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MAXIMILIAN I, Roman emperor, son of the emperor Frederick III and Leonora, daughter of Edward, king of Portugal,
was born at Vienna Neustadt on the 22nd of March 1459. On the 18th of August 1477, by his marriage at Ghent to Mary, who
had just inherited Burgundy and the Netherlands from her father Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy,
he effected a union of great importance in the history of the house of Habsburg. He at once undertook the defence of his
wife's dominions from an attack by Louis XI, King of France, and defeated the French forces at
Guinegatte, the modern Enguinegatt, on the 7th of August 1479.
But Maximilian was regarded with suspicion by the states of Netherlands, and after suppressing a rising in Gelderland
his position was further weakened by the death of his wife on the 27th of March 1482. He claimed to be recognized as
guardian of his young son Philip and as regent of the Netherlands, but some of the states refused to agree to his demands
and disorder was general. Maximilian was compelled to assent to the treaty of Arras in 1482 between the states of the
Netherlands and Louis XI. This treaty provided that Maximilian's daughter Margaret should marry Charles, the dauphin
of France, and have for her dowry Artois and Franche-Comte, two of the provinces in dispute, while the claim of Louis
on the duchy of Burgundy was tacitly admitted.
Maximilian did not, however, abandon the struggle in the Netherlands. Having crushed a rebellion at Utrecht, he compelled
the burghers of Ghent to restore Philip to him in 1485, and returning to Germany was chosen king of the Romans, or German
king, at Frankfort on the 16th of February 1486, and crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle on the 9th of the following April. Again
in the Netherlands, he made a treaty with Francis II, duke of Brittany, whose independence was threatened by the French
regent, Anne of Beaujeu, and the struggle with France was soon renewed. This war was very unpopular with the trading
cities of the Netherlands, and early in 1488 Maximilian, having entered Bruges, was detained there as a prisoner for
nearly three months, and only set at liberty on the approach of his father with a large force.
On his release he had promised he would maintain the treaty of Arras and withdraw from the Netherlands; but he delayed
his departure for nearly a year and took part in a punitive campaign against his captors and their allies. On his return
to Germany he made peace with France at Frankfort in July 1489, and in October several of the states of the Netherlands
recognized him as their ruler and as guardian of his son. In March 1490 the county of Tirol was added to his possessions
through the abdication of his kinsman, Count Sigismund, and this district soon became his favourite residence.
Meanwhile the king had formed an alliance with Henry VII king of England, and
Ferdinand II, king of Aragon, to defend the possessions of the duchess Anne, daughter
and successor of Francis, duke of Brittany. Early in 1490 he took a further step and was betrothed to the duchess, and
later in the same year the marriage was celebrated by proxy; but Brittany was still occupied by French troops, and
Maximilian was unable to go to the assistance of his bride. The sequel was startling. In December 1491 Anne was married
to Charles VIII, king of France, and Maximilian's daughter Margaret, who had resided in France since her betrothal, was
sent back to her father.
The inaction of Maximilian at this time is explained by the condition of affairs in Hungary, where the death of king
Matthias Corvinus had brought about a struggle for this throne. The Roman king, who was an unsuccessful candidate, took
up arms, drove the Hungarians from Austria, and regained Vienna, which had been in the possession of Matthias since 1485;
but he was compelled by want of money to retreat, and on the 7th of November 1491 signed the treaty of Pressburg with
Ladislaus, king of Bohemia, who had obtained the Hungarian throne. By this treaty it was agreed that Maximilian should
succeed to the crown in case Ladislaus left no legitimate male issue. Having defeated the invading Turks at Villach in
1492, the king was eager to take revenge upon the king of France; but the states of the Netherlands would afford him no
assistance. The German diet was indifferent, and in May 1493 he agreed to the peace of Senlis and regained Artois and
Franche-Comte.
In August 1493 the death of the emperor left Maximilian sole ruler of Germany and head of the house of Habsburg; and on
the 6th of March 1494 he married at Innsbruck Bianca Maria Sforza, daughter of Galeazzo Sforza, duke of Milan (d. 1476).
At this time Bianca's uncle, Ludovico Sforza, was invested with the duchy of Milan in return for the substantial dowry
which his niece brought to the king. Maximilian harboured the idea of driving the Turks from Europe; but his appeal to
all Christian sovereigns was ineffectual. In 1494 he was again in the Netherlands, where he led an expedition against
the rebels of Gelderland, assisted Perkin Warbeck
to make a descent upon England, and formally handed over the government of the Low Countries to Philip.
His attention was next turned to Italy, and, alarmed at the progress of Charles VIII in the peninsula, he signed the
league of Venice in March 1495, and about the same time arranged a marriage between his son Philip and Joanna, daughter
of Ferdinand and Isabella,
King and Queen of Castile and Aragon. The need for help to prosecute the war in Italy caused the king to call the diet
to Worms in March 1495, when he urged the necessity of checking the progress of Charles. As during his father's lifetime
Maximilian had favoured the reforming party among the princes, proposals for the better government of the empire were
brought forward at Worms as a necessary preliminary to financial and military support. Some reforms were adopted, the
public peace was proclaimed without any limitation of time and a general tax was levied.
The three succeeding years were mainly occupied with quarrels with the diet, with two invasions of France, and a war in
Gelderland against Charles, count of Egmont, who claimed that duchy, and was supported by French troops. The reforms of
1495 were rendered abortive by the refusal of Maximilian to attend the diets or to take any part in the working of the
new constitution, and in 1497 he strengthened his own authority by establishing an Aulic Council (Reichshofrath), which
he declared was competent to deal with all business of the empire, and about the same time set up a court to centralize
the financial administration of Germany.
In February 1499 the king became involved in a war with the Swiss, who had refused to pay the imperial taxes or to furnish
a contribution for the Italian expedition. Aided by France they defeated the German troops, and the peace of Basel in
September 1499 recognized them as virtually independent of the empire. About this time Maximilian's ally, Ludovico of Milan,
was taken prisoner by Louis XII, king of France, and
Maximilian was again compelled to ask the diet for help. An elaborate scheme for raising an army was agreed to, and in
return a council of regency (Reichsregiment) was established, which amounted, in the words of a Venetian envoy, to a
deposition of the king. The relations were now very strained between the reforming princes and Maximilian, who, unable
to raise an army, refused to attend the meetings of the council at Nuremberg, while both parties treated for peace with
France.
The hostility of the king rendered the council impotent. He was successful in winning the support of many of the younger
princes, and in establishing a new court of justice, the members of which were named by himself. The negotiations with
France ended in the treaty of Blois, signed in September 1504, when Maximilian's grandson Charles
was betrothed to Claude, daughter of Louis XII, and Louis, invested with the duchy of Milan, agreed to aid the king of the
Romans to secure the imperial crown. A succession difficulty in Bavaria-Landshut was only decided after Maximilian had taken
up arms and narrowly escaped with his life at Regensburg. In the settlement of this question, made in 1505, he secured a
considerable increase of territory, and when the king met the diet at Cologne in 1505 he was at the height of his power.
His enemies at home were crushed, and their leader, Berthold, elector of Mainz, was dead; while the outlook abroad was more
favourable than it had been since his accession.
It is at this period that Ranke believes Maximilian to have entertained the idea of a universal monarchy; but whatever hopes
he may have had were shattered by the death of his son Philip and the rupture of the treaty of Blois. The diet of Cologne
discussed the question of reform in a halting fashion, but afforded the king supplies for an expedition into Hungary, to aid
his ally Ladislaus, and to uphold his own influence in the East. Having established his daughter Margaret as regent for
Charles in the Netherlands, Maximilian met the diet at Constance in 1507, when the imperial chamber (Reichskammergericht)
was revised and took a more permanent form, and help was granted for an expedition to Italy. The king set out for Rome to
secure his coronation, but Venice refused to let him pass through her territories; and at Trant, on the 4th of February 1508,
he took the important step of assuming the title of Roman Emperor Elect, to which he soon received the assent of
pope Julius II. He attacked the Venetians, but finding the war unpopular with the trading cities
of southern Germany, made a truce with the republic for three years.
The treaty of Blois had contained a secret article providing for an attack on Venice, and this ripened into the league of
Cambray, which was joined by the emperor in December 1509. He soon took the field, but after his failure to capture Padua
the league broke up; and his sole ally, the French king, joined him in calling a general council at Pisa to discuss the
question of Church reform. A breach with pope Julius followed, and at this time Maximilian appears to have entertained,
perhaps quite seriously, the idea of seating himself in the chair of St Peter. After a period of vacillation he deserted
Louis and joined the Holy League, which had been formed to expel the French from Italy; but unable to raise troops, he
served with the English forces as a volunteer and shared in the victory gained over the French at the
battle of the Spurs near Therouanne on the 16th of August 1513.
In 1500 the diet had divided Germany into six circles, for the maintenance of peace, to which the emperor at the diet of
Cologne in 1512 added four others. Having made an alliance with Christian II, king of Denmark, and interfered to protect
the Teutonic Order against Sigismund I, king of Poland, Maximilian was again in Italy early in 1516 fighting the French
who had overrun Milan. His want of success compelled him on the 4th of December 1516 to sign the treaty of Brussels, which
left Milan in the hands of the French king, while Verona was soon afterwards transferred to Venice. He attempted in vain
to secure the election of his grandson Charles as king of the Romans, and in spite of increasing
infirmity was eager to lead the imperial troops against the Turks.
At the diet of Augsburg in 1518 the emperor heard warnings of the Reformation in the shape of complaints against papal
exactions, and a repetition of the complaints preferred at the diet of Mainz in 1517 about the administration of Germany.
Leaving the diet, he travelled to Wels in Upper Austria, where he died on the 12th of January 1519. He was buried in the
church of St George in Vienna Neustadt, and a superb monument, which may still be seen, was raised to his memory at
Innsbruck.
Maximilian had many excellent personal qualities. He was not handsome, but of a robust and well-proportioned frame. Simple
in his habits, conciliatory in his bearing, and catholic in his tastes, he enjoyed great popularity and rarely made a personal
enemy. He was a skilled knight and a daring huntsman, and although not a great general, was intrepid on the field of battle.
His mental interests were extensive. He knew something of six languages, and could discuss art, music, literature or theology.
He reorganized the university of Vienna and encouraged the development of the universities of Ingolstadt and Freiburg. He was
the friend and patron of scholars, caused manuscripts to be copied and medieval poems to be collected.
He was the author of military reforms, which included the establishment of standing troops, called Landsknechte, the improvement
of artillery by making cannon portable, and some changes in the equipment of the cavalry. He was continually devising plans for
the better government of Austria, and although they ended in failure, he established the unity of the Austrian dominions.
Maximilian has been called the second founder of the house of Habsburg, and certainly by bringing about marriages between Charles
and Joanna and between his grandson Ferdinand and Anna, daughter of Ladislaus, king of Hungary and Bohemia, he paved the way
for the vast empire of Charles V and for the influence of the Habsburgs in eastern Europe.
But he had many qualities less desirable. He was reckless and unstable, resorting often to lying and deceit, and never pausing
to count the cost of an enterprise or troubling to adapt means to ends. For absurd and impracticable schemes in Italy and elsewhere
he neglected Germany, and sought to involve its princes in wars undertaken solely for private aggrandizement or personal jealousy.
Ignoring his responsibilities as ruler of Germany, he only considered the question of its government when in need of money and
support from the princes. As the "last of the knights" he could not see that the old order of society was passing away and a new
order arising, while he was fascinated by the glitter of the medieval empire and spent the better part of his life in vague
schemes for its revival. As "a gifted amateur in politics" he increased the disorder of Germany and Italy and exposed himself
and the empire to the jeers of Europe.
Maximilian was also a writer of books, and his writings display his inordinate vanity. His Geheimes Jagdbuch, containing
about 2500 words, is a treatise purporting to teach his grandsons the art of hunting. He inspired the production of The Dangers
and Adventures of the Famous Hero and Knight Sir Teuerdank, an allegorical poem describing his adventures on his journey to
marry Mary of Burgundy. The emperor's share in the work is not clear, but it seems certain that the general scheme and many of
the incidents are due to him. It was first published at Nuremberg by Melchior Pfintzing in 1517, and was adorned with woodcuts
by Hans Leonhard Schaufelein. The Weisskunig was long regarded as the work of the emperor's secretary, Marx Treitzsaurwein,
but it is now believed that the greater part of the book at least is the work of the emperor himself. It is an unfinished
autobiography containing an account of the achievements of Maximilian, who is called "the young white king." It was first
published at Vienna in 1775.
He also is responsible for Freydal, an allegorical account of the tournaments in which he took part during his wooing of
Mary of Burgundy; Ehrenpforten, Triumphwagen and Der weisen konige Stammbaum, books concerning his own history and
that of the house of Habsburg, and works on various subjects, as Das Stahlbuch, Die Baumeisterei and Die Gartnerei.
These works are all profusely illustrated, some by Albrecht Dürer, and in the preparation of the woodcuts Maximilian himself
took the liveliest interest.
Excerpted from:
Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th Ed. Vol XVII.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1910. 923.
Other Local Resources:
Books for further study:
Benecke, Gerhard. Maximilian I (1459-1519): An analytical biography.
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 2004.
Wheatcroft, Andrew. The Habsburgs: Embodying Empire.
New York: Penguin, 1997.
Wiesflecker, H. Maximilian I. Die Fundamente des habsburgischen Weltreiches.
Oldenbourg, 1991.
Wilson, Peter H. The Holy Roman Empire 1495-1806.
New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1999.
Emperor Maximilian on the Web:
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London c1480, MS Royal 16
London, 1510, the earliest view in print
Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
London in late 16th century
Location Map of Elizabethan London
Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
Visscher's View of London, 1616
Larger Visscher's View in Sections
c. 1690. View of London Churches, after the Great Fire
The Yard of the Tabard Inn from Thornbury, Old and New London
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