Getting started with the collection:
No image available
State formation and shared sovereignty: the Holy Roman Empire and the Dutch Republic, 1488-1696
By
Abstract
"In May 1608, several Protestant rulers in the Holy Roman Empire convened an emergency summit in the Swabian town of Auhausen. Weeks earlier, they had walked out of the Imperial Diet, the Empire's main legislative assembly, to protest what they deemed Catholic attempts to undermine the Empire's constitution. Speaking in one voice, those gathered in Auhausen condemned their opponents' "hostile and violent actions" as a threat to the Empire and its members, known as Imperial Estates. If left unchecked, rogue actors would "create one disturbance after another in the beloved Fatherland, thereby wreaking havoc with the entire ancient and praiseworthy imperial constitution. The result will be nothing less than the destruction of all good order, law, and prosperity." Only by uniting "in a loyal understanding and association" could peace-loving authorities prevent this catastrophe. Accordingly, the Estates assembled in Auhausen formed an alliance, set to last for ten years, which became known as the Protestant Union. By pooling their resources through this corporate framework, the Union's founders argued they acted as the Empire's saviors. Their collective endeavor did not seek "the collapse of the Holy Empire's constitution, but much more to strengthen the same and to better preserve peace and unity in the Empire.""--
Contents
The Swabian League and the politics of alliance (1488-1534) -- Alliances and the early Reformation (1526-1545) -- Alliances and new visions for the Empire and Low Countries (1540-1556) -- Shared sovereignty and regional peace (1552-1567) -- Shared sovereignty and multi-confessionality in the Empire and Low Countries (1566-1609) -- Religious alliance and the legacy of past leagues (1591-1613) -- Religious alliance and the Thirty Years War (1610-1632) -- Westphalia and politics of alliance in the Empire and Dutch Republic (1631-1696)
Publisher
Publication
Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2021
Year
Is about
Subject
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9781108925082
- 110883762X
- 1108925081
- 9781108837620
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: