Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor
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Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor Habsburg (June 9, 1640 – May 5, 1705), Holy Roman emperor, was the second son of the emperor Ferdinand III and his first wife Maria Anna of Spain. His maternal grandparents were Philip III of Spain and Margarita of Austria.
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[edit] Early life
He was a much younger brother of Ferdinand IV of Hungary and Mariana of Austria. Intended for the Church, he received a good education but his prospects were changed by the death of his elder brother Ferdinand IV, on July 9, 1654 of smallpox, when he became his father's heir.
The last thing Leopold wanted was to rule. He was hideous and under-sized, his bones stunted, his teeth broken by scurvy. He was painfully shortsighted. In him the Habsburg lip and chin were exaggerated to the point of caricature. He was pathologically shy. He would have liked to have gone into a monastery, and, indeed, from early childhood he had been intended for the Church. Instead of this he was called upon not merely to wear the crown but to carry Austria into the new course determined by the outcome of the Thirty Years' War and to defend his personal Empire against the two most formidable adversaries in the world: France, arrogant and triumphant under Louis XIV, and the Ottoman Turks in their last and most terrible bid to break into Europe.
In 1655 he was chosen king of Hungary and in 1656 king of Bohemia,1657 king of Croatia and in July 1658, more than a year after his father's death, he was elected emperor at Frankfurt in spite of the intrigues of Jules Cardinal Mazarin, who wished to place on the imperial throne Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria or some other prince whose elevation would break the Habsburg succession.
Mazarin, however, obtained a promise from the new emperor that he would not send assistance to Spain, then at war with France, and, by joining a confederation of German princes, called the league of the Rhine, France secured a certain influence in the internal affairs of Germany. Leopold's long reign covers one of the most important periods of European history; for nearly the whole of its forty-seven years he was pitted against Louis XIV of France, whose dominant personality completely overshadowed Leopold. The emperor was not himself a man of war, and never led his troops in person; yet the greater part of his public life was spent in arranging and directing wars. The first was with Sweden, whose king Charles X found a useful ally in the prince of Transylvania, György II Rákóczi, a rebellious vassal of the Hungarian crown.
[edit] Early wars against the Ottoman Empire
This war, a legacy of the last reign, was waged by Leopold as the ally of Poland until peace was made at Oliva in 1660. A more dangerous foe next entered the lists. The Ottoman Empire interfered in the affairs of Transylvania, always an unruly district, and this interference brought on a war with the Holy Roman Empire, which after some desultory operations really began in 1663. By a personal appeal to the diet at Regensburg Leopold induced the princes to send assistance for the campaign; troops were also sent by France, and in August 1664 the great imperialist general, Raimondo Montecuccoli, gained a notable victory at Saint Gotthard. By the Peace of Vasvár the emperor made a twenty years' truce with the sultan, granting more generous terms than his recent victory seemed to render necessary.
[edit] Wars Against France
After a few years of peace began the first of three wars between France and the Empire. The aggressive policy pursued by Louis XIV towards the United Provinces had aroused the serious attention of Europe, and steps had been taken to check it. Although the French king had sought the alliance of several German princes and encouraged the Turks in their attacks on Austria the emperor at first took no part in this movement. He was on friendly terms with Louis, to whom he was closely related and with whom he had already discussed the partition of the lands of the Spanish monarchy; moreover, in 1671 he arranged with him a treaty of neutrality.
In 1672, however, he was forced to take action. He entered into an alliance for the defence of the United Provinces and war broke out; then, after this league had collapsed owing to the defection of the elector of Brandenburg, another and more durable alliance was formed for the same purpose, including, besides the emperor, the king of Spain and several German princes, and the war was renewed. At this time, twenty-five years after the peace of Westphalia, the Empire was virtually a confederation of independent princes, and it was very difficult for its head to conduct any war with vigour and success, some of its members being in alliance with the enemy and others being only lukewarm in their support of the imperial interests. Thus this struggle, which lasted until the end of 1678, was on the whole unfavourable to Germany, and the advantages of the Treaty of Nijmegen (February 1679) were with France.
Almost immediately after the conclusion of peace Louis renewed his aggressions on the German frontier. Engaged in a serious struggle with Turkey, the emperor was again slow to move, and although he joined a league against France in 1682 he was glad to make a truce at Regensburg two years later. In 1686 the league of Augsburg was formed by the emperor and the imperial princes, to preserve the terms of the treaties of Westphalia and of Nijmegen. The whole European position was now bound up with events in England, and the tension lasted until 1688, when William of Orange won the English crown and Louis invaded Germany. In May 1689 the grand alliance was formed, including the emperor, the kings of England, Spain and Denmark, the elector of Brandenburg and others, and a fierce struggle against France was waged throughout almost the whole of western Europe. In general the several campaigns were favourable to the allies, and in September 1697 England, Spain and the United Provinces made peace with France at the Treaty of Rijswijk.
To this treaty Leopold refused to assent, as he considered that his allies had somewhat neglected his interests, but in the following month he came to terms and a number of places were transferred from France to Germany. The peace with France lasted for about four years and then Europe was involved in the War of the Spanish Succession. The king of Spain, Charles II, was a Habsburg by descent and was related by marriage to the Austrian branch, while a similar tie bound him to the royal house of France. He was feeble and childless, and attempts had been made by the European powers to arrange for a peaceable division of his extensive kingdom. Leopold refused to consent to any partition, and when in November 1700 Charles died, leaving his crown to Philip, duke of Anjou, a grandson of Louis XIV, all hopes of a peaceable settlement vanished. Under the guidance of William III a powerful league, the grand alliance, was formed against France; of this the emperor was a prominent member, and in 1703 he transferred his claim on the Spanish monarchy to his second son, the Archduke of Austria, also known as Charles III of Hungary. The early course of the war was not favourable to the imperialists, but the tide of defeat had been rolled back by the great victory of Blenheim before Leopold died on May 5, 1705.
[edit] Internal problems
In governing his own lands Leopold found his chief difficulties in Hungary, where unrest was caused partly by his desire to crush Protestantism. A rising was suppressed in 1671 and for some years Hungary was treated with great severity. In 1681, after another rising, some grievances were removed and a less repressive policy was adopted, but this did not deter the Hungarians from revolting again. Espousing the cause of the rebels the sultan sent an enormous army into Austria early in 1683; this advanced almost unchecked to Vienna, which was besieged from July to September, while Leopold took refuge at Passau. Realizing the gravity of the situation somewhat tardily, some of the German princes, among them the electors of Saxony and Bavaria, led their contingents to the imperial army which was commanded by the emperor's brother-in-law, Charles, duke of Lorraine, but the most redoubtable of Leopold's allies was the king of Poland, John Sobieski, who was already dreaded by the Turks.
[edit] Success against the Turks and in Hungary
On September 12, 1683 the allied army fell upon the enemy, who was completely routed, and Vienna was saved. The imperial forces, among whom Prince Eugene of Savoy was rapidly becoming prominent, followed up the victory with others, notably one near Mohács in 1687 and another at Zenta in 1697, and in January 1699 the sultan signed the treaty of Karlowitz by which he admitted the sovereign rights of the house of Habsburg over nearly the whole of Hungary. Before the conclusion of the war, however, Leopold had taken measures to strengthen his hold upon this country. In 1687, the Hungarian diet in Pozsony (called Pressburg at that time) changed the constitution, the right of the Habsburgs to succeed to the throne without election was admitted and the emperor's elder son Joseph I was crowned hereditary king of Hungary.
[edit] The Holy Roman Empire
During this reign some important changes were made in the constitution of the Empire. In 1663, the imperial diet entered upon the last stage of its existence, and became a body permanently in session at Regensburg. In 1692, the duke of Hanover was raised to the rank of an elector, becoming the ninth member of the electoral college. In 1700, Leopold, greatly in need of help for the impending war with France, granted the title of king in Prussia to the elector of Brandenburg. The net result of these and similar changes was to weaken the authority of the emperor over the members of the Empire and to compel him to rely more and more upon his position as ruler of the Austrian archduchies and of Hungary and Bohemia. Leopold was the first to have realized this altered state of affairs and to have acted in accordance with it.
[edit] Ancestors
Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor | Father: Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor |
Father's father: Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor |
Father's father's father: Charles II of Austria |
Father's father's mother: Maria Anna of Bavaria |
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Father's mother: Maria Anna of Bavaria |
Father's mother's father: William V, Duke of Bavaria |
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Father's mother's mother: Renata of Lorraine |
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Mother: Maria Anna of Spain |
Mother's father: Philip III of Spain |
Mother's father's father: Philip II of Spain |
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Mother's father's mother: Anne of Austria |
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Mother's mother: Margaret of Austria |
Mother's mother's father: Charles II of Austria |
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Mother's mother's mother: Maria Anna of Bavaria |
[edit] Private life
Epitome of the Habsburg jaw, Leopold ("the Hogmouth") was married three times.
In 1666 he married Margaret Theresa (d. 1673), daughter of Philip IV of Spain, also his niece, (the young infanta depicted in Diego Velasquez' "Las Meninas"). Also known as Margarita Teresa, she was daughter of Philip IV. The miraculous series of Velazquez portraits of this Spanish princess at various stages of her childhood were done for Leopold as he waited in Vienna for his betrothed to grow up. This grave, blank image of immortal dreams was married at fifteen. She bore her husband five children and died in childbirth at twenty-two. Leopold was kind and gay with her.
Children :
- Ferdinand Wenzel, Archduke of Austria (1667 - 1668).
- Maria Antonia of Austria (1669 - 1692). Married Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria.
- Johann Leopold, Archduke of Austria (1670).
- Maria Anna of Austria (1672).
His second wife was Archduchess Claudia Felicitas, the heiress of Tyrol. She died at the age of 22 on 2 September 1676; their two daughters also died. She was buried in the crypt of the St. Dominic side chapel of the Dominican church in Vienna.
His third wife was Eleonore-Magdalena of Pfalz-Neuburg, a princess of the Palatinate. By his first two wives, he had no surviving sons, but his third wife bore him two:
Their other children were
- Christina (1679-1679)
- Maria Elisabeth (1680-1741), Archduchess, governor of the Austrian Netherlands
- Leopold Joseph (1682-1684)
- Maria Anna (1683-1754), Archduchess, married John V of Portugal, King of Portugal
- Maria Theresia (1684-1696)
- Maria Josepha (1687-1703)
- Maria Magdalena (1689-1743)
- Maria Margaretha (1690-1691)
[edit] Character and overall assessment
Leopold was a man of industry and education, and during his later years, he showed some political ability. Extremely tenacious of his rights and regarding himself as an absolute sovereign, he was also very intolerant and greatly influenced by the Jesuits. In person, he was short, but strong and healthy. Although he had no inclination for a military life, he loved exercise in the open air, such as hunting and riding; he also had a taste for music and composed several Oratorios and Suites of Dances.
He made fearful mistakes. He stumbled reluctantly, sometimes as a direct result of his own mismanagement, from war to war, and failed to press the advantage when he had it. He was a bigot of the narrowest kind and alienated his Hungarian subjects by harsh treatment of the Protestants and a rigid system of government. Hopelessly at a disadvantage in the handling of men, he secluded himself in his court behind a solemn barrier of protocol and etiquette taken over from Madrid, dressing always in the Spanish fashion in black with red stockings. Hidden from the world, however, he could be gay and charming. He snatched every moment he could spare for his beloved music, playing himself, composing more than well. He was happiest with his books, but he was also an alchemist of sorts and he loved painting.
Vienna's second district, Leopoldstadt, is named after him.
Names in other languages: German/Czech/Slovak/Croatian: Leopold I, Hungarian: I. Lipót.
Preceded by: Ferdinand III |
Holy Roman Emperor Also King of Germany 1658-1705 |
Succeeded by: Joseph I |
Archduke of Austria, Duke of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola 1657-1705 |
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King of Hungary 1657-1705 |
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King of Croatia and Slavonia 1657-1705 |
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King of Bohemia 1657-1705 |
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Preceded by: Imre Thököly |
Prince of Transylvania 1691-1705 |
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Preceded by: Archduke Sigismund Francis of Austria |
Ruler of Tyrol and Further Austria 1665-1705 |
Crankshaw, Edward. The Habsburgs: Portrait of a Dynasty. New York: The Viking Press. 1971.
[edit] External links
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
Categories: House of Habsburg | Holy Roman emperors | German kings | Bohemian monarchs | Roman Catholic monarchs | Hungarian monarchs | Rulers of Austria | Rulers of Styria | Dukes of Carinthia | Counts of Tyrol | Knights of the Golden Fleece | 1640 births | 1705 deaths | Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica