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{{Short description|Conflict between the house of Habsburg and France}}
{{Short description|Territorial and military conflicts between the House of Habsburg and France}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2021}}


{{Multiple image
The term '''France–Habsburg rivalry''' ({{Lang-fr|Rivalité franco-habsbourgeoise}}; {{Lang-de|Habsburgisch-Französischer Gegensatz}}) describes the rivalry between [[France]] and the [[House of Habsburg]]. The Habsburgs headed an expansive and evolving Empire that included, at various times, the [[Holy Roman Empire]], the [[Habsburg Spain|Spanish Empire]] and the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian Empire]] from the [[Diet of Augsburg]] in the [[High Middle Ages]] until the dissolution of the monarchy following the [[World War I]] in the [[Late modern period]].
|width=150px
|image1=Charles I of Spain.jpg
|image2=François Ier Louvre.jpg
|footer=The conflicts between [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor]] and [[Francis I of France]] initiated the French-Habsburg rivalry}}
The term '''French–Habsburg rivalry''' ({{Langx|fr|Rivalité franco-habsbourgeoise}}; {{Langx|de|Habsburgisch-französischer Gegensatz}}) describes the rivalry between [[France]] and the [[House of Habsburg]]. The Habsburgs headed an expansive and evolving empire that included, at various times, the [[Holy Roman Empire]], the [[Habsburg Spain|Spanish Empire]], [[archduchy of Austria|Austria]], [[Kingdom of Bohemia|Bohemia]] and [[Kingdom of Hungary|Hungary]] from the [[Diet of Augsburg]] in the [[High Middle Ages]] until the dissolution of the monarchy following [[World War I]] in the [[late modern period]].


In addition to holding the [[Erblande|Austrian hereditary lands]], the Habsburg dynasty ruled the [[Habsburg Netherlands|Low Countries]] (1482–1794), [[Habsburg Spain|Spain]] (1504–1700) and the [[Holy Roman Empire]] (1438–1806). All these lands were in [[personal union]] under [[Emperor Charles V]]. The expansion of the Habsburgs into western Europe increasingly led to border tensions with the Kingdom of France, which found itself encircled by Habsburg territory. The subsequent rivalry between the two powers became a cause for several conflicts. These include parts of the [[Anglo-French Wars]] (1066–1815), the [[War of the Burgundian Succession]] (1477–1482), the [[Italian Wars]] (1494–1559), the [[Thirty Years' War]] (1618–1648), the [[Nine Years' War]] (1688–1697), and the [[War of succession|succession wars]] of [[War of the Jülich Succession|Jülich]] (1609–1614), [[War of the Mantuan Succession|Mantua]] (1628–1631), [[War of the Spanish Succession|Spain]] (1700–1713), [[War of the Polish Succession|Poland]] (1733–1736) and [[War of the Austrian Succession|Austria]] (1740–1748).
{{Infobox War
| conflict = French-Habsburg Wars
| place = [[World]]
| image = File:Habsburg dominions 1700.png
| caption = Habsburg dominions in the centuries following their partition by [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor]].
| date = 1494-1918
| combatant1 = [[Early Modern France|Kingdom of France]]


==Middle Ages==
[[Kingdom of Scotland]] (1300s-1603; 1642-1661)
During the late Middle Ages, the Habsburgs, whose dominions consisted principally of Austria, and later Spain, sought alliances, principally through marriage, a policy which had the added benefit of gaining territory through marital inheritance. Territorial expansion in this way allowed the Habsburgs to gain territories throughout [[Europe]]<ref>1. R. J. W. Evans, ''The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1550–1700: An Interpretation'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979), p. 93.</ref> such as the [[Spanish Road]], [[Burgundy]], [[Milan]] and the [[Low Countries]]. This practice was described by Hungarian king [[Matthias Corvinus]]' quote: ''Bella gerant alii, tu felix Austria, nube!'' – "Let others wage war. You, happy Austria, marry!"<ref>''The World of The Hapsburgs''. (2011). "Tu felix Austria nube 1430–1570". Retrieved from: http://www.habsburger.net/en/stories/tu-felix-austria-nube</ref>


Following this tradition, [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Maximilian]] married [[Mary of Burgundy|Mary]], the last [[House of Valois|Valois]] ruler of [[Duchy of Burgundy|Burgundy]] and the [[Burgundian Netherlands]], in 1477. Nineteen years later, their son [[Philip I of Castile|Philip the Handsome]] married [[Joanna of Castile]], who became heir to the Spanish thrones. Joanna and Philip's son, [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles]], united all of these possessions in 1519. France had the Habsburgs on three sides as its neighbor, with Spain to the south, the [[Habsburg Netherlands|Netherlands]] to the north, and the [[Franche-Comté]] to the east.
[[Ottoman Empire]] (1536-1559)


==Early modern period==
Various Italian States
[[File:Philip II's realms in 1598.png|thumb|[[Iberian Union]] of Spain and Portugal between 1580 and 1640]]


===Italian Wars===
[[Swedish Empire|Sweden]] (1635-1648)
{{Main|Italian Wars}}


The Italian Wars were a long series of wars fought between 1494 and 1559 in Italy during the [[Renaissance]]. The Italian peninsula, economically advanced but politically divided between several states, became the main battleground for European supremacy. The conflicts involved the major powers of Italy and Europe, in a series of events that followed the end of the 40-year long [[Peace of Lodi]] agreed in 1454 with the formation of an [[Italic League]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Sarti|first=Roland|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/191029034|title=Italy : a reference guide from the Renaissance to the present|date=2004|publisher=Facts On File|isbn=978-0-8160-7474-7|location=New York, NY|pages=342|oclc=191029034}}</ref>
[[Dutch Republic]] (1652-1654; 1665-1667; 1672-1674; 1780-1784)


The collapse of the alliance in the 1490s left Italy open to the ambitions of [[Charles VIII of France]], who invaded the [[Kingdom of Naples]] in 1494 on the ground of a dynastic claim. The French were however forced to leave Naples after the [[Republic of Venice]] formed an alliance with [[Habsburg (Austrian) monarchy|Habsburg Austria]] and [[Habsburg Spain|Spain]].<ref name=":0" />
[[History of Spain (1700–1810)|Early Bourbon Spain]] and [[History of Spain (1810–1873)|Late Bourbon Spain]] (1713-1808; 1833-1874)


[[File:Manif. di bruxelles su dis.di bernart von orley, IGMN144483, 1526-31.JPG|thumb|260px|Detail of a tapestry depicting the [[Battle of Pavia]], woven from a cartoon by [[Bernard van Orley]] ({{circa|1531}})]]
[[Poland-Lithuania]] (1704-1709; 1733-1736; 1794-1796)
An important consequence of the [[League of Venice]] was the political marriage arranged by [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor]] for his son, through [[Mary of Burgundy]], [[Philip I of Castile|Philip the Handsome]] who married [[Joanna of Castile|Joanna the Mad]] (daughter of [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] and [[Isabella I of Castile|Isabella of Castile]]) to reinforce the anti-French alliance between Austria and Spain. The son of Philip and Joanna would become [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor]] in 1519 succeeding Maximilian and controlling an Habsburg empire inclusive of [[Crown of Castile|Castile]], [[Crown of Aragon|Aragon]], [[Archduchy of Austria|Austria]], and the [[Burgundian Netherlands]], thus encircling France.


The [[Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis]] (1559), which put an end to the Italian Wars, had mixed results: France renounced its claims to territories in Italy, but gained certain other territories, including the [[Pale of Calais]] and the [[Three Bishoprics]].<ref>{{cite web|title="Italian Wars" |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Italian-Wars|website=Britannica |publisher=Encyclopedia Britannica|access-date=6 March 2023}}</ref>
[[United States]] (1777-1783; 1917-1918)


The Italian Wars also coincide with the [[Spanish conquest of Iberian Navarre]], where France supported the [[List of Navarrese monarchs|King of Navarre]] (from the French [[Albret|House of Albret]]) against the Spanish Habsburgs. The result of this was the Spanish conquest of much Navarre south of the [[Pyrenees]], but the French kept Navarre north of the Pyrenees. The Kingdom of Navarre would later be inherited by the [[House of Bourbon|Bourbons]], and later united with France through [[personal union]] during the ascension of [[Henry IV of France|Henry IV]].
[[First French Republic]]


[[First French Empire]]
=== French Wars of Religion ===
During the [[French Wars of Religion]], France was split into several factions. Spain supported the French Catholics. In the [[Treaty of Joinville]], Spain agreed to provide monetary and military support to the [[Catholic League (French)|Catholic League]]. When the Protestant [[Henry IV of France|King of Navarre]] laid siege to Paris, Spanish commander, [[Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma|the Duke of Parma]], helped relieve the city on behalf of the Catholics. Spain also occupied territory in Brittany during the [[Brittany campaign|Brittany Campaign]]. When the King of Navarre became King of France (as Henry IV), he declared war on Spain. This war was ended with the [[Peace of Vervins]].

[[List of French client states|French Client States]]

[[Second French Empire]]

[[Kingdom of Sardinia]] and [[Kingdom of Italy]] (1849-1882; 1915-1918)

[[Third French Republic]]

[[Russian Empire|Russia]] (1894-1918)

[[Japanese Empire]] (1907-1918)

[[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]] (1907-1918)

[[Allies of World War I|and other allies of France during WW1]]
| combatant2 = [[Habsburg Monarchy|Habsburg Empire]], including:

[[Archduchy of Austria]]

[[Holy Roman Empire]]

[[Habsburg Netherlands]]

[[Habsburg Spain|Early Spanish Empire]] (1516-1700) and [[Iberian Union]] (1581-1640)

[[Austrian Netherlands]]

[[Austrian Empire]]

[[Austria-Hungary]]



Various Italian States

[[Kingdom of England]] (1337-1646; 1661-1707)

[[Kingdom of Scotland]] (1603-1642; 1661-1707)

[[Poland-Lithuania]] (1684-1704; 1709-1733)

[[Kingdom of Portugal]] (1700-1807; 1808-1814; 1815)

[[Kingdom of Great Britain]]

[[Kingdom of Prussia]] (1733-1736; 1792-1814; 1815; 1864-1866; 1879-1918)

[[Russian Empire|Russia]] (1762-1807; 1811-1814)

[[United States]] (1798)

[[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]] (1801-1814; 1815)

[[German Empire|Germany]] (1879-1918)

[[Kingdom of Italy]] (1882-1915)

[[Ottoman Empire]] (1914-1918)

[[Tsardom of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] (1915-1918)
}}

In addition to holding the [[Austrian hereditary lands]], the Habsburg dynasty ruled the [[Habsburg Netherlands|Low Countries]] (1482-1794), [[Habsburg Spain|Spain]] (1504–1700) and the [[Holy Roman Empire]] (1438–1806). All these lands were notably in [[personal union]] under [[Emperor Charles V]] and formed the "'''Habsburg ring'''" around France. As the House of Habsburg expanded into western Europe, border friction began with the Kingdom of France. The subsequent rivalry between the two powers became a cause for several conflicts. These include the [[Anglo-French Wars]] (1066-1815) [[Italian Wars]] (1494–1559), the [[Thirty Years' War]] (1618–1648), the [[Nine Years' War]] (1688–1697), the [[War of the Spanish Succession|War of Spanish Succession]] (1700-1713), the [[War of the Polish Succession|War of Polish Succession]] (1733-1736) the [[War of the Austrian Succession|War of Austrian Succession]] (1740-1748), the [[Seven Years' War]] (1756-1763), the [[Anglo-French War (1778–1783)|American Revolutionary War]] (1778-1783), the [[Coalition Wars]] (1792-1815), the [[Revolutions of 1830]] (1830), the [[Revolutions of 1848]] (1848-1849), the [[Second Italian War of Independence|Franco-Austrian War]] (1859), the [[Unification of Germany|Wars of German Unification]] (1864-1871) and [[World War I]] (1914-1918).

{{Campaignbox
| name = French-Habsburg Wars
| title =
| listclass = hlist

| battles =
* [[Anglo-French Wars]]
* [[Italian Wars]]
* [[Thirty Years' War]]
* [[Nine Years' War]]
* [[War of Spanish Succession]]
* [[War of Austrian Succession]]
* [[French Revolutionary Wars]]
* [[Quasi-War]]
* [[Napoleonic Wars]]
* [[Second Italian War of Independence]]
* [[World War I]]
}}

==Middle Ages==
[[File:Peter Paul Rubens 120b.jpg|thumb|upright|Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, whose expansion of the Holy Roman Empire through strategic marriage heightened Franco-Habsburg tension.]]
During the late Middle Ages, the Habsburgs, whose dominions consisted principally of Austria, and later Spain, sought coalitions, principally through marriage, a policy which had the added benefit of gaining territory through marital inheritance. Territorial expansion in this way allowed the Habsburgs to gain territories throughout [[Europe]]<ref>1. R. J. W. Evans, ''The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1550-1700: An Interpretation'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979), p. 93.</ref> such as the [[Spanish Road]], [[Burgundy]], [[Milan]] and the [[Low Countries]]. This practice was described by Hungarian king [[Matthias Corvinus]]' quote: ''Bella gerant alii, tu felix Austria, nube!'' – "Let others wage war. You, happy Austria, marry!"<ref>''The World of The Hapsburgs''. (2011). "Tu felix Austria nube 1430–1570". Retrieved from:
http://www.habsburger.net/en/stories/tu-felix-austria-nube</ref> Following this tradition, [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Prince Maximilian]] married [[Mary of Burgundy|Mary]], the last [[House of Valois|Valois]] ruler of [[Duchy of Burgundy|Burgundy]] and the Netherlands, in 1477. Nineteen years later, their son [[Philip I of Castile|Philip the Handsome]] married [[Joanna of Castile]], who became heir to the Spanish thrones. Joanna and Philip's son, [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles]], united all of these possessions in 1519. France had the Habsburgs on three sides as its neighbor, with Spain to the south, the Netherlands to the north, and the [[Franche-Comté]] to the east.

==Early modern period==

===Italian Wars===
{{Main|Italian Wars}}
The [[Italian Wars]] were a long series of wars fought between 1494 and 1559 in Italy during the [[Renaissance]]. The Italian peninsula, economically advanced but politically divided between several states, became the main battleground for European supremacy. The conflicts involved the major powers of Italy and Europe, in a series of events that followed the end of the 40-years long [[Peace of Lodi]] agreed in 1454 with the formation of an [[Italic League]].

The collapse of the alliance in the 1490s left Italy open to the ambitions of [[Charles VIII of France]], who invaded the [[Kingdom of Naples]] in 1494 on the ground of a dynastic claim. The French were however forced to leave Naples after the [[Republic of Venice]] formed an alliance with [[Habsburg Austria]] and [[Spain]].

An important consequence of the [[League of Venice]] was the political marriage arranged by [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor]] for the son he had with [[Mary of Burgundy]]: [[Philip I of Castile|Philip the Handsome]] married [[Joanna of Castile|Joanna the Mad]] (daughter of [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] and [[Isabella I of Castile|Isabella of Castile]]) to reinforce the anti-French alliance between [[Austria]] and [[Spain]]. The son of Philip and Joanna would become [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor]] in 1519 succeeding Maximilian and controlling an Habsburg empire inclusive of [[Crown of Castile|Castile]], [[Crown of Aragon|Aragon]], [[Austria]], and the [[Burgundian Netherlands]], thus encircling France.

The [[Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis]](1559), which put an end to the Italian Wars, had mixed results: France renounced its claims to territories in Italy, but gained certain other territories, including the [[Pale of Calais]] and the [[Three Bishoprics]]. In addition, even if the Habsburgs maintained a position of primacy, France managed to change the European balance of power by forcing Charles V to abdicate during the ''Eighth Italian War'' and divide the Habsburg Empire between Austria and Spain.


===Thirty Years' War===
===Thirty Years' War===
{{Main|Thirty Years' War}}
{{Main|Thirty Years' War}}
[[File:Europe map 1648.PNG|thumb|Europe after the [[Peace of Westphalia]], 1648]]
Even though the realm of Charles V was divided between the German and the Spanish branches of his dynasty in 1556, most of the territories of the Burgundian Inheritance, including Flanders, stayed with the Spanish crown, whereas the German and North Italian regions remained with the Austrian branch of the dynasty within the Holy Roman Empire. France regarded the encirclement by the Habsburg powers as a permanent threat, and intervened in several years, to prevent an Austrian-Spanish dominance in Europe.


Even though the realm of Charles V was divided between the German and the Spanish branches of his dynasty in 1556, most of the territories of the [[Burgundian inheritance in the Low Countries|Burgundian Inheritance]], including the [[Spanish Netherlands|Netherlands]], stayed with the Spanish crown, whereas the German regions remained with the Austrian branch of the dynasty within the Holy Roman Empire. France regarded the encirclement by the Habsburg powers as a permanent threat, and intervened in several years, to prevent Austro-Spanish domination in Europe. For example, in 1609, the death of [[John William, Duke of Jülich-Cleves-Berg]], led a [[War of the Jülich Succession|succession dispute]]. When [[Leopold V, Archduke of Austria|Archduke Leopold V]] was sent by Emperor [[Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor|Rudolf II]] to occupy [[Jülich]] in the name of the Emperor, French king [[Henry IV of France|Henry IV]] intervened to prevent the Habsburgs from gaining more influence by supporting the [[Protestant Union]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Anderson |first=Alison D. |title=On the verge of war: international relations and the Jülich-Kleve succession crises (1609-1614) |date=1999 |publisher=Humanities Press |isbn=978-0-391-04092-2 |series=Studies in Central European histories |location=Boston}}</ref> France also supported the protestant [[Dutch Republic]] in their [[Eighty Years' War|independence struggle]] against Habsburg Spain.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Gemeentearchief |first1=Amsterdam (Netherlands) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=708uAAAAYAAJ&q=alliantie+engeland+frankrijk+nederland+1596 |title=Inventaris van het Amsterdamsche Archief |last2=Scheltema |first2=Pieter |date=1866 |publisher=Stads-Drukkerij |language=nl}}</ref>
The [[Thirty Years' War]] began in 1618 as a result of religious intolerance and insurrection between the [[Catholicism|Roman Catholics]] and Protestants in [[Bohemia]], a region belonging to Austria. Eventually, the conflict spread from an intrastate rebellion into a full-scale war between two religious groups: the Protestant North [[Germany|German]] states (which later included Denmark and [[Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years' War|Sweden]]); and the Catholic powers with the Holy Alliance of Austria, Spain and the Papal States. France later joined the conflict, but despite the fact its national religion was Catholicism, it fought on the Protestant side for the political reason of attempting to prevent the Habsburgs from achieving total hegemony over the German lands.<ref>[[Richard Bonney]]. (2010). ''The Thirty Years' War: 1618 - 1648''. (London, Britain: Osprey Publishing). p. 7.</ref>


The [[Thirty Years' War]] began in 1618 as a result of conflict between the Protestant estates in [[Bohemia]] and their [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] monarch [[Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor|Ferdinand II]], who was heir to Austria. Ferdinand II was deposed as [[Kingdom of Bohemia|King of Bohemia]] and replaced by [[Frederick V of the Palatinate]]. Eventually, the conflict spread from an intrastate rebellion into a full-scale war between two religious groups: the Protestant North [[Germany|German]] states (which later included Denmark and [[Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years' War|Sweden]]); and the Catholic powers of the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs as well as the German [[Catholic League (German)|Catholic League]]. France later joined the conflict, and like in the Jülich War and the 80 Years War, fought on the side of the Protestants in spite of the fact that France's national religion was Catholicism. This was for the political reason of attempting to prevent the Habsburgs from achieving total hegemony over the German lands.<ref>[[Richard Bonney]]. (2010). ''The Thirty Years' War: 1618 – 1648''. (London, Britain: Osprey Publishing). p. 7.</ref> French minister, [[Cardinal Richelieu]], was the architect of much of France's foreign policy during this time.
After 1648, France became predominant in central Europe. Following the peace treaty of [[Peace of Münster|Munster]] in 1648 and, more particularly, the [[Treaty of the Pyrenees]] in 1659, Spain's power began its slow decline in what proved to be the last decades of a degenerating Habsburg regime there. After their victory over the Turks in the second Turkish [[Battle of Vienna|siege]] of [[Vienna]] in 1683, the Austrian Habsburgs focused less and less on their conflicts with the [[Ottoman Empire]] in the [[Balkans]]. After the death of the last Spanish Habsburg [[Charles II of Spain|Charles II]] in 1700, King [[Louis XIV of France]] claimed the Spanish throne for his grandson [[Philip V of Spain|Philip]]. This caused the [[War of the Spanish Succession]]. In the [[treaty of Utrecht]], Louis succeeded in installing the [[Bourbon dynasty]] in a Spain that was by now a second-rank power, and in bringing the Habsburg encirclement of France to an end.
[[File:Rocroi, el último tercio, por Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau.jpg|thumb|''Roicroi, the last tercio'', portraying infantry of a battered Spanish ''[[tercio]]'' at the 1643 [[Battle of Rocroi]]]]
Corresponding to the Thirty Years' War was the [[War of the Mantuan Succession]], which erupted in 1628. France backed the [[Charles I Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua|Duke of Nevers]], and the Habsburgs backed the [[Ferrante II Gonzaga, Duke of Guastalla|Duke of Guastalla]].<ref>DAVID PARROTT, The Mantuan Succession, 1627–31: A Sovereignty Dispute in Early Modern Europe, ''The English Historical Review'', Volume CXII, Issue 445, February 1997, Pages 20–65, <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CXII.445.20</nowiki></ref> French success in this war, and the subsequent installation of Nevers as [[List of rulers of Mantua|Duke of Mantua]], weakened the Habsburg position in Italy.


After 1648, France became predominant in central Europe. Following the peace treaty of [[Peace of Münster|Munster]] in 1648 and, more particularly, the [[Treaty of the Pyrenees]] in 1659, Spain's power began its slow decline in what proved to be the last decades of a degenerating Habsburg regime there. After their victory over the Turks in the second Turkish [[Battle of Vienna|siege]] of [[Vienna]] in 1683, the Austrian Habsburgs focused less and less on their conflicts with the [[Ottoman Empire]] in the [[Balkans]].<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Lynn |first=John A. |title=The wars of Louis XIV, 1667-1714 |date=1999 |publisher=Longman |isbn=978-0-582-05628-2 |series=Modern wars in perspective |location=London}}</ref>
After two centuries, the rivalry had lost its original cause. After the potent decline of Spain, the 18th Century witnessed a major restructuring in European politics. Austria, the dominant power in Central Europe, now had to face the rising power of [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]] in the north. Russia finally grew to become a recognized great power after its success against Sweden. And last, Britain's ever-growing might in Europe and America finally challenged the hegemony that France had upheld for years. Nevertheless, the two powers remained hostile for another 40 years.


===Nine Years' War ===
===Nine Years' War ===
{{Main|Nine Years' War}}The Nine Years' War (1688–1697), often called the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg<ref>Older texts may refer to the war as the '''War of the Palatine Succession''', the '''War of the English Succession''', or in North American historiography as '''King William's War'''. This varying nomenclature reflects the fact that contemporaries – as well as later historians – viewed the general conflict from particular national or dynastic viewpoints.</ref> – was a conflict between [[Louis XIV of France]] and a European coalition of Austria, the Holy Roman Empire, the Dutch Republic, Spain, England and Savoy. It was fought in Europe and the surrounding seas, North America and in India. It is sometimes considered the first [[global war]]. The conflict encompassed the [[Williamite war in Ireland]] and [[Jacobite risings]] in Scotland, where [[William III of England|William III]] and [[James II of England|James II]] struggled for control of England and Ireland, and a campaign in colonial North America between French and English settlers and their respective Indigenous allies, today called [[King William's War]] by Americans.
{{Main|Nine Years' War}}
The ''[[Nine Years' War]]'' 1688–1697, often called the '''War of the Grand Alliance''' or the '''War of the League of Augsburg'''<ref>Older texts may refer to the war as the '''War of the Palatine Succession''', the '''War of the English Succession''', or in North American historiography as '''King William's War'''. This varying nomenclature reflects the fact that contemporaries – as well as later historians – viewed the general conflict from particular national or dynastic viewpoints.</ref> – was a conflict between [[Louis XIV of France]] and a European coalition of Austria, the Holy Roman Empire, the Dutch Republic, Spain, England and Savoy. It was fought in Europe and the surrounding seas, North America and in India. It is sometimes considered the first [[global war]]. The conflict encompassed the [[Williamite war in Ireland]] and [[Jacobite risings]] in Scotland, where [[William III of England|William III]] and [[James II of England|James II]] struggled for control of England and Ireland, and a campaign in colonial North America between French and English settlers and their respective Indigenous allies, today called '''[[King William's War]]''' by Americans.


[[File:Europe c. 1700.png|thumb|Map of European borders as they stood after the [[Treaty of Ryswick]] and just prior to Louis XIV's last great war, the [[War of the Spanish Succession]].]]
Louis XIV had emerged from the [[Franco-Dutch War]] in 1678 as the most powerful monarch in Europe, an [[Absolute monarchy|absolute]] ruler who had won numerous military victories. Using a combination of aggression, annexation, and quasi-legal means, Louis set about extending his gains to stabilize and strengthen France's frontiers, culminating in the brief [[War of the Reunions]] (1683–84). The [[Truce of Ratisbon]] guaranteed France's new borders for twenty years, but Louis's subsequent actions – notably his [[Edict of Fontainebleau]] (the revocation of the Edict of Nantes) in 1685 – led to the deterioration of his military and political dominance. Louis's decision to cross the [[Rhine]] in September 1688 was designed to extend his influence and pressure the [[Holy Roman Empire]] into accepting his territorial and dynastic claims. [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I]] and the German princes resolved to resist, and when the [[States General of the Netherlands|States General]] and William III brought the Dutch and the English into the war against France, the French king faced a powerful coalition aimed at curtailing his ambitions.
Louis XIV had emerged from the [[Franco-Dutch War]] in 1678 as the most powerful monarch in Europe, an [[Absolute monarchy|absolute]] ruler who had won numerous military victories. Using a combination of aggression, annexation, and quasi-legal means, Louis set about extending his gains to stabilize and strengthen France's frontiers, culminating in the brief [[War of the Reunions]] (1683–84). The [[Truce of Ratisbon]] guaranteed France's new borders for twenty years, but Louis's subsequent actions – notably his [[Edict of Fontainebleau]] (the revocation of the Edict of Nantes) in 1685 – led to the deterioration of his military and political dominance. Louis's decision to cross the [[Rhine]] in September 1688 was designed to extend his influence and pressure the [[Holy Roman Empire]] into accepting his territorial and dynastic claims. [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I]] and the German princes resolved to resist, and when the [[States General of the Netherlands|States General]] and William III brought the Dutch and the English into the war against France, the French king faced a powerful coalition aimed at curtailing his ambitions.<ref name=":1" />


The main fighting took place around France's borders in the [[Spanish Netherlands]], the [[Rhineland]], the [[Duchy of Savoy]] and [[Catalonia]]. The fighting generally favoured France's armies, but by 1696 his country was in the grip of an economic crisis. The Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic) were also financially exhausted, and when Savoy defected from the Alliance, all parties were keen to negotiate a settlement. By the terms of the [[Treaty of Ryswick]] (1697) France retained the whole of [[Alsace]] but was forced to return [[Lorraine (duchy)|Lorraine]] to its ruler and give up any gains on the right bank of the Rhine. Louis also accepted William III as the rightful king of England, while the Dutch acquired a [[barrier fortress]] system in the Spanish Netherlands to help secure their borders. With the ailing and childless [[Charles II of Spain]] approaching his end, a new conflict over the inheritance of the [[Spanish Empire]] embroiled Louis and the Grand Alliance in the [[War of the Spanish Succession]].
The main fighting took place around France's borders in the [[Spanish Netherlands]], the [[Rhineland]], the [[Duchy of Savoy]] and [[Catalonia]]. The fighting generally favoured France's armies, but by 1696 his country was in the grip of an economic crisis. The Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic) were also financially exhausted, and when Savoy defected from the Alliance, all parties were keen to negotiate a settlement. By the terms of the [[Treaty of Ryswick]] (1697) France retained the whole of [[Alsace]] but was forced to return [[Lorraine (duchy)|Lorraine]] to its ruler and give up any gains on the right bank of the Rhine. Louis also accepted William III as the rightful king of England, while the Dutch acquired a [[barrier fortress]] system in the Spanish Netherlands to help secure their borders.<ref name=":1" />


=== War of Spanish Succession ===
==Diplomatic Revolution==
{{Main|Diplomatic Revolution}}
{{Main|War of the Spanish Succession}}
[[File:John Wootton - The Battle of Blenheim on the 13th August 1704 c1743 (see 1 - (MeisterDrucke-281242).jpg|thumb|Clash between Anglo-Austrian and French-Bavarian troops in the [[Battle of Blenheim]], 1704]]
With the death of the childless [[Charles II of Spain]] in 1700, King [[Louis XIV of France]] claimed the Spanish throne for his grandson [[Philip V of Spain|Philip V]], which caused the War of the Spanish Succession. In the [[treaty of Utrecht]], Louis succeeded in installing the [[Bourbon dynasty]] in a Spain that was by now a second-rank power, and in bringing the Habsburg encirclement of France to an end.

After two centuries, the rivalry had lost its original cause. After the potent decline of Spain, the 18th Century witnessed a major restructuring in European politics. Austria, the dominant power in Central Europe, now had to face the rising power of [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]] in the north. [[Russian Empire|Russia]] finally grew to become a recognized great power after its success against [[Swedish Empire|Sweden]] in the [[Great Northern War]]. And last, Britain's ever-growing might in Europe and America finally challenged the hegemony that France had upheld for years. Nevertheless, the two powers remained hostile for several decades.


==Diplomatic Revolution==
{{Main|Diplomatic Revolution}}{{Unreferenced section|date=October 2021}}
===Franco-Austrian Alliance===
===Franco-Austrian Alliance===
{{Main|Franco-Austrian Alliance}}
{{Main|Franco-Austrian Alliance}}
[[File:Wedding Supper - Martin van Meytens - Google Cultural Institute.jpg|thumb|190px|[[Princess Isabella of Parma]] marries [[Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Joseph of Austria]] to strengthen the [[Franco-Austrian Alliance]], 5 October 1760]]
A significant reversal in French-Habsburg relations known as the [[Diplomatic Revolution]], occurred in 1756. In a move masterminded by Austrian diplomat [[Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg|Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz]],<ref>Franz A.J. Szabo, "Prince Kaunitz and the Balance of Power." ''International History Review'' 1#3 (1979): 399–408. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40105021 in JSTOR]</ref> France and Austria [[Franco-Austrian Alliance|became allies]] for the first time in over two hundred years. The alliance was sealed with the marriage of Austrian princess [[Marie Antoinette]] to the [[Dauphin of France|French Dauphin]], who later became King [[Louis XVI]]. The alliance was formalised with the signing of the [[Treaty of Versailles (1756)|First Treaty of Versailles]] in 1756.
A significant reversal in French–Habsburg relations known as the Diplomatic Revolution, occurred in 1756. In a move masterminded by Austrian diplomat [[Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg|Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz]],<ref>Franz A.J. Szabo, "Prince Kaunitz and the Balance of Power." ''International History Review'' 1#3 (1979): 399–408. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40105021 in JSTOR]</ref> France and Austria [[Franco-Austrian Alliance|became allies]] for the first time in over two hundred years. The alliance was sealed with the marriage of Austrian princess [[Marie Antoinette]] to the [[Dauphin of France]], who later became King [[Louis XVI]]. The alliance was formalised with the signing of the [[Treaty of Versailles (1756)|First Treaty of Versailles]] in 1756.

The diplomatic change was triggered by a separation of interests between Austria and Britain. The [[Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748)|Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle]] which had concluded the [[War of the Austrian Succession]] in 1748 had left [[Maria Theresa|Maria Theresa of Austria]] dissatisfied with the [[Anglo-Austrian Alliance|British alliance]]. Despite having successfully defended her claim to the Habsburg throne and had her husband, [[Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor|Francis Stephen]], crowned Emperor in 1745, she had been forced to relinquish valuable territory in the process. Under British diplomatic pressure, Maria Theresa had given up most of [[Lombardy]] and occupied [[Bavaria]], as well as ceding [[Parma]] to Spain and the [[House of Bourbon-Parma|house of Bourbon]]. Finally, the valuable Bohemian crown land of [[Silesia]] had been given up to [[Frederick II of Prussia|Frederick the Great]], who had occupied it during the war. That acquisition had further advanced Prussia as a great European power, which now posed an increasing threat to Austria's central European position, and the growth of Prussia was welcomed by the British, who saw it as a means of balancing French power and reducing French influence in Germany, which might otherwise have grown in response to Austria's weakness. Conversely, the French, determined to impede further Prussian progress, were now willing to support Austria whose force had grown less intimidating.


===Seven Years' War===
===Seven Years' War===
{{Main|Seven Years' War}}
{{Main|Seven Years' War}}
[[File:Europe 1748-1766 en.png|thumb|Europe in the years after the [[Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748)|Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle]] in 1748]]
Several months after the signing of the treaty, the [[Seven Years' War]], which involved [[Prussia]], Great Britain, [[Russia]], France, and Austria. France and Austria expanded upon the First Treaty with [[Treaty of Versailles (1757)|a further treaty concluded in 1757]] and, along with Russia, fought against [[Anglo-Prussian alliance (1756)|an alliance of Great Britain and Prussia]], which was founded on the Westminster Convention of 1756.


Several months after the signing of the treaty, the Seven Years' War, which involved [[Prussia]], Great Britain, [[Russia]], France, and Austria, broke out. France and Austria expanded upon the First Treaty with [[Treaty of Versailles (1757)|a further treaty concluded in 1757]] and, along with Russia, fought against [[Anglo-Prussian alliance (1756)|an alliance of Great Britain and Prussia]], which was founded on the Westminster Convention of 1756.
The diplomatic change was triggered by a separation of interests between Austria and Britain. The [[Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748)|Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle]] which had concluded the [[War of the Austrian Succession]] in 1748 had left [[Maria Theresa|Maria Theresa of Austria]] dissatisfied with the [[Anglo-Austrian Alliance|British alliance]]. Despite having successfully defended her claim to the Habsburg throne and had her husband, [[Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor|Francis Stephen]], crowned Emperor in 1745, she had been forced to relinquish valuable territory in the process. Under British diplomatic pressure, Maria Theresa had given up most of [[Lombardy]] and occupied [[Bavaria]], as well as ceding [[Parma]] to Spain and the [[House of Bourbon-Parma|house of Bourbon]]. Finally, the valuable Bohemian crown land of [[Silesia]] had been given up to [[Frederick II of Prussia|Frederick the Great]], who had occupied it during the war. That acquisition had further advanced Prussia as a great European power, which now posed an increasing threat to Austria's central European position, and the growth of Prussia was welcomed by the British, who saw it as a means of balancing French power and reducing French influence in Germany, which might otherwise have grown in response to Austria's weakness. Conversely, the French, determined to impede further Prussian progress, were now willing to support Austria whose force had grown less intimidating.


Despite early successes in the war, the Franco-Austrian alliance did not prevail. The war ended in a victory for Britain and Prussia, aided by the [[miracle of the House of Brandenburg]] and Britain's control of the seas, and both France and Austria were left in weakened positions. The [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]], which ended the war in 1763, established France's withdrawal from the American continent and consolidated Prussian gains in Europe to Austria's detriment.
Despite early successes in the war, the Franco-Austrian alliance did not prevail. The war ended in a victory for Britain and Prussia, aided by the [[miracle of the House of Brandenburg]] and Britain's control of the seas, and both France and Austria were left in weakened positions. The [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]], which ended the war in 1763, established France's withdrawal from the American continent and consolidated Prussian gains in Europe to Austria's detriment.


==Late modern period==
==Late modern period==
===Coalition Wars===
===French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars===
[[File:Bivouac on the Eve of the Battle of Austerlitz, 1st December 1805.PNG|thumb|left|The Battle of Austerlitz, in which Habsburg power was crushed by the French forces under [[Napoleon]].]]
{{Main|Coalition Wars}}
{{Main|Coalition Wars}}
[[File:Bivouac on the Eve of the Battle of Austerlitz, 1st December 1805.PNG|thumb|left|The Battle of Austerlitz, in which Habsburg power was crushed by the French forces under [[Napoleon]].]]
The [[French Revolution]] was opposed by the Habsburgs in Austria, who sought to destroy the [[French First Republic|Revolutionary Republic]] with assistance from several coalitions of monarchical nations, including [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]] and several states within the Holy Roman Empire. According to Chris McNab:<ref>Chris McNab. (2011). ''Armies of the Napoleonic Wars''. (London, Great Britain: Oxford Publishing). p. 168.</ref> "The problems faced by the Austrian Emperor were in large part due to past Habsburg successes. Primarily through marriages, they had acquired many provinces with varied ethnic and racial populations – therefore, no universal language existed in the army." Due to difficulties such as this, the Austrian Army suffered defeats during the [[French Revolutionary Wars|French Revolutionary]] and the [[Napoleonic Wars]]. After the [[Battle of Austerlitz]] on 2 December 1805 during the [[War of the Third Coalition]], the ability of the Habsburgs to govern the Holy Roman Empire was dramatically weakened. This led to the [[dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire]], which was divided between France and the newly-formed [[Austrian Empire]], leading to the formation of the [[Confederation of the Rhine]]. The Confederation was dissolved following Napoleon's defeat at the hands of the [[War of the Sixth Coalition|Sixth Coalition]], which included Austria. Fighting between the two Empires resumed during the [[Hundred Days]], which saw the seventh and final coalition emerge victorious over the French and an end to the Coalition Wars

The [[French Revolution]] was opposed by the Habsburgs in Austria, who sought to destroy the [[French First Republic|Revolutionary Republic]] with assistance from several coalitions of monarchical nations, including [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]] and several states within the Holy Roman Empire. According to Chris McNab: "The problems faced by the Austrian Emperor were in large part due to past Habsburg successes. Primarily through marriages, they had acquired many provinces with varied ethnic and racial populations – therefore, no universal language existed in the army."<ref>Chris McNab. (2011). ''Armies of the Napoleonic Wars''. (London, Great Britain: Oxford Publishing). p. 168.</ref> Due to difficulties such as this, the Austrian Army suffered defeats during the [[French Revolutionary Wars|French Revolutionary]] and the [[Napoleonic Wars]]. After the [[Battle of Austerlitz]] on 2 December 1805 during the [[War of the Third Coalition]], the ability of the Habsburgs to govern the Holy Roman Empire was dramatically weakened. This led to the [[dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire]], which was divided between France and the newly formed [[Austrian Empire]], leading to the formation of the [[Confederation of the Rhine]]. The Confederation was dissolved following Napoleon's defeat at the hands of the [[War of the Sixth Coalition|Sixth Coalition]], which included Austria. Fighting between the two Empires resumed during the [[Hundred Days]], which saw the seventh and final coalition emerge victorious over the French and an end to the Coalition Wars.


===Franco-Austrian War===
===Franco-Austrian War===
{{Main|Second Italian War of Independence}}
{{Main|Second Italian War of Independence}}
[[File:Yvon Bataille de Solferino Compiegne.jpg|thumb|[[Napoleon III]] with the French forces at the [[Battle of Solferino]], which secured the Austrian withdrawal from Italy.]]
The period immediately following the [[Bourbon Restoration in France|Bourbon Restoration]] was one of peace between France and Habsburg Austria with the two monarchies signing the [[Quintuple Alliance]] in 1818. However, this alliance was dissolved following the death of Emperor [[Alexander I of Russia]] in 1825 and France's subsequent [[July Revolution|liberal overthrow of the Bourbon monarchy]] in 1830.

Hostilities between the two Empires resumed during the [[Second Italian War of Independence|Franco-Austrian War]] in 1859, Franco-[[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]]n victory in which resulted in a loss of control of [[Lombardy]] for Austria.
The period immediately following the [[Bourbon Restoration in France|Bourbon Restoration]] was one of peace between France and Austria, as the two monarchies participated in the [[Quintuple Alliance]] in 1818. However, this alliance was dissolved following the death of Emperor [[Alexander I of Russia]] in 1825 and France's subsequent [[July Revolution]] of 1830, in which the Bourbon monarchy was overthrown. Hostilities between the two nations resumed during the [[Second Italian War of Independence|Franco-Austrian War]] in 1859, Franco-[[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]]n victory which resulted in the gains of [[Duchy of Savoy|Savoy]] and [[County of Nice|Nice]] for France, and the loss of [[Lombardy]] for Austria.


===World War I===
===World War I===
{{Main|World War I}}
{{Main|World War I}}

In the aftermath of the 1866 [[Austro-Prussian War]], the [[Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867|Compromise of 1867]] resulted in the creation of [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian Empire]] under the Habsburg Emperor. In 1879, Austria-Hungary entered into the [[Dual Alliance (1879)|Dual Alliance]] with the [[German Empire]]. In response, France entered into alliances [[Franco-Russian Alliance|with Russia]] and [[Entente Cordiale|with the United Kingdom]] in 1894 and 1904 respectively. On 12 August 1914, the [[French Third Republic]] declared war on Austria-Hungary in response to Austria's declarations against Serbia and Russia. A [[Italian front (World War I)|western front against Austria-Hungary]] was opened upon its [[Triple Alliance (1882)|former ally]], the [[Kingdom of Italy]]'s entry into the war in 1915. Austro-Hungarian defeat resulted in it ceding [[Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol|Southern Tyrol]] to Italy through the [[Armistice of Villa Giusti]] signed 3 November 1918. At the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918]], [[Charles I of Austria]] renounced participation in state affairs and the Habsburg Monarchy was officially brought to an end with the passing of the [[Habsburg Law]] by the [[Republic of German-Austria|Austria]]n Constitutional Assembly on 3 April 1919.
In the aftermath of the 1866 [[Austro-Prussian War]], the [[Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867|Compromise of 1867]] resulted in the creation of [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian Empire]] under the Habsburg Emperor. In 1879, Austria-Hungary entered into the [[Dual Alliance (1879)|Dual Alliance]] with the [[German Empire]]. In response, France entered into alliances [[Franco-Russian Alliance|with Russia]] and [[Entente Cordiale|with the United Kingdom]] in 1894 and 1904 respectively. On 12 August 1914, the [[French Third Republic]] declared war on Austria-Hungary in response to Austria's declarations against Serbia and Russia. A [[Italian front (World War I)|western front against Austria-Hungary]] was opened upon its [[Triple Alliance (1882)|former ally]], the [[Kingdom of Italy]]'s entry into the war in 1915. Austro-Hungarian defeat resulted in it ceding [[Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol|Southern Tyrol]] to Italy through the [[Armistice of Villa Giusti]] signed 3 November 1918. At the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918]], [[Charles I of Austria]] renounced participation in state affairs and the Habsburg Monarchy was officially brought to an end with the passing of the [[Habsburg Law]] by the [[Republic of German-Austria|Austria]]n Constitutional Assembly on 3 April 1919. France would play a major role in the creation of the postwar independent [[First Austrian Republic]] by insisting on forbidding ''[[Anschluss]]'' – or union with the [[Weimar Republic]] –in the [[Treaty of Versailles|Treaties of Versailles]] and [[Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919)|Saint-Germain-en-Laye]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Steiner|first=Zara|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86068902|title=The lights that failed : European international history, 1919–1933|date=2005|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-151881-2|location=Oxford|oclc=86068902}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Anglo-French Wars]]
* [[Anglo-French Wars]]
* [[Franco-Spanish War (disambiguation)|Franco-Spanish War]]
* [[Austria–France relations]]
* [[Austria–France relations]]
* [[French–German enmity]]
* [[French–German enmity]]
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[[Category:16th century in the Habsburg monarchy]]
[[Category:17th century in the Habsburg Monarchy]]
[[Category:17th century in the Habsburg monarchy]]
[[Category:18th century in the Habsburg Monarchy]]
[[Category:18th century in the Habsburg monarchy]]
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[[Category:16th century in Spain]]
[[Category:17th century in Spain]]
[[Category:17th century in Spain]]

Latest revision as of 11:56, 8 December 2024

The conflicts between Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Francis I of France initiated the French-Habsburg rivalry

The term French–Habsburg rivalry (French: Rivalité franco-habsbourgeoise; German: Habsburgisch-französischer Gegensatz) describes the rivalry between France and the House of Habsburg. The Habsburgs headed an expansive and evolving empire that included, at various times, the Holy Roman Empire, the Spanish Empire, Austria, Bohemia and Hungary from the Diet of Augsburg in the High Middle Ages until the dissolution of the monarchy following World War I in the late modern period.

In addition to holding the Austrian hereditary lands, the Habsburg dynasty ruled the Low Countries (1482–1794), Spain (1504–1700) and the Holy Roman Empire (1438–1806). All these lands were in personal union under Emperor Charles V. The expansion of the Habsburgs into western Europe increasingly led to border tensions with the Kingdom of France, which found itself encircled by Habsburg territory. The subsequent rivalry between the two powers became a cause for several conflicts. These include parts of the Anglo-French Wars (1066–1815), the War of the Burgundian Succession (1477–1482), the Italian Wars (1494–1559), the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648), the Nine Years' War (1688–1697), and the succession wars of Jülich (1609–1614), Mantua (1628–1631), Spain (1700–1713), Poland (1733–1736) and Austria (1740–1748).

Middle Ages

[edit]

During the late Middle Ages, the Habsburgs, whose dominions consisted principally of Austria, and later Spain, sought alliances, principally through marriage, a policy which had the added benefit of gaining territory through marital inheritance. Territorial expansion in this way allowed the Habsburgs to gain territories throughout Europe[1] such as the Spanish Road, Burgundy, Milan and the Low Countries. This practice was described by Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus' quote: Bella gerant alii, tu felix Austria, nube! – "Let others wage war. You, happy Austria, marry!"[2]

Following this tradition, Archduke Maximilian married Mary, the last Valois ruler of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands, in 1477. Nineteen years later, their son Philip the Handsome married Joanna of Castile, who became heir to the Spanish thrones. Joanna and Philip's son, Charles, united all of these possessions in 1519. France had the Habsburgs on three sides as its neighbor, with Spain to the south, the Netherlands to the north, and the Franche-Comté to the east.

Early modern period

[edit]
Iberian Union of Spain and Portugal between 1580 and 1640

Italian Wars

[edit]

The Italian Wars were a long series of wars fought between 1494 and 1559 in Italy during the Renaissance. The Italian peninsula, economically advanced but politically divided between several states, became the main battleground for European supremacy. The conflicts involved the major powers of Italy and Europe, in a series of events that followed the end of the 40-year long Peace of Lodi agreed in 1454 with the formation of an Italic League.[3]

The collapse of the alliance in the 1490s left Italy open to the ambitions of Charles VIII of France, who invaded the Kingdom of Naples in 1494 on the ground of a dynastic claim. The French were however forced to leave Naples after the Republic of Venice formed an alliance with Habsburg Austria and Spain.[3]

Detail of a tapestry depicting the Battle of Pavia, woven from a cartoon by Bernard van Orley (c. 1531)

An important consequence of the League of Venice was the political marriage arranged by Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor for his son, through Mary of Burgundy, Philip the Handsome who married Joanna the Mad (daughter of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella of Castile) to reinforce the anti-French alliance between Austria and Spain. The son of Philip and Joanna would become Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor in 1519 succeeding Maximilian and controlling an Habsburg empire inclusive of Castile, Aragon, Austria, and the Burgundian Netherlands, thus encircling France.

The Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis (1559), which put an end to the Italian Wars, had mixed results: France renounced its claims to territories in Italy, but gained certain other territories, including the Pale of Calais and the Three Bishoprics.[4]

The Italian Wars also coincide with the Spanish conquest of Iberian Navarre, where France supported the King of Navarre (from the French House of Albret) against the Spanish Habsburgs. The result of this was the Spanish conquest of much Navarre south of the Pyrenees, but the French kept Navarre north of the Pyrenees. The Kingdom of Navarre would later be inherited by the Bourbons, and later united with France through personal union during the ascension of Henry IV.

French Wars of Religion

[edit]

During the French Wars of Religion, France was split into several factions. Spain supported the French Catholics. In the Treaty of Joinville, Spain agreed to provide monetary and military support to the Catholic League. When the Protestant King of Navarre laid siege to Paris, Spanish commander, the Duke of Parma, helped relieve the city on behalf of the Catholics. Spain also occupied territory in Brittany during the Brittany Campaign. When the King of Navarre became King of France (as Henry IV), he declared war on Spain. This war was ended with the Peace of Vervins.

Thirty Years' War

[edit]
Europe after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648

Even though the realm of Charles V was divided between the German and the Spanish branches of his dynasty in 1556, most of the territories of the Burgundian Inheritance, including the Netherlands, stayed with the Spanish crown, whereas the German regions remained with the Austrian branch of the dynasty within the Holy Roman Empire. France regarded the encirclement by the Habsburg powers as a permanent threat, and intervened in several years, to prevent Austro-Spanish domination in Europe. For example, in 1609, the death of John William, Duke of Jülich-Cleves-Berg, led a succession dispute. When Archduke Leopold V was sent by Emperor Rudolf II to occupy Jülich in the name of the Emperor, French king Henry IV intervened to prevent the Habsburgs from gaining more influence by supporting the Protestant Union.[5] France also supported the protestant Dutch Republic in their independence struggle against Habsburg Spain.[6]

The Thirty Years' War began in 1618 as a result of conflict between the Protestant estates in Bohemia and their Catholic monarch Ferdinand II, who was heir to Austria. Ferdinand II was deposed as King of Bohemia and replaced by Frederick V of the Palatinate. Eventually, the conflict spread from an intrastate rebellion into a full-scale war between two religious groups: the Protestant North German states (which later included Denmark and Sweden); and the Catholic powers of the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs as well as the German Catholic League. France later joined the conflict, and like in the Jülich War and the 80 Years War, fought on the side of the Protestants in spite of the fact that France's national religion was Catholicism. This was for the political reason of attempting to prevent the Habsburgs from achieving total hegemony over the German lands.[7] French minister, Cardinal Richelieu, was the architect of much of France's foreign policy during this time.

Roicroi, the last tercio, portraying infantry of a battered Spanish tercio at the 1643 Battle of Rocroi

Corresponding to the Thirty Years' War was the War of the Mantuan Succession, which erupted in 1628. France backed the Duke of Nevers, and the Habsburgs backed the Duke of Guastalla.[8] French success in this war, and the subsequent installation of Nevers as Duke of Mantua, weakened the Habsburg position in Italy.

After 1648, France became predominant in central Europe. Following the peace treaty of Munster in 1648 and, more particularly, the Treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659, Spain's power began its slow decline in what proved to be the last decades of a degenerating Habsburg regime there. After their victory over the Turks in the second Turkish siege of Vienna in 1683, the Austrian Habsburgs focused less and less on their conflicts with the Ottoman Empire in the Balkans.[9]

Nine Years' War

[edit]

The Nine Years' War (1688–1697), often called the War of the Grand Alliance or the War of the League of Augsburg[10] – was a conflict between Louis XIV of France and a European coalition of Austria, the Holy Roman Empire, the Dutch Republic, Spain, England and Savoy. It was fought in Europe and the surrounding seas, North America and in India. It is sometimes considered the first global war. The conflict encompassed the Williamite war in Ireland and Jacobite risings in Scotland, where William III and James II struggled for control of England and Ireland, and a campaign in colonial North America between French and English settlers and their respective Indigenous allies, today called King William's War by Americans.

Map of European borders as they stood after the Treaty of Ryswick and just prior to Louis XIV's last great war, the War of the Spanish Succession.

Louis XIV had emerged from the Franco-Dutch War in 1678 as the most powerful monarch in Europe, an absolute ruler who had won numerous military victories. Using a combination of aggression, annexation, and quasi-legal means, Louis set about extending his gains to stabilize and strengthen France's frontiers, culminating in the brief War of the Reunions (1683–84). The Truce of Ratisbon guaranteed France's new borders for twenty years, but Louis's subsequent actions – notably his Edict of Fontainebleau (the revocation of the Edict of Nantes) in 1685 – led to the deterioration of his military and political dominance. Louis's decision to cross the Rhine in September 1688 was designed to extend his influence and pressure the Holy Roman Empire into accepting his territorial and dynastic claims. Leopold I and the German princes resolved to resist, and when the States General and William III brought the Dutch and the English into the war against France, the French king faced a powerful coalition aimed at curtailing his ambitions.[9]

The main fighting took place around France's borders in the Spanish Netherlands, the Rhineland, the Duchy of Savoy and Catalonia. The fighting generally favoured France's armies, but by 1696 his country was in the grip of an economic crisis. The Maritime Powers (England and the Dutch Republic) were also financially exhausted, and when Savoy defected from the Alliance, all parties were keen to negotiate a settlement. By the terms of the Treaty of Ryswick (1697) France retained the whole of Alsace but was forced to return Lorraine to its ruler and give up any gains on the right bank of the Rhine. Louis also accepted William III as the rightful king of England, while the Dutch acquired a barrier fortress system in the Spanish Netherlands to help secure their borders.[9]

War of Spanish Succession

[edit]
Clash between Anglo-Austrian and French-Bavarian troops in the Battle of Blenheim, 1704

With the death of the childless Charles II of Spain in 1700, King Louis XIV of France claimed the Spanish throne for his grandson Philip V, which caused the War of the Spanish Succession. In the treaty of Utrecht, Louis succeeded in installing the Bourbon dynasty in a Spain that was by now a second-rank power, and in bringing the Habsburg encirclement of France to an end.

After two centuries, the rivalry had lost its original cause. After the potent decline of Spain, the 18th Century witnessed a major restructuring in European politics. Austria, the dominant power in Central Europe, now had to face the rising power of Prussia in the north. Russia finally grew to become a recognized great power after its success against Sweden in the Great Northern War. And last, Britain's ever-growing might in Europe and America finally challenged the hegemony that France had upheld for years. Nevertheless, the two powers remained hostile for several decades.

Diplomatic Revolution

[edit]

Franco-Austrian Alliance

[edit]
Princess Isabella of Parma marries Archduke Joseph of Austria to strengthen the Franco-Austrian Alliance, 5 October 1760

A significant reversal in French–Habsburg relations known as the Diplomatic Revolution, occurred in 1756. In a move masterminded by Austrian diplomat Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz,[11] France and Austria became allies for the first time in over two hundred years. The alliance was sealed with the marriage of Austrian princess Marie Antoinette to the Dauphin of France, who later became King Louis XVI. The alliance was formalised with the signing of the First Treaty of Versailles in 1756.

The diplomatic change was triggered by a separation of interests between Austria and Britain. The Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle which had concluded the War of the Austrian Succession in 1748 had left Maria Theresa of Austria dissatisfied with the British alliance. Despite having successfully defended her claim to the Habsburg throne and had her husband, Francis Stephen, crowned Emperor in 1745, she had been forced to relinquish valuable territory in the process. Under British diplomatic pressure, Maria Theresa had given up most of Lombardy and occupied Bavaria, as well as ceding Parma to Spain and the house of Bourbon. Finally, the valuable Bohemian crown land of Silesia had been given up to Frederick the Great, who had occupied it during the war. That acquisition had further advanced Prussia as a great European power, which now posed an increasing threat to Austria's central European position, and the growth of Prussia was welcomed by the British, who saw it as a means of balancing French power and reducing French influence in Germany, which might otherwise have grown in response to Austria's weakness. Conversely, the French, determined to impede further Prussian progress, were now willing to support Austria whose force had grown less intimidating.

Seven Years' War

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Europe in the years after the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748

Several months after the signing of the treaty, the Seven Years' War, which involved Prussia, Great Britain, Russia, France, and Austria, broke out. France and Austria expanded upon the First Treaty with a further treaty concluded in 1757 and, along with Russia, fought against an alliance of Great Britain and Prussia, which was founded on the Westminster Convention of 1756.

Despite early successes in the war, the Franco-Austrian alliance did not prevail. The war ended in a victory for Britain and Prussia, aided by the miracle of the House of Brandenburg and Britain's control of the seas, and both France and Austria were left in weakened positions. The Treaty of Paris, which ended the war in 1763, established France's withdrawal from the American continent and consolidated Prussian gains in Europe to Austria's detriment.

Late modern period

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French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

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The Battle of Austerlitz, in which Habsburg power was crushed by the French forces under Napoleon.

The French Revolution was opposed by the Habsburgs in Austria, who sought to destroy the Revolutionary Republic with assistance from several coalitions of monarchical nations, including Britain and several states within the Holy Roman Empire. According to Chris McNab: "The problems faced by the Austrian Emperor were in large part due to past Habsburg successes. Primarily through marriages, they had acquired many provinces with varied ethnic and racial populations – therefore, no universal language existed in the army."[12] Due to difficulties such as this, the Austrian Army suffered defeats during the French Revolutionary and the Napoleonic Wars. After the Battle of Austerlitz on 2 December 1805 during the War of the Third Coalition, the ability of the Habsburgs to govern the Holy Roman Empire was dramatically weakened. This led to the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire, which was divided between France and the newly formed Austrian Empire, leading to the formation of the Confederation of the Rhine. The Confederation was dissolved following Napoleon's defeat at the hands of the Sixth Coalition, which included Austria. Fighting between the two Empires resumed during the Hundred Days, which saw the seventh and final coalition emerge victorious over the French and an end to the Coalition Wars.

Franco-Austrian War

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Napoleon III with the French forces at the Battle of Solferino, which secured the Austrian withdrawal from Italy.

The period immediately following the Bourbon Restoration was one of peace between France and Austria, as the two monarchies participated in the Quintuple Alliance in 1818. However, this alliance was dissolved following the death of Emperor Alexander I of Russia in 1825 and France's subsequent July Revolution of 1830, in which the Bourbon monarchy was overthrown. Hostilities between the two nations resumed during the Franco-Austrian War in 1859, Franco-Sardinian victory which resulted in the gains of Savoy and Nice for France, and the loss of Lombardy for Austria.

World War I

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In the aftermath of the 1866 Austro-Prussian War, the Compromise of 1867 resulted in the creation of Austro-Hungarian Empire under the Habsburg Emperor. In 1879, Austria-Hungary entered into the Dual Alliance with the German Empire. In response, France entered into alliances with Russia and with the United Kingdom in 1894 and 1904 respectively. On 12 August 1914, the French Third Republic declared war on Austria-Hungary in response to Austria's declarations against Serbia and Russia. A western front against Austria-Hungary was opened upon its former ally, the Kingdom of Italy's entry into the war in 1915. Austro-Hungarian defeat resulted in it ceding Southern Tyrol to Italy through the Armistice of Villa Giusti signed 3 November 1918. At the Armistice of 11 November 1918, Charles I of Austria renounced participation in state affairs and the Habsburg Monarchy was officially brought to an end with the passing of the Habsburg Law by the Austrian Constitutional Assembly on 3 April 1919. France would play a major role in the creation of the postwar independent First Austrian Republic by insisting on forbidding Anschluss – or union with the Weimar Republic –in the Treaties of Versailles and Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 1. R. J. W. Evans, The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1550–1700: An Interpretation (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979), p. 93.
  2. ^ The World of The Hapsburgs. (2011). "Tu felix Austria nube 1430–1570". Retrieved from: http://www.habsburger.net/en/stories/tu-felix-austria-nube
  3. ^ a b Sarti, Roland (2004). Italy : a reference guide from the Renaissance to the present. New York, NY: Facts On File. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-8160-7474-7. OCLC 191029034.
  4. ^ ""Italian Wars"". Britannica. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  5. ^ Anderson, Alison D. (1999). On the verge of war: international relations and the Jülich-Kleve succession crises (1609-1614). Studies in Central European histories. Boston: Humanities Press. ISBN 978-0-391-04092-2.
  6. ^ Gemeentearchief, Amsterdam (Netherlands); Scheltema, Pieter (1866). Inventaris van het Amsterdamsche Archief (in Dutch). Stads-Drukkerij.
  7. ^ Richard Bonney. (2010). The Thirty Years' War: 1618 – 1648. (London, Britain: Osprey Publishing). p. 7.
  8. ^ DAVID PARROTT, The Mantuan Succession, 1627–31: A Sovereignty Dispute in Early Modern Europe, The English Historical Review, Volume CXII, Issue 445, February 1997, Pages 20–65, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CXII.445.20
  9. ^ a b c Lynn, John A. (1999). The wars of Louis XIV, 1667-1714. Modern wars in perspective. London: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-05628-2.
  10. ^ Older texts may refer to the war as the War of the Palatine Succession, the War of the English Succession, or in North American historiography as King William's War. This varying nomenclature reflects the fact that contemporaries – as well as later historians – viewed the general conflict from particular national or dynastic viewpoints.
  11. ^ Franz A.J. Szabo, "Prince Kaunitz and the Balance of Power." International History Review 1#3 (1979): 399–408. in JSTOR
  12. ^ Chris McNab. (2011). Armies of the Napoleonic Wars. (London, Great Britain: Oxford Publishing). p. 168.
  13. ^ Steiner, Zara (2005). The lights that failed : European international history, 1919–1933. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-151881-2. OCLC 86068902.