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{{short description|Members of the electoral college that elected the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire}} |
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The '''prince-electors''' or '''electoral princes''' of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] — [[German language|German]]: '''''Kurfürst''''' ({{Audio|De-Kurfürst-pronunciation.ogg|<small>listen}}</small> - singular), '''''Kurfürsten''''' (plural) — were the members of the [[electoral college]] of the Holy Roman Empire, having the function of [[election|electing]] the [[Holy Roman Emperor|Emperors of Germany]]. During and after the [[15th century]] they often merely formalised the [[elective monarchy]] into what was in fact a [[dynasty|dynastic]] [[order of succession|succession]]. Formally, they elected a [[King of the Romans]], who became Holy Roman Emperor only when [[coronation|crowned]] by the [[pope]]. [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]] was the last to be actually crowned; all of his successors were merely "Emperors-Elect". Electors were among the [[prince]]s of the Empire, but they had several privileges (in addition to electoral ones) which were disallowed to their non-electoral brethren. |
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{{redirect|College of Electors|other uses|Electoral college}} |
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[[File:Balduineum Wahl Heinrich VII.jpg|thumb|400px|The imperial prince-electors<br /> Left to right: [[Archbishop of Cologne]], [[Archbishop of Mainz]], [[Elector of Trier|Archbishop of Trier]], [[Elector of the Palatinate|Count Palatine]], [[Duke of Saxony]], [[Margrave of Brandenburg]] and [[King of Bohemia]] (''[[Codex Balduini Trevirorum]]'', {{Circa|1340}})]] |
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[[File:Sachsenspiegel die wahl des deutschen Königs.jpg|thumb|Choosing the king. Above: the three ecclesiastical princes choosing the king, pointing at him. Middle: the [[Electorate of the Palatinate|Count Palatine of the Rhine]] hands over a golden bowl, acting as a servant. Behind him, the [[Rulers of Saxony|Duke of Saxony]] with his marshal's staff and the [[Margrave of Brandenburg]] bringing a bowl of warm water, as a valet. Below, the new king in front of the great men of the empire ([[Heidelberg]] [[Sachsenspiegel]], around 1300).]] |
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{{Ranks of Nobility}} |
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The '''prince-electors''' ({{langx|de|Kurfürst}} {{nowrap|({{Audio|De-Kurfürst-pronunciation.ogg|listen}}),}} pl. {{lang|de|Kurfürsten}}, {{langx|cs|Kurfiřt}}, {{langx|la|Princeps Elector}}) were the members of the [[electoral college]] that elected the [[Holy Roman Emperor|ruler]] of the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. |
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From the 13th century onwards, a small group of prince-electors gained the privilege of [[Imperial election|electing the King of the Romans]]. The king would then later be [[Coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor|crowned Emperor]] by the [[pope]]. [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]] (elected in 1519) was the last emperor to be crowned (1530); his successors assumed the title "Elected Emperor of the Romans" ({{langx|de|erwählter Römischer Kaiser}}; {{langx|la|electus Romanorum imperator}}) upon their coronation as kings. |
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For a great part of the Holy Roman Empire's history (at least from the [[13th century]]) there were seven electors, including three spiritual ones — the [[Archbishopric of Mainz|Archbishop of Mainz]], the [[Archbishopric of Trier|Archbishop of Trier]], and the [[Archbishopric of Cologne|Archbishop of Cologne]] — and four lay ones — the [[List of rulers of Bohemia|King of Bohemia]], the [[Palatinate|Count Palatine of the Rhine]], the [[Rulers of Saxony|Duke of Saxony]], and the [[Margrave of Brandenburg]]. (The last three aforementioned are also known as the Elector Palatine, the Elector of Saxony, and the Elector of Brandenburg, respectively.) Other electors, added in the [[17th century]], include the [[List of rulers of Bavaria|Dukes of Bavaria]] (referred to as Electors of Bavaria - replacing the Count Palatine of the Rhine, who was of the same family but had lost his title temporarily during the [[Thirty Year War]]) and the [[Hanover (state)|Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg]] (the Electors of Hanover). In [[1803]], several new electors were created, but they never participated in an election, for the Holy Roman Empire was abolished under pressure from [[Napoléon Bonaparte]] on [[August 6]], [[1806]]. |
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The dignity of elector carried great prestige and was considered to be behind only the emperor, kings, and the highest dukes.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/nations.htm|title=Precedence among Nations|website=www.heraldica.org|access-date=2020-04-26}}</ref> The electors held exclusive privileges that were not shared with other princes of the [[Empire]], and they continued to hold their original titles alongside that of elector. |
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==Composition== |
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The [[heir apparent]] to a secular prince-elector was known as an '''electoral prince''' ({{langx|de|Kurprinz}}). |
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The German practice of electing [[monarch]]s began when ancient Germanic tribes formed ''ad hoc'' coalitions and elected the leaders thereof. Elections were irregularly held by the [[Franks]], whose [[successor state]]s include [[France]] and [[Germany]]. The French monarchy eventually became hereditary, but the German monarchy continued to remain elective. While all men originally exercised the right to vote in such elections, suffrage eventually came to be limited to the leading men of the realm. In the election of [[Lothar II, Holy Roman Emperor|Lothar II]] in [[1125]], a small number of eminent [[nobility|noble]]s chose the monarch and then submitted him to the remaining magnates for their approbation. Soon, the right to choose the monarch was settled on an exclusive group of princes, and the procedure of seeking the approval of the remaining nobles was abandoned. The college of electors was mentioned in [[1152]] and again in [[1198]]. A letter of [[Pope Urban IV]] suggests that by "immemorial custom", seven princes — |
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* Three ecclesiastic |
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**[[Archbishopric of Mainz|Archbishop of Mainz]] |
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**[[Archbishopric of Trier|Archbishop of Trier]] |
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**[[Archbishopric of Cologne|Archbishop of Cologne]] |
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* Four secular |
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**[[Franconia|Duke of Francony]] |
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**[[Duke of Swabia]] |
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**[[Duke of Saxony]] |
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**[[Duke of Bavaria]] |
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— had the right to elect the Emperor. The three Archbishops aforementioned oversaw some of the richest and most powerful [[Episcopal see|see]]s in Europe, while the four Dukes controlled ancient Frankish territory and held important hereditary offices. |
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== Rights and privileges == |
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By the thirteenth century, the Frankish and Swabian ducal lines became extinct; their electoral claims passed to the [[Palatinate|Count Palatine of the Rhine]] and the [[Margrave of Brandenburg]]. The Palatinate and Bavaria were originally held by the same individual, but in [[1253]], they were divided between two members of the [[Wittelsbach]] dynasty. The other electors refused to allow two princes from the same dynasty to have electoral rights, so a heated rivalry between the Count Palatine and the Duke of Bavaria arose. Meanwhile, the King of Bohemia, who held the ancient imperial office of Arch-Cupbearer, asserted his right to participate in elections, but was challenged on the grounds that his kingdom was not German. |
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Electors were rulers of {{lang|de|Reichsstände}} ([[Imperial Estate|Imperial Estates]]), enjoying precedence over the other [[Princes of the Holy Roman Empire|Imperial Princes]]. They were, until the 18th century, exclusively entitled to be addressed with the title {{lang|de|Durchlaucht}} (Serene Highness). In 1742, the electors became entitled to the superlative {{lang|de|Durchlauchtigste}} (Most Serene Highness), while other princes were promoted to {{lang|de|Durchlaucht}}. |
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As rulers of Imperial Estates, the electors enjoyed all the privileges of princes, including the right to enter into alliances, to autonomy in relation to dynastic affairs, and to precedence over other subjects. The [[Golden Bull of 1356|Golden Bull]] granted them the [[Privilegium de non appellando]], which prevented their subjects from lodging an appeal to a higher Imperial court. Although this privilege, and some others, were automatically granted to Electors, they were not exclusive to them and many of the larger Imperial Estates were also to be individually granted some or all those rights and privileges.<ref>Even a small [[Free Imperial City]] such as [[Schwäbisch Gmünd]] had been granted the ''Privilegium de non appellando'' in 1475. Cf. [[:s:de:Kaiser Friedrich III.: Privilegium de non appellando für Schwäbisch Gmünd, 1475|Kaiser Friedrich III.: Privilegium de non appellando für Schwäbisch Gmünd, 1475]]</ref> |
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Already the [[declaration at Rhense]] in [[1338]] by six electors had the effect that election by all or the majority of the electors automatically conferred the royal title and rule over the empire, without papal confirmation. The [[Golden Bull of 1356]] finally resolved the disputes among the electors; under it, the Archbishops of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne, as well as the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine, the Duke of Saxony, and the Margrave of Brandenburg held the right to elect the King. |
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== Imperial Diet == |
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[[Image:The Ratification of the Treaty of Münster (Gerard Terborch 1648).jpg|thumb|300px|right|''The Ratification of the Treaty of Münster'' by Gerard Terborch]] |
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The electors, like the other princes ruling States of the Empire, were members of the [[Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)|Imperial Diet]], which was divided into three ''collegia'': the Council of Electors, the Council of Princes, and the Council of Cities. In addition to being members of the Council of Electors, most electors were also members of the Council of Princes by virtue of possessing territory or holding ecclesiastical position. The assent of both bodies was required for important decisions affecting the structure of the Empire, such as the creation of new electorates or States of the Empire. |
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Many electors ruled a number of States of the Empire or held several ecclesiastical titles, and therefore had multiple votes in the Council of Princes. In 1792, the Elector of Brandenburg had eight votes, the Elector of Bavaria six votes, the Elector of Hanover six votes, the King of Bohemia three votes, the Elector-Archbishop of Trier three votes, the Elector-Archbishop of Cologne two votes, and the Elector-Archbishop of Mainz one vote. Thus, of the hundred votes in the [[List of Imperial Diet participants (1792)|Council of Princes in 1792]], twenty-nine belonged to electors, giving them considerable influence in the Council of Princes in addition to their positions as electors. |
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The college's composition remained unchanged until the 17th century. In [[1621]], the Elector Palatine, [[Frederick V, Elector Palatine|Frederick V]], came under the imperial ban after participating in the Bohemian Revolt (a part of the [[Thirty Years' War]]). The Elector Palatine's seat was conferred on the Duke of Bavaria, the head of a junior branch of his family. Originally, the Duke held the electorate personally, but it was later made hereditary along with the duchy. When the Thirty Years' War concluded with the [[Peace of Westphalia|Treaty of Münster]] (also called the Peace of Westphalia) in [[1648]], a new electorate was created for the Count Palatine of the Rhine. Since the Elector of Bavaria retained his seat, the number of electors increased to eight. |
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In addition to voting by colleges or councils, the Imperial Diet also voted in religious coalitions, as provided for in the [[Peace of Westphalia]]. The Archbishop of Mainz presided over the [[Roman Catholicism|Catholic]] body, the {{lang|la|corpus catholicorum}}, while the Elector of Saxony presided over the [[Protestantism|Protestant]] body, the {{lang|la|[[corpus evangelicorum]]}}. The division into religious bodies was on the basis of the official religion of the state. |
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In [[1692]], as a result of the inheritance of the Palatinate by a Catholic branch of the Wittelsbach family, which threatened to upset the religious balance of the College of Electors, the number of electors was increased to nine, with a seat being granted to the Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who became known as the Electors of Hanover (the Reichstag officially confirmed the creation in [[1708]]). In [[1706]], the Elector of Bavaria and Archbishop of Cologne were banned during the [[War of the Spanish Succession]], but both were restored in [[1714]] after the [[Peace of Baden]]. In [[1777]], the number of electors was reduced to eight when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria. |
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== Elections == |
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Many changes to the composition of the college were necessitated by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]]'s aggression during the early 19th century. The [[Treaty of Lunéville]] ([[1801]]), which ceded territory on the [[Rhine]]'s left bank to [[France]], led to the abolition of the archbishoprics of Trier and Cologne, and the transfer of the remaining spiritual Elector from Mainz to [[Regensburg]]. In [[1803]], electorates were created for the Duke of [[Württemberg]], the [[Margrave of Baden]], the [[Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel]], and the [[Duke of Salzburg]], bringing the total number of electors to ten. When [[Austria]] annexed Salzburg under the [[Treaty of Pressburg]] ([[1805]]), the Duke of Salzburg moved to the [[Principality of Würzburg]] and retained his electorate. None of the new electors, however, had an opportunity to cast votes, as the Holy Roman Empire was abolished in [[1806]], and the new electorates were never confirmed by the Emperor. |
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{{Main|Imperial election}} |
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The electors were originally summoned by the Archbishop of Mainz within one month of an Emperor's death, and met within three months of being summoned. During the ''interregnum'', imperial power was exercised by two [[imperial vicar]]s. Each vicar, in the words of the Golden Bull, was "the administrator of the empire itself, with the power of passing judgments, of presenting to ecclesiastical benefices, of collecting returns and revenues and investing with fiefs, of receiving oaths of fealty for and in the name of the holy empire". The Elector of Saxony was vicar in areas operating under Saxon law ([[Saxony]], [[Westphalia]], [[Electorate of Hanover|Hannover]], and northern Germany), while the Elector Palatine was vicar in the remainder of the Empire ([[Franconia]], [[Swabia]], the [[Rhine]], and southern Germany). The Elector of Bavaria replaced the Elector Palatine in 1623, but when the latter was granted a new electorate in 1648, there was a dispute between the two as to which was vicar. In 1659, both purported to act as vicar, but ultimately, the other vicar recognized the Elector of Bavaria. Later, the two electors made a pact to act as joint vicars, but the Imperial Diet rejected the agreement. In 1711, while the Elector of Bavaria was under the [[ban of the Empire]], the Elector Palatine again acted as vicar, but his cousin was restored to his position upon his restoration three years later. |
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==Rights and privileges== |
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Finally, in 1745, the two agreed to alternate as vicars, with Bavaria starting first. This arrangement was upheld by the Imperial Diet in 1752. In 1777, the question was settled when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria. On many occasions, however, there was no interregnum, as a new king had been elected during the lifetime of the previous Emperor. |
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Electors were among the rulers of the States of the Empire, but enjoyed precedence over the other princes. They were, until the [[18th century]], exclusively entitled to the style ''Durchlaucht'' (Serene Highness). In [[1742]], the electors became entitled to the superlative ''Durchläuchtigste'' (Most Serene Highness), while other princes were promoted to ''Durchlaucht''. |
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[[Frankfurt am Main|Frankfurt]] regularly served as the site of the election from the 14th century on, but elections were also held at [[Cologne]] (1531), [[Regensburg]] (1575 and 1636), and [[Augsburg]] (1653 and 1690). An elector could appear in person or could appoint another elector as his proxy. More often, an electoral suite or embassy was sent to cast the vote; the credentials of such representatives were verified by the Archbishop of Mainz, who presided over the ceremony. The deliberations were held at the city hall, but voting occurred in the cathedral. In Frankfurt, a special electoral chapel, or {{lang|de|Wahlkapelle}}, was used for elections. Under the Golden Bull, a majority of electors sufficed to elect a king, and each elector could cast only one vote. Electors were free to vote for whomsoever they pleased (including themselves), but dynastic considerations played a great part in the choice. |
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As rulers of States of the Empire, the electors enjoyed all the privileges of the other princes, including the right to enter into alliances, autonomy in relation to dynastic affairs and precedence over other subjects. The Golden Bull recognised certain additional rights belonging to the electors. For instance, electors were granted a [[monopoly]] over all mines of [[gold]], [[silver]], and other metals within their territories, to tax [[Judaism|Jews]], to collect [[toll]]s, and to mint money; these powers belonged to the Emperor in the other territories, and princes who wrongly assumed them could be deprived of their status. Thus, the electors were among the most powerful princes in the Empire. Electors also enjoyed several judicial powers within their territories. Their subjects could be not be tried in the imperial courts, and appeal from their courts lay only in cases where denial of justice was claimed. |
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From the 16th century on, electors drafted a {{lang|de|[[Wahlkapitulation]]}}, or electoral capitulation, which was presented to the king-elect. The capitulation may be described as a contract between the princes and the king, the latter conceding rights and powers to the electors and other princes. Once an individual swore to abide by the electoral capitulation, he assumed the office of King of the Romans. |
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After the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire in [[August]] of [[1806]], the electors continued to reign over their territories, many of them taking higher titles. The Dukes of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Saxony made themselves Kings, as did the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who was already [[George III of the United Kingdom|King of Great Britain]]; meanwhile, the Margrave of Baden elevated himself to the [[Grand Duke|Grand-Ducal]] dignity. The Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, however, retained the meaningless title "Elector of Hesse", thus distinguishing himself from other Hessian princes (the Grand Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt and the Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg). In [[1866]], however, the Elector of Hesse was dethroned under [[Otto von Bismarck]]'s plan for [[German Empire|German Unification]]. |
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In the 10th and 11th centuries, princes often acted merely to confirm hereditary succession in the [[Ottonian dynasty|Ottonian]] and [[Salian dynasty|Salian dynasties]]. But with the actual formation of the prince-elector class, elections became more open, starting with the election of [[Lothair III, Holy Roman Emperor|Lothair III]] in 1125. The [[Hohenstaufen|Staufen]] dynasty managed to get its sons formally elected in their fathers' lifetimes almost as a formality. After those lines ended in extinction, the electors began to elect kings from different families, so that the throne would not once again settle within a single dynasty. All kings elected from 1438 onwards were from among the [[House of Habsburg|Habsburg dynasty]] until 1740, when Austria was inherited by a woman, [[Maria Theresa of Austria|Maria Theresa]], sparking the [[War of the Austrian Succession]] and the short-lived rule of a Bavarian [[Wittelsbach]] emperor. In 1745, Maria Theresa's husband, [[Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor|Francis I of Lorraine]], was elected emperor. All of his successors were also from the Habsburg-Lorraine family. |
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==Reichstag== |
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=== High offices === |
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The electors, like the other princes ruling States of the Empire, were members of the Reichstag, which was divided into three ''collegia'': the Council of Electors, the Council of Princes, and the Council of Cities. In addition to being members of the Council of Electors, several lay electors were therefore members of the Council of Princes as well by virtue of other territories they possessed. In many cases, the lay electors ruled numerous States of the Empire, and therefore held several votes in the Council of Princes. In [[1792]], the King of Bohemia held three votes, the Elector of Bavaria six votes, the Elector of Brandenburg eight votes, and the Elector of Hanover six votes. Thus, of the hundred votes in the [[List of Reichstag participants (1792)|Council of Princes in 1792]], twenty-three belonged to electors. The lay electors therefore exercised considerable influence, being members of the small Council of Electors and holding a significant number of votes in the Council of Princes. The assent of both bodies was required for important decisions affecting the structure of the Empire, such as the creation of new electorates or States of the Empire. |
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<!--This section linked from [[Clemens August of Bavaria]]--> |
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Each elector held a "High Office of the Empire" ({{lang|de|Reichserzamt}}) analogous to a modern cabinet office position and was a member of the ceremonial [[Imperial Household]]. The three spiritual electors became [[Archchancellor]]s ({{langx|de|Erzkanzler}}, {{langx|la|Archicancellarius}}): the [[Elector of Mainz|Archbishop of Mainz]] became ''Archchancellor of [[Kingdom of Germany|Germany]]'', the [[Archbishop of Cologne]] became ''Archchancellor of [[Kingdom of Italy (Holy Roman Empire)|Italy]]'', and the [[Elector of Trier|Archbishop of Trier]] became ''Archchancellor of [[Kingdom of Arles|Burgundy]]''. The secular electors were granted [[heraldic augmentation]]s to their coats of arms reflecting their positions in the Household. These augmentations were displayed in three alternative ways: |
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* as an [[inescutcheon]] on their coat of arms (as in the case of the Arch-Steward, Treasurer, and Chamberlain); |
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* as [[Dexter and sinister|dexter]] impalements (as in the case of the Arch-Marshal and Arch-Bannerbearer) |
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* integrated into the charge within the [[Escutcheon (heraldry)|escutcheon]] (as in the case of the Arch-Cupbearer, where the Lion of Bohemia acquired a "simple crown" held in its dexter paw). |
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{|class="wikitable" |
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In addition to voting by colleges or councils, the Reichstag also voted on religious lines, as provided for by the Peace of Westphalia. The Archbishop of Mainz presided over the [[Roman Catholicism|Catholic]] body, or ''corpus catholicorum'', while the Elector of Saxony presided over the [[Protestantism|Protestant]] body, or ''corpus evangelicorum''. The division into religious bodies was on the basis of the official religion of the state, and not of its rulers. Thus, even when the Electors of Saxony were Catholics during the eighteenth century, they continued to preside over the ''corpus evangelicorum'', since the state of Saxony was officially Protestant. |
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|+Holders of imperial offices and their heraldic augmentations |
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!Imperial office<br>([[German language|German]], [[Latin language|Latin]]) !! Augmentation !! Elector |
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|- |
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| align="center" | Arch-[[Cupbearer]]<br>(''Erzmundschenk,<br>Archipincerna'') |
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| align="center" | [[File:Simple gold crown.svg|40px]]<br>''A simple crown, [[Or (heraldry)|Or]]''<br>{{efn|name=armorial Frederick III|[[File:Armorial Emperor Frederick III.jpg|thumb|none|upright=0.7|Page from an [[armorial]] showing the arms of Emperor Frederick III, ca 1415–1493.]]}}{{efn|name=armorial Maximilian I |[[File:Armorial Emperor Maximilian I.jpg|thumb|none|upright=0.7|Page from an armorial showing arms of Kaiser Maximilian I ca 1508–1519]]}}{{efn|name=Kurrent|[[File:Deutsche Kurrentschrift.svg|thumb|none|upright=0.7|German Kurrent script, in which the armorial sources are written.]]}} |
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|| [[King of Bohemia]] |
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|- |
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|align="center"| Arch-[[Steward (office)|Steward]]<br>(''Erztruchseß'',<br>''Archidapifer'') |
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|align="center"| [[File:HRE Arch-Steward Arms.svg|40px]]<br>''[[Gules]], an [[Globus cruciger|orb]], [[or (heraldry)|Or]]'' |
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||[[Elector Palatine]] (1356-1623)<br>[[Elector of Bavaria]] (1623–1706)<br>[[Elector Palatine]] (1706–1714)<br>[[Elector of Bavaria]] (1714–1806) |
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|- |
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|align="center"|{{anchor|Arch-Marshal}}<!-- [[Arch-Marshal]] redirects here --> Arch-[[Marshal#Ceremonial and protocol|Marshal]]<br>(''Erzmarschall'',<br>''Archimarescallus'') |
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|align="center"|[[File:HRE Arch-Marshal Arms.svg|40px]]<br>''[[Fess|Per fess]] [[Sable (heraldry)|sable]] and [[argent]], two swords in [[saltire]], gules'' |
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|| [[Elector of Saxony]] |
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|- |
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|align="center"|Arch-[[Chamberlain (office)|Chamberlain]]<br>(''Erzkämmerer'',<br>''Archicamerarius'') |
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|align="center"|[[File:HRE Arch-Chamberlain Arms (Ancient).svg|40px]] [[File:HRE Arch-Chamberlain Arms (Modern).svg|40px]]<br>{{Fix|text=Please clarify why two images.}}<br>''[[azure (heraldry)|Azure]], a [[scepter]] [[Pale (heraldry)|palewise]], Or'' |
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|| [[Elector of Brandenburg]] |
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|- |
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|align="center"| [[Arch-Treasurer]]<br>(''Erzschatzmeister'',<br>''Archithesaurarius'') |
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|align="center"| [[File:HRE Arch-Treasurer Arms.svg|40px]]<br>''Gules, [[Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire|Crown of the Holy Roman Empire]], or'' |
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||[[Elector Palatine]] (1648–1706)<br>[[Elector of Hanover]] (1710–1714)<ref name=Treasurer>The augmentation was borne as an inescutcheon continuously and without interruption by the Electors of Hanover from 1714-1837. There is no evidence that this inescutcheon was ever borne by the Elector Palatine (House of Wittelsbach).</ref><br>[[Elector Palatine]] (1714–1777)<ref name=Treasurer/><br>[[Elector of Hanover]] (1777–1806)<ref name=Treasurer/> |
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|- |
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| align="center" | Arch-[[King of Arms|Bannerbearer]]<br>(''Erzbannerträger'',<br>''Archivexillarius'') |
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| align="center" | [[File:HRE Arch-Bannerbearer Arms.svg|40px]]<br />''Azure, a lance party [[Fess|per fess]], or, and gules bendwise<br>flying to sinister chief a [[Flags of the Holy Roman Empire|banner, or, with the Imperial Eagle]]'' |
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||[[Electorate of Hanover|Elector of Hanover]] (1692–1710)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Noack |first=Konstantin |url=https://www.grin.com/document/384498 |title=Die neun Kurfürstentümer des Heiligen Römischen Reiches Deutscher Nation |date=2017-12-10 |publisher=GRIN Verlag |isbn=978-3-668-62294-4 |language=de}}</ref><br>[[Electorate of Hanover|Elector of Hanover]] (1714–1777)<br>[[Electorate of Württemberg|Elector of Württemberg]] (1803–1806)<ref>[https://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/hre.htm#Electors “The Holy Roman Empire”, ''Heraldica'']</ref> |
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|} |
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[[File:COA family de Kurpfalz.svg|thumb|150px|right|Arms of [[Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian I, Duke of Bavaria and Prince-Elector]], with inescutcheon of the Arch-Steward of the Holy Roman Empire]] |
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[[File:Royal Hanover Inescutcheon.svg|thumb|150px|right|The ''Lesser coat of arms of the Elector of Hanover'' with inescutcheon of the Arch-Treasurer, borne as an inescutcheon on the royal arms of the United Kingdom by [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]].]] |
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When the [[Duke of Bavaria]] replaced the Elector Palatine in 1623, he assumed the latter's office of Arch-Steward. When the Count Palatine was granted a new electorate, he assumed the position of Arch-Treasurer of the Empire. When the Duke of Bavaria was banned in 1706, the Elector Palatine returned to the office of Arch-Steward, and in 1710, the Elector of Hanover was promoted to the post of Arch-Treasurer. Matters were complicated by the Duke of Bavaria's restoration in 1714; the Elector of Bavaria resumed the office of Arch-Steward, while the Elector Palatine returned to the post of Arch-Treasurer, and the Elector of Hanover was given the new office of Archbannerbearer. The Electors of Hanover, however, continued to be styled Arch-Treasurers, though the Elector Palatine was the one who actually exercised the office until 1777, when he inherited Bavaria and the Arch-Stewardship. After 1777, no further changes were made to the Imperial Household; new offices were planned for the Electors admitted in 1803, but the Empire was abolished before they could be created. The Duke of Württemberg, however, started to adopt the trappings of the Arch-Bannerbearer. |
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==Elections== |
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The electors discharged the ceremonial duties associated with their offices only during coronations, where they bore the crown and regalia of the Empire. Otherwise, they were represented by holders of corresponding "[[Hereditary Offices of the Household]]". The Arch-Butler was represented by the Hereditary Butler ([[Cupbearer]]) (the [[Count of Althann]]), the Arch-Seneschal by the Hereditary [[Steward (office)|Steward]] (the [[House of Waldburg|Count of Waldburg]], who adopted the title into their name as "Truchsess von Waldburg"), the Arch-Chamberlain by the Hereditary [[Chamberlain (office)|Chamberlain]] (the [[Count of Hohenzollern]]), the Arch-Marshal by the Hereditary [[Marshal]] (the [[Count of Pappenheim]]), and the Arch-Treasurer by the Hereditary [[Treasurer]] (the [[Count of Sinzendorf]]). After 1803, the Duke of Württemberg as Arch-Bannerbearer assigned the count of Zeppelin-[[Aschhausen]] as Hereditary Bannerbearer.<br>{{Fix|text=Please clarify why some of these offices do not feature in the table immediately above.}} |
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[[Image:Balduineum Wahl Heinrich VII.jpg|thumb|left|350px|Illustration of electors deliberating (left to right: Arcibishop of Cologne, Arcibishop of Mainz, Arcibishop of Trier, Count Palatine, Duke of Saxony, Margrave of Brandenburg and King of Bohemia)]] |
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The individual chosen by the electors assumed title "King of the Romans", though he actually reigned in Germany and Austria. The King of the Romans became Holy Roman Emperor only when crowned by the pope. On many occasions, a pope refused to crown a king with whom he was engaged in a dispute, but a lack of a papal coronation deprived a king of only the title Emperor and not of the power to govern. The [[Habsburg]] dynasty stopped the practice of papal coronations. Since [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]], all individuals chosen by the electors were merely "Emperors-Elect". |
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== History == |
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The electors were originally summoned by the Archbishop of Mainz within one month of an Emperor's death, and met within three months of being summoned. During the ''interregnum'', imperial power was exercised by two imperial [[vicar]]s. Each vicar, in the words of the Golden Bull, was "the administrator of the empire itself, with the power of passing judgments, of presenting to ecclesiastical benefices, of collecting returns and revenues and investing with fiefs, of receiving oaths of fealty for and in the name of the holy empire". The Elector of Saxony was vicar in areas operating under Saxon law ([[Saxony]], [[Westphalia]], [[Hanover (state)|Hanover]], and northern Germany), while the Elector Palatine was vicar in the remainder of the Empire ([[Franconia]], [[Swabia]], the [[Rhine]], and southern Germany). The Elector of Bavaria replaced the Elector Palatine in [[1623]], but when the latter was granted a new electorate in [[1648]], there was a dispute between the two as to which was vicar. In [[1659]], both purported to act as vicar, but the other vicar recognised the Elector of Bavaria. Later, the two electors made a pact to act as joint vicars, but the Reichstag rejected the agreement. In [[1711]], while the Elector of Bavaria was under the ban of the Empire, the Elector Palatine again acted as vicar, but his cousin was restored to his position upon his restoration three years later. Finally, in [[1745]], the two agreed to alternate as vicars, with Bavaria starting first. This arrangement was upheld by the Reichstag in [[1752]]. In [[1777]] the question became moot when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria. On many occasions, however, there was no interregnum, as a new king had been elected during the lifetime of the previous Emperor. |
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[[File:Philipp Veit 008.jpg|thumb|Coats of arms representing the seven original electors with the figure of [[Germania (personification)|Germania]]. Original colours were vivid. Germania's gown was gold, not beige, and the blue-grey was purple. Also, the browns were painted as vivid red and the muted grey in Saxony's arms was a brilliant green.]] |
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The German practice of electing [[monarch]]s began when ancient [[Germanic peoples|Germanic tribes]] formed ''ad hoc'' coalitions and elected the leaders thereof. Elections were irregularly held by the [[Franks]], whose [[successor state]]s include [[France]] and the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. The [[List of French monarchs|French monarchy]] eventually became [[Heredity|hereditary]], but the Holy Roman Emperors remained elective. While all free men originally exercised the right to vote in such elections, suffrage eventually came to be limited to the leading men of the realm. In the election of [[Lothar II, Holy Roman Emperor|Lothar III]] in 1125, a small number of eminent [[nobility|noble]]s chose the monarch and then submitted him to the remaining magnates for their approbation. |
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[[Frankfurt, Germany|Frankfurt]] has regularly served as the site of the election since the fifteenth century, but elections have also been held at [[Cologne]] ([[1531]]), [[Regensburg]] ([[1575]] and [[1636]]), and [[Augsburg]] ([[1653]] and [[1690]]). An elector could appear in person or could appoint another elector his proxy. More often, an electoral suite or embassy was sent to cast the vote; the credentials of such representatives were verified by the Archbishop of Mainz, who presided over the ceremony. The deliberations were held at the city hall, but voting occurred in the cathedral. In Frankfurt, a special electoral chapel, or ''Wahlkapelle'', was used for elections. Under the Golden Bull, a majority of electors sufficed to elect a king, and each elector could cast only one vote. Electors were free to vote for whomsoever they pleased (including themselves), but dynastic considerations played a great part in the choice. Electors drafted a ''Wahlkapitulation'', or electoral capitulation, which was presented to the king-elect. The capitulation may be described as a contract between the princes and the king, the latter conceding rights and powers to the electors and other princes. Once an individual swore to abide by the electoral capitulation, he assumed the office of King of the Romans. |
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Soon, the right to choose the monarch was settled on an exclusive group of princes, and the procedure of seeking the approval of the remaining nobles was abandoned. The college of electors was mentioned in 1152 and again in 1198. The composition of electors at that time is unclear, but appears to have included bishops and the [[duke]]s of the [[Stem duchy|stem duchies]]. |
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In the [[10th century|10th]] and [[11th century|11th centuries]], electors often acted merely to confirm hereditary succession in the Saxonian, Franconian, and [[Hohenstaufen|Staufen]] dynasties. After these lines ended in extinction, the electors began to elect kings from different families so that the throne would not once again settle within a single dynasty. For a short time, the monarchy was elective both in theory and in practice; the arrangement, however, did not last, since the powerful House of Habsburg managed to secure succession within their dynasty during the fifteenth century. The Habsburg Archdukes of Austria (and later Kings of Hungary and Bohemia) were all elected kings from [[1438]] until [[1740]], when the archduchy was inherited by a woman, [[Maria Theresa of Austria|Maria Theresa]]. The House of Wittelsbach came to power for a short period of time, but in [[1745]], Maria Theresa's husband, [[Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor|Francis I]] of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty, became King; all of his successors were also from the same family. Hence, for the greater part of the Empire's history, the role of the electors was largely ceremonial. |
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=== 1257 to Thirty Years' War === |
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==High Offices== |
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The electoral college is known to have existed by 1152, but its composition is unknown. A letter written by [[Pope Urban IV]] in 1265 suggests that by "[[time immemorial|immemorial custom]]", seven princes had the right to elect the King and future Emperor. The pope wrote that the seven electors were those who had just voted in the election of 1257, which resulted in the election of two kings.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bryce |first1=James |title=The Holy Roman Empire |date=1866 |publisher=Macmillan |location=London |page=252 |edition=Revised}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Bavaria arms.jpg|thumb|250px|The Arms of [[Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian, Duke of Bavaria]], Arch-Steward and Prince-Elector]] |
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Each elector held a "High Office of the Empire" and was a member of the (ceremonial) [[Imperial Household]]. The three spiritual electors were all [[Arch-Chancellors]]: the [[Archbishop of Mainz]] was [[Arch-Chancellor of Germany]], the [[Archbishop of Trier]] was [[Arch-Chancellor of Burgundy]], and the [[Archbishop of Cologne]] was [[Arch-Chancellor of Italy]]. The [[King of Bohemia]] held the office of the [[Arch-Cupbearer]], the [[Elector Palatine]] that of [[Arch-Steward]], the [[Elector of Saxony]] that of [[Arch-Marshal]], and the [[Elector of Brandenburg]] that of [[Arch-Chamberlain]]. When the [[Duke of Bavaria]] replaced the Elector Palatine in [[1623]], he assumed the latter's office of Arch-Steward. When the Count Palatine was granted a new electorate, he assumed the position of [[Arch-Treasurer of the Empire]]. When the Duke of Bavaria was banned in [[1706]], the Elector Palatine returned to the office of Arch-Steward, and in [[1710]] the Elector of Hanover was promoted to the post of Arch-Treasurer. Matters were complicated by the Duke of Bavaria's restoration in [[1714]]; the Elector of Bavaria resumed the office of Arch-Steward, while the Elector Palatine returned to the post of Arch-Treasurer. The Electors of Hanover, however, continued to be styled Arch-Treasuers, though the Elector Palatine was the one who actually exercised the office until [[1777]], when he inherited Bavaria and the Arch-Stewardship. After 1777, no further changes were made to the Imperial Household; new offices were planned for the Electors admitted in [[1803]], but the Empire was abolished before they could be created. |
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* Three ecclesiastical Electors: |
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Many High Officers were entitled to use "augmentations" on their [[heraldry|coats of arms]]; these augmentations, which were special marks of honour, appeared in the centre of the electors' shields (as shown in the image on the right) above the other charges (in heraldic terms, the augmentations appeared in the form of inescutcheons). The Arch-Steward used ''gules an orb Or'' (a gold orb on a red field — illustrated on the right). The Arch-Marshal utilised the more complicated ''per fess sable and argent, two swords per saltire gules'' (two red swords arranged in the form of a [[saltire]], on a black and white field). The Arch-Chamberlain's augmentation was ''azure a sceptre per pale Or'' (a gold sceptre on a blue field), while the Arch-Treasurer's was ''gules the crown of Charlemagne Or'' (a gold crown on a red field). As noted above, the Elector Palatine and the Elector of Hanover styled themselves Arch-Treasurer from [[1714]] until [[1777]]; during this time, both electors used the corresponding augmentations. The three Arch-Chancellors and the Arch-Cupbearer did not use any augmentations. |
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** The [[Archbishopric of Mainz|Archbishop of Mainz]] |
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** The [[Electorate of Trier|Archbishop of Trier]] |
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** The [[Electorate of Cologne|Archbishop of Cologne]] |
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* Four secular Electors: |
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** The [[King of Bohemia]] |
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** The [[Electorate of the Palatinate|Count Palatine of the Rhine]] |
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** The [[Electorate of Saxony|Duke of Saxony]] |
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** The [[Margraviate of Brandenburg|Margrave of Brandenburg]] |
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The three Archbishops oversaw the most venerable and powerful [[Episcopal see|see]]s in Germany. Since 1214, the Palatinate and Bavaria were held by the same individual, but in 1253, they were divided between two members of the [[House of Wittelsbach]]. The other electors refused to allow two princes from the same dynasty to have electoral rights, so a heated rivalry arose between the Count Palatine and the Duke of Bavaria over who should hold the Wittelsbach seat. |
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The electors discharged the ceremonial duties associated with their offices only during coronations, where they bore the crown and regalia of the Empire. Otherwise, they were represented by holders of corresponding "[[Hereditary Offices of the Household]]". The Arch-Cupbearer was represented by the [[Cupbearer]] (the [[Count of Althann]]), the Arch-Steward by the [[Steward]] (the [[Count of Waldburg]]), the Arch-Chamberlain by the [[Chamberlain]] (the [[Count of Hohenzollern]]), the Arch-Marshal by the [[Marshal]] (the [[Count of Pappenheim]]), and the Arch-Treasurer by the [[Treasurer]] (the [[Count of Sinzendorf]]). |
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Meanwhile, the King of Bohemia, who held the ancient imperial office of Arch-Cupbearer, asserted his right to participate in elections. Sometimes he was challenged on the grounds that his kingdom was not German, though usually he was recognized, instead of Bavaria, which, after all, was just a younger line of Wittelsbachs.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wolf |first=Armin |date=2020-04-23 |title=Electors |url=https://www.historisches-lexikon-bayerns.de/Lexikon/EN:Electors |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211105094712/https://www.historisches-lexikon-bayerns.de/Lexikon/EN:Electors |archive-date=2021-11-05 |access-date=2022-05-16 |website=Historisches Lexikon Bayerns}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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The [[Declaration of Rhense]] issued in 1338 had the effect that election by the majority of the electors automatically conferred the royal title and rule over the empire, without papal confirmation. The [[Golden Bull of 1356]] finally resolved the disputes among the electors. Under it, the Archbishops of [[Archbishop of Mainz|Mainz]], [[Archbishop of Trier|Trier]], and [[Electorate of Cologne|Cologne]], as well as the [[King of Bohemia]], the [[Electorate of the Palatinate|Count Palatine of the Rhine]], the [[Duke of Saxony]], and the [[Margrave of Brandenburg]] held the right to elect the King. |
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* [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], another contemporaraneous elective monarchy |
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The college's composition remained unchanged until the 17th century, although the Electorate of Saxony was transferred from the senior to the junior branch of the Wettin family in 1547, in the aftermath of the [[Schmalkaldic War]]. |
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==References== |
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=== Thirty Years' War to Napoleon === |
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*Bryce, J. (1887). ''The Holy Roman Empire,'' 8th ed. New York: Macmillan. |
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*"Germany." (1911). ''Encyclopædia Britannica,'' 11th ed. London: Cambridge University Press. |
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In 1623, the Elector Palatine, [[Frederick V, Elector Palatine|Frederick V]], came under the [[imperial ban]] after participating in the [[Thirty Years' War#The Bohemian Revolt|Bohemian Revolt]] (a part of the [[Thirty Years' War]]). The Elector Palatine's seat was conferred on the Duke of Bavaria, the head of a junior branch of his family. Originally, the Duke held the electorate personally, but it was later made hereditary along with the duchy. When the Thirty Years' War concluded with the [[Peace of Westphalia]] in 1648, a new electorate was created for the Count Palatine of the Rhine. Since the Elector of Bavaria retained his seat, the number of electors increased to eight; the two Wittelsbach lines were now sufficiently estranged so as not to pose a combined potential threat. |
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==External links== |
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In 1685, the religious composition of the College of Electors was disrupted when a Catholic branch of the Wittelsbach family inherited the Palatinate. A new Protestant electorate was created in 1692 for the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who became known as the Elector of Hanover (the [[Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)|Imperial Diet]] officially confirmed the creation in 1708). The Elector of Saxony converted to Catholicism in 1697 so that he could become King of Poland, but no additional Protestant electors were created. Although the Elector of Saxony was personally Catholic, the Electorate itself remained officially Protestant, and the Elector even remained the leader of the [[Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)#Religious bodies|Protestant body in the Reichstag]]. |
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*[http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/golden.htm The Avalon Project. (2003). "The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A.D."] |
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*[http://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/reichsstande.htm Oestreich, G. and Holzer, E. (1973). "Übersicht über die Reichsstände." In Gebhardt, Bruno. ''Handbuch der Deutschen Geschichte,'' 9th ed. (Vol. 2, pp. 769-784). Stuttgart: Ernst Ketler Verlag.] |
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*[http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/royalstyle.htm Velde, F. R. (2003). "Royal Styles."] |
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*[http://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/hre.htm Velde, F. R. (2004). "The Holy Roman Empire."] |
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In 1706, the Elector of Bavaria and Archbishop of Cologne were [[Imperial ban|outlawed]] during the [[War of the Spanish Succession]], but both were restored in 1714 after the [[Treaty of Baden (1714)|Peace of Baden]]. In 1777, the number of electors was reduced to eight when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria. |
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[[Category:Titles]] |
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[[Category:Holy Roman Empire]] |
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[[Category:Princes|*]] |
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Many changes to the composition of the college were necessitated by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]]'s aggression during the early 19th century. The [[Treaty of Lunéville]] (1801), which ceded territory on the [[Rhine]]'s left bank to [[France]], led to the abolition of the archbishoprics of Trier and Cologne, and the transfer of the remaining spiritual Elector from Mainz to [[Principality of Regensburg|Regensburg]]. In 1803, electorates were created for the [[Duchy of Württemberg|Duke of Württemberg]], the [[Margraviate of Baden|Margrave of Baden]], the [[Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel|Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel]], and the [[Duchy of Salzburg|Duke of Salzburg]], bringing the total number of electors to ten. When [[Austria]] annexed Salzburg under the [[Treaty of Pressburg (1805)]], the Duke of Salzburg moved to the [[Grand Duchy of Würzburg]] and retained his electorate. None of the new electors, however, had an opportunity to cast votes, as the Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806, and the new electorates were never confirmed by the Emperor. |
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[[bg:Курфюрст]] |
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[[cs:Kurfiřt]] |
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In 1788, the ruling family of [[Savoyard state|Savoy]] pushed to receive an electoral title. Their ambition was backed by Brandenburg-Prussia. Nonetheless, the French Revolution and subsequent Coalition Wars soon rendered this a moot point.<ref>Peter Wilson. ''Heart of Europe: A History of the Holy Roman Empire.'' Cambridge: 2016. p. 227. {{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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[[da:Kurfyrste]] |
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[[de:Kurfürst]] |
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=== After the Empire === |
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[[es:Príncipe elector]] |
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[[eo:Princo-elektisto]] |
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After the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire in August 1806, the Electors continued to reign over their territories, many of them taking higher or alternative titles. The Electors of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Saxony styled themselves Kings, while the Electors of Baden, [[Principality of Regensburg|Regensburg]], and [[Grand Duchy of Würzburg|Würzburg]] became [[Grand duke|Grand Dukes]]. The Elector of Hesse-Kassel, however, retained the meaningless title "[[Electorate of Hesse|Elector of Hesse]]", thus distinguishing himself from other Hessian princes (the [[Grand Duchy of Hesse|Grand Duke of Hesse(-Darmstadt)]] and the Landgrave of [[Hesse-Homburg]]). Napoleon soon exiled him and Kassel was annexed to the [[Kingdom of Westphalia]], a new creation. The King of Great Britain remained at war with Napoleon and continued to style himself Elector of Hanover, while the Hanoverian government continued to operate in London. |
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[[fr:Prince-Électeur]] |
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[[is:Kjörfursti]] |
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The [[Congress of Vienna]] accepted the Electors of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Saxony as Kings, along with the newly created Grand Duke of Baden. The Elector of Hanover finally joined his fellow Electors by declaring himself the [[King of Hanover]]. The restored Elector of Hesse tried to be recognized as the King of the [[Chatti]]. The European powers refused to acknowledge this title at the [[Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818)]], however, and instead listed him with the Grand Dukes as a "Royal Highness".<ref name="satow1932">{{cite book |last1=Satow |first1=Ernest Mason |title=A Guide to Diplomatic Practice |url=https://archive.org/details/guidetodiplomati00satouoft |date=1932 |publisher=Longmans |location=London}}</ref> Believing the title of Prince-Elector to be superior in dignity to that of Grand Duke, the Elector of Hesse-Kassel chose to remain an Elector, even though there was no longer a Holy Roman Emperor to elect. Hesse-Kassel remained the only Electorate in Germany until 1866, when the country backed the losing side in the [[Austro-Prussian War]] and was absorbed into Prussia. |
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[[it:Principe elettore]] |
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[[nl:Keurvorst]] |
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== Marks of office == |
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[[ja:選帝侯]] |
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===Electoral arms=== |
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[[no:Kurfyrste]] |
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[[File:Wapen 1545 Kaiserwappen des Heiligen Römischen Reichs Polychromie.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|Coats of arms of prince electors surround the Holy Roman Emperor's; from flags book of [[Jacob Köbel]] (163#+1545). Left to right: Cologne, Bohemia, Brandenburg, Saxony, the Palatinate, Trier, Mainz]] |
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[[pl:Elektorzy Rzeszy]] |
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Below are the State arms of each Imperial Elector. Emblems of [[#High offices|Imperial High Offices]] are shown on the appropriate arms. |
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[[pt:Príncipe-eleitor]] |
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[[File:Maximilian I HStAS B 515.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|The emperor [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian]] surrounded by shields of electorates]] |
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[[ru:Курфюрст]] |
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[[sk:Kurfirst]] |
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Three Electors Spiritual (Archbishops): all three were annexed by various powers through [[German mediatisation|German Mediatisation]] of 1803. |
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[[sv:Kurfurste]] |
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[[uk:Курфюрст]] |
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<gallery widths="100" heights="100" perrow="4"> |
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[[zh:选帝侯]] |
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File:Mainz Arms.svg|[[Electorate of Mainz|Mainz]] |
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{{featured article}} |
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File:Trier Arms.svg|[[Electorate of Trier|Trier]] |
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File:Coat of Arms of Electorate of Cologne.svg|[[Electorate of Cologne|Cologne]] |
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</gallery> |
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Four Electors Secular: |
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<gallery widths="100" heights="100" perrow="4"> |
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File:Arch Cupbearer Holding Augment.png|alt=Kingdom of Bohemia. The white lion bears in his right paw a simple crown, the emblem of the office of Arch Cupbearer. Restored directly from Medieval, hand-drawn armorials.|[[Kingdom of Bohemia]]. The white lion bears in his right paw a simple crown, the device of the office of Arch Cupbearer. Restored directly from Medieval, hand-drawn [[armorial]]s.{{efn|name=armorial Frederick III}}{{efn|name=armorial Maximilian I}}{{efn|name=Kurrent}} |
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File:Arms of the Electoral Palatinate (Variant 1).svg|[[Electoral Palatine|The Palatinate]] was an electorate until 1777, when the Elector acceded to Bavaria. The office of [[Arch-Treasurer]] transferred to Hanover. |
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File:Blason Jean-Georges IV de Saxe.svg|[[Electorate of Saxony|Saxony]] |
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File:Arms of Brandenburg.svg|[[Margraviate of Brandenburg|Brandenburg]] |
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</gallery> |
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Electors added in the 17th century: |
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<gallery widths="100px" heights="100px" perrow="4"> |
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File:Arms of Charles VII Albert, Holy Roman Emperor.svg|[[Electorate of Bavaria|Bavaria]] was granted electoral dignity by [[Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor|Ferdinand II]] in 1623, removing the dignity from the Count Palatine of the Rhine. |
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Royal Hanover Inescutcheon.svg|[[Electorate of Hanover|Hanover]] (Brunswick-Lüneburg), made an elector by [[Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor|Leopold I]] in 1692 as a reward for aid given in the [[War of the Grand Alliance]]. Later, the ceremonial office of Chief Treasurer was transferred here from the Palatinate. |
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</gallery> |
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====Napoleonic additions==== |
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As Napoleon waged war on Europe, between 1803 and 1806, the following changes to the Constitution of the Holy Roman Empire were attempted until the Empire's collapse. The arch-chancellor of Germany and archbishop elector of Mainz continued to be an elector, but as the prince of Regensburg, which took over Mainz's arch-episcopal status. The prince of Württemberg received the formerly defunct office of Arch-Bannerbearer, while the other new electors were not given augments or high office in the imperial household, though new offices were planned.<ref name="heraldica">{{Cite web |title=the Holy Roman Empire |url=https://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/hre.htm#Electors |access-date=2023-05-17 |website=www.heraldica.org}}</ref> |
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<gallery widths="100" heights="100" perrow="6"> |
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File:Augmented arms of electoral Württemberg.png|In 1777, the number of Electors dropped from nine to eight, until 1803, when [[Electorate of Württemberg|Württemberg]] was raised to an electorate by [[Reichsdeputationshauptschluss|the Imperial diet]], while the prince himself was elevated from Standard-Bearer ({{lang|de|Bannerherr}}) to Arch-Standardbearer.<ref name="heraldica" /> |
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File:Arms_of_the_house_of_Hesse-Kassel_(3).svg|[[Electorate of Hesse|Hesse-Cassel]] was added in 1803. |
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File:Wappen Regensburg.svg|[[Electorate of Regensburg|Principality of Regensburg]], ruled by the [[Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg|former prince-archbishop of Mainz]] was added in 1803, after the annexation of [[Electorate of Mainz|Mainz]] by the French. |
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File:Kursalzburg.png|[[Electorate of Salzburg|Grand Duchy of Salzburg]] was added in 1803. After it was [[German mediatization|mediatized]] [[Peace of Pressburg (1805)|to Austria]] in 1805, its electoral vote was transferred to [[Grand Duchy of Würzburg|Würzburg]]. Salzburg and Würzburg were ruled by the same person, [[Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany|Ferdinand III]]. |
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File:Wappen Großherzogtum Würzburg.svg|[[Electorate of Würzburg|Duchy of Würzburg]] was added in 1805. |
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File:Coat of arms of Baden.svg|[[Electorate of Baden|Margraviate of Baden]] was added in 1803. |
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</gallery> |
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== Timeline of electors == |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center" |
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! |
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!Third ecclesiastical elector |
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!Second ecclesiastical elector |
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!First ecclesiastical elector |
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!Elector of the [[Saxons]]<br>{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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!Elector of the [[Swabians]]<br>{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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!Elector of the [[Bavarians]]<br>{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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!Elector of the [[Franks]]<br>{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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!Eighth elector |
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!Ninth elector |
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!Tenth elector |
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|- |
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|Pre-1059 |
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| rowspan="5" |Prior history of ecclesiastical electors unclear |
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| rowspan="4" |Prior history of ecclesiastical electors unclear |
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| rowspan="2" |Prior history of ecclesiastical electors unclear |
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| rowspan="7" |[[File:Arms_of_the_house_of_Anhalt_(ancient).svg|center|frameless|121x121px]][[Duchy of Saxony]] |
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| rowspan="6" |[[File:Arms_of_Swabia.svg|center|frameless|114x114px]][[Duchy of Swabia]] |
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| rowspan="3" |[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]][[Duchy of Bavaria]] {{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} |
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|[[File:Frankenrechen.svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Duchy of Franconia]] |
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| rowspan="10" {{n/a}} |
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| rowspan="11" {{n/a}} |
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| rowspan="15" {{n/a}} |
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|- |
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|1059–1189 |
|||
| rowspan="7" |[[File:Arms_of_the_Palatinate_(Old).svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Electoral Palatinate|County Palatine of the Rhine]] – The Palatinate |
|||
|- |
|||
|1189–1214 |
|||
| rowspan="13" |[[File:Wappen_Erzbistum_Trier.png|center|frameless|135x135px]][[Electorate of Trier|Archbishopric of Trier]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1214–1238 |
|||
| rowspan="12" |[[File:Coat_of_arms_of_the_House_of_Luxembourg-Bohemia.svg|center|frameless|125x125px]][[Kingdom of Bohemia]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1238–1251 |
|||
| rowspan="8" |[[File:Wappen_Erzbistum_Köln.png|center|frameless|135x135px]][[Electorate of Cologne|Archbishopric of Cologne]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1251–1257 or 1268 |
|||
| rowspan="10" |[[File:Wappen_Erzbistum_Mainz.png|center|frameless|135x135px]][[Electorate of Mainz|Archbishopric of Mainz]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1257 or 1268–1296 |
|||
| rowspan="9" |[[File:Arms_of_Brandenburg.svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Margraviate of Brandenburg]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1296–1621 |
|||
| rowspan="8" |[[File:Armoiries_Saxe2.svg|center|frameless|116x116px]][[Duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg]] – [[Electorate of Saxony]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1621–1623 |
|||
|[[Imperial ban]] due to [[Thirty Years' War]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1621–1648 |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]][[Duchy of Bavaria]] – [[Electorate of Bavaria]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1648–1692 |
|||
| rowspan="4" |[[File:Arms_of_the_Palatinate_(Old).svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Electoral Palatinate|County Palatine of the Rhine]] – The Palatinate |
|||
|- |
|||
|1692–1706 |
|||
| rowspan="4" |[[File:Coat_of_arms_of_Lower_Saxony.svg|center|frameless|114x114px]][[Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg]] – [[Electorate of Hanover]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1706–1714 |
|||
|[[Imperial ban]] due to [[War of the Spanish Succession]] |
|||
|Imperial ban due to [[War of the Spanish Succession]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1714–1777 |
|||
| rowspan="2" |[[File:Wappen_Erzbistum_Köln.png|center|frameless|135x135px]][[Electorate of Cologne|Archbishopric of Cologne]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" |[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]][[Electorate of Bavaria]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1777–1801 |
|||
|None |
|||
(Merged into [[Duchy of Bavaria]]) |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="11" style="background:#BBFFFF;"|[[Treaty of Lunéville]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1801–1803 |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Wappen_Bistum_Regensburg.png|center|frameless|130x130px]][[Principality of Regensburg|Archbishopric of Regensburg]] |
|||
|None |
|||
|None |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Armoiries_Saxe2.svg|center|frameless|116x116px]][[Electorate of Saxony]] |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Arms_of_Brandenburg.svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Margraviate of Brandenburg]] |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Coat_of_arms_of_the_House_of_Luxembourg-Bohemia.svg|center|frameless|125x125px]][[Kingdom of Bohemia]] |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]][[Electorate of Bavaria]] |
|||
|None |
|||
| rowspan="3" |[[File:Coat_of_arms_of_Lower_Saxony.svg|center|frameless|114x114px]][[Electorate of Hanover]] |
|||
|None |
|||
|- |
|||
|1803–1805 |
|||
| rowspan="2" |[[File:Arms_of_the_house_of_Hesse.svg|center|frameless|116x116px]][[Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel]] – [[Electorate of Hesse]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" |[[File:Wappen_Baden,_Markgrafschaft.svg|center|frameless|119x119px]][[Margraviate of Baden]] – [[Electorate of Baden]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" |[[File:Wuerttemberg_Arms.svg|center|frameless|111x111px]][[Duchy of Württemberg]] – [[Electorate of Württemberg]] |
|||
|[[File:Salzburg_Wappen_(shield).svg|center|frameless|115x115px]][[Electorate of Salzburg]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|1805–1806 |
|||
|[[File:Wurzburg-stift.PNG|center|frameless|118x118px]][[Grand Duchy of Würzburg|Electorate of Würzburg]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="11" style="background:#BBFFFF;"|[[Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="11" style="background:#BBFFFF;"|[[Congress of Vienna]] (1814–1815) |
|||
|- |
|||
|Successor states |
|||
|[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]]Fully subsumed into [[Kingdom of Bavaria]] |
|||
|[[File:Arms_of_the_house_of_Hesse.svg|center|frameless|116x116px]][[Electorate of Hesse]] |
|||
|[[File:Wappen_Baden,_Markgrafschaft.svg|center|frameless|119x119px]][[Grand Duchy of Baden]] |
|||
|[[File:Armoiries_Saxe2.svg|center|frameless|116x116px]][[Kingdom of Saxony]] |
|||
|[[File:Arms_of_East_Prussia.svg|center|frameless|114x114px]]Fully subsumed into [[Kingdom of Prussia]] |
|||
|[[File:Habsburg-Lorraine_Tripartite_Arms.svg|center|frameless|108x108px]]Crown Land of the [[Austrian Empire]] |
|||
|[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]][[Kingdom of Bavaria]] |
|||
|[[File:Coat_of_Arms_of_Kingdom_of_Wurtemberg.svg|center|frameless|122x122px]][[Kingdom of Württemberg]] |
|||
|[[File:Coat_of_arms_of_Lower_Saxony.svg|center|frameless|114x114px]][[Kingdom of Hanover]] |
|||
|[[File:Bavaria_Arms.svg|center|frameless|110x110px]]Fully subsumed into [[Kingdom of Bavaria]] |
|||
|} |
|||
== See also == |
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{{Portal|Holy Roman Empire}} |
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* [[Elective monarchy]] |
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* [[Electoral Palace (disambiguation)]] |
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* [[Electress]] |
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* [[Imperial election]] |
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== References == |
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=== Armorials === |
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{{notelist|15em}} |
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=== Citations === |
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{{Reflist}} |
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=== Sources === |
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* Bryce, J. (1887). ''The Holy Roman Empire'', 8th ed. New York: Macmillan. |
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* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Electors|volume=9|pages=173–175}} |
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* {{1728|title=Elector |url=https://search.library.wisc.edu/digital/A4C5AV6Q7LZ5DY8E/pages/AINHCTHET2XNQV8J?view=one}} |
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== External links == |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040603023653/http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/golden.htm The Avalon Project. (2003). "The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A.D."] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040604170137/http://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/reichsstande.htm Oestreich, G. and Holzer, E. (1973). " Übersicht über die Reichsstände." In Gebhardt, Bruno. ''{{lang|de|Handbuch der Deutschen Geschichte}}'', 9th ed. (Vol. 2, pp. 769–784). Stuttgart: Ernst Ketler Verlag.] |
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* [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/royalstyle.htm Velde, F. R. (2003). "Royal Styles."] |
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* [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/hre.htm Velde, F. R. (2004). "The Holy Roman Empire."] |
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* {{Cite NIE|wstitle=Electors, German Imperial |year=1905 |short=x}} |
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* [https://www.historisches-lexikon-bayerns.de/Lexikon/EN:Electors Armin Wolf, Electors, published 9 May 2011, english version published 26 February 2020 ; in: Historisches Lexikon Bayerns] |
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{{Electors of the Holy Roman Empire after 1356}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:1125 establishments in Europe]] |
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[[Category:1120s establishments in the Holy Roman Empire]] |
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[[Category:1866 disestablishments in the German Confederation]] |
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[[Category:Princes of the Holy Roman Empire|*]] |
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[[Category:German noble titles]] |
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[[Category:Titles of nobility of the Holy Roman Empire]] |
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[[Category:Prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire|*]] |
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[[Category:Electoral colleges]] |
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[[Category:Imperial election (Holy Roman Empire)]] |
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[[Category:Monarchy in Germany]] |
Latest revision as of 16:34, 29 December 2024
Part of a series on |
Imperial, royal, noble, gentry and chivalric ranks in Europe |
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The prince-electors (German: Kurfürst (ⓘ), pl. Kurfürsten, Czech: Kurfiřt, Latin: Princeps Elector) were the members of the electoral college that elected the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire.
From the 13th century onwards, a small group of prince-electors gained the privilege of electing the King of the Romans. The king would then later be crowned Emperor by the pope. Charles V (elected in 1519) was the last emperor to be crowned (1530); his successors assumed the title "Elected Emperor of the Romans" (German: erwählter Römischer Kaiser; Latin: electus Romanorum imperator) upon their coronation as kings.
The dignity of elector carried great prestige and was considered to be behind only the emperor, kings, and the highest dukes.[1] The electors held exclusive privileges that were not shared with other princes of the Empire, and they continued to hold their original titles alongside that of elector.
The heir apparent to a secular prince-elector was known as an electoral prince (German: Kurprinz).
Rights and privileges
[edit]Electors were rulers of Reichsstände (Imperial Estates), enjoying precedence over the other Imperial Princes. They were, until the 18th century, exclusively entitled to be addressed with the title Durchlaucht (Serene Highness). In 1742, the electors became entitled to the superlative Durchlauchtigste (Most Serene Highness), while other princes were promoted to Durchlaucht.
As rulers of Imperial Estates, the electors enjoyed all the privileges of princes, including the right to enter into alliances, to autonomy in relation to dynastic affairs, and to precedence over other subjects. The Golden Bull granted them the Privilegium de non appellando, which prevented their subjects from lodging an appeal to a higher Imperial court. Although this privilege, and some others, were automatically granted to Electors, they were not exclusive to them and many of the larger Imperial Estates were also to be individually granted some or all those rights and privileges.[2]
Imperial Diet
[edit]The electors, like the other princes ruling States of the Empire, were members of the Imperial Diet, which was divided into three collegia: the Council of Electors, the Council of Princes, and the Council of Cities. In addition to being members of the Council of Electors, most electors were also members of the Council of Princes by virtue of possessing territory or holding ecclesiastical position. The assent of both bodies was required for important decisions affecting the structure of the Empire, such as the creation of new electorates or States of the Empire.
Many electors ruled a number of States of the Empire or held several ecclesiastical titles, and therefore had multiple votes in the Council of Princes. In 1792, the Elector of Brandenburg had eight votes, the Elector of Bavaria six votes, the Elector of Hanover six votes, the King of Bohemia three votes, the Elector-Archbishop of Trier three votes, the Elector-Archbishop of Cologne two votes, and the Elector-Archbishop of Mainz one vote. Thus, of the hundred votes in the Council of Princes in 1792, twenty-nine belonged to electors, giving them considerable influence in the Council of Princes in addition to their positions as electors.
In addition to voting by colleges or councils, the Imperial Diet also voted in religious coalitions, as provided for in the Peace of Westphalia. The Archbishop of Mainz presided over the Catholic body, the corpus catholicorum, while the Elector of Saxony presided over the Protestant body, the corpus evangelicorum. The division into religious bodies was on the basis of the official religion of the state.
Elections
[edit]The electors were originally summoned by the Archbishop of Mainz within one month of an Emperor's death, and met within three months of being summoned. During the interregnum, imperial power was exercised by two imperial vicars. Each vicar, in the words of the Golden Bull, was "the administrator of the empire itself, with the power of passing judgments, of presenting to ecclesiastical benefices, of collecting returns and revenues and investing with fiefs, of receiving oaths of fealty for and in the name of the holy empire". The Elector of Saxony was vicar in areas operating under Saxon law (Saxony, Westphalia, Hannover, and northern Germany), while the Elector Palatine was vicar in the remainder of the Empire (Franconia, Swabia, the Rhine, and southern Germany). The Elector of Bavaria replaced the Elector Palatine in 1623, but when the latter was granted a new electorate in 1648, there was a dispute between the two as to which was vicar. In 1659, both purported to act as vicar, but ultimately, the other vicar recognized the Elector of Bavaria. Later, the two electors made a pact to act as joint vicars, but the Imperial Diet rejected the agreement. In 1711, while the Elector of Bavaria was under the ban of the Empire, the Elector Palatine again acted as vicar, but his cousin was restored to his position upon his restoration three years later.
Finally, in 1745, the two agreed to alternate as vicars, with Bavaria starting first. This arrangement was upheld by the Imperial Diet in 1752. In 1777, the question was settled when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria. On many occasions, however, there was no interregnum, as a new king had been elected during the lifetime of the previous Emperor.
Frankfurt regularly served as the site of the election from the 14th century on, but elections were also held at Cologne (1531), Regensburg (1575 and 1636), and Augsburg (1653 and 1690). An elector could appear in person or could appoint another elector as his proxy. More often, an electoral suite or embassy was sent to cast the vote; the credentials of such representatives were verified by the Archbishop of Mainz, who presided over the ceremony. The deliberations were held at the city hall, but voting occurred in the cathedral. In Frankfurt, a special electoral chapel, or Wahlkapelle, was used for elections. Under the Golden Bull, a majority of electors sufficed to elect a king, and each elector could cast only one vote. Electors were free to vote for whomsoever they pleased (including themselves), but dynastic considerations played a great part in the choice.
From the 16th century on, electors drafted a Wahlkapitulation, or electoral capitulation, which was presented to the king-elect. The capitulation may be described as a contract between the princes and the king, the latter conceding rights and powers to the electors and other princes. Once an individual swore to abide by the electoral capitulation, he assumed the office of King of the Romans.
In the 10th and 11th centuries, princes often acted merely to confirm hereditary succession in the Ottonian and Salian dynasties. But with the actual formation of the prince-elector class, elections became more open, starting with the election of Lothair III in 1125. The Staufen dynasty managed to get its sons formally elected in their fathers' lifetimes almost as a formality. After those lines ended in extinction, the electors began to elect kings from different families, so that the throne would not once again settle within a single dynasty. All kings elected from 1438 onwards were from among the Habsburg dynasty until 1740, when Austria was inherited by a woman, Maria Theresa, sparking the War of the Austrian Succession and the short-lived rule of a Bavarian Wittelsbach emperor. In 1745, Maria Theresa's husband, Francis I of Lorraine, was elected emperor. All of his successors were also from the Habsburg-Lorraine family.
High offices
[edit]Each elector held a "High Office of the Empire" (Reichserzamt) analogous to a modern cabinet office position and was a member of the ceremonial Imperial Household. The three spiritual electors became Archchancellors (German: Erzkanzler, Latin: Archicancellarius): the Archbishop of Mainz became Archchancellor of Germany, the Archbishop of Cologne became Archchancellor of Italy, and the Archbishop of Trier became Archchancellor of Burgundy. The secular electors were granted heraldic augmentations to their coats of arms reflecting their positions in the Household. These augmentations were displayed in three alternative ways:
- as an inescutcheon on their coat of arms (as in the case of the Arch-Steward, Treasurer, and Chamberlain);
- as dexter impalements (as in the case of the Arch-Marshal and Arch-Bannerbearer)
- integrated into the charge within the escutcheon (as in the case of the Arch-Cupbearer, where the Lion of Bohemia acquired a "simple crown" held in its dexter paw).
Imperial office (German, Latin) |
Augmentation | Elector |
---|---|---|
Arch-Cupbearer (Erzmundschenk, Archipincerna) |
A simple crown, Or [a][b][c] |
King of Bohemia |
Arch-Steward (Erztruchseß, Archidapifer) |
Gules, an orb, Or |
Elector Palatine (1356-1623) Elector of Bavaria (1623–1706) Elector Palatine (1706–1714) Elector of Bavaria (1714–1806) |
Arch-Marshal (Erzmarschall, Archimarescallus) |
Per fess sable and argent, two swords in saltire, gules |
Elector of Saxony |
Arch-Chamberlain (Erzkämmerer, Archicamerarius) |
[Please clarify why two images.] Azure, a scepter palewise, Or |
Elector of Brandenburg |
Arch-Treasurer (Erzschatzmeister, Archithesaurarius) |
Gules, Crown of the Holy Roman Empire, or |
Elector Palatine (1648–1706) Elector of Hanover (1710–1714)[3] Elector Palatine (1714–1777)[3] Elector of Hanover (1777–1806)[3] |
Arch-Bannerbearer (Erzbannerträger, Archivexillarius) |
Azure, a lance party per fess, or, and gules bendwise flying to sinister chief a banner, or, with the Imperial Eagle |
Elector of Hanover (1692–1710)[4] Elector of Hanover (1714–1777) Elector of Württemberg (1803–1806)[5] |
When the Duke of Bavaria replaced the Elector Palatine in 1623, he assumed the latter's office of Arch-Steward. When the Count Palatine was granted a new electorate, he assumed the position of Arch-Treasurer of the Empire. When the Duke of Bavaria was banned in 1706, the Elector Palatine returned to the office of Arch-Steward, and in 1710, the Elector of Hanover was promoted to the post of Arch-Treasurer. Matters were complicated by the Duke of Bavaria's restoration in 1714; the Elector of Bavaria resumed the office of Arch-Steward, while the Elector Palatine returned to the post of Arch-Treasurer, and the Elector of Hanover was given the new office of Archbannerbearer. The Electors of Hanover, however, continued to be styled Arch-Treasurers, though the Elector Palatine was the one who actually exercised the office until 1777, when he inherited Bavaria and the Arch-Stewardship. After 1777, no further changes were made to the Imperial Household; new offices were planned for the Electors admitted in 1803, but the Empire was abolished before they could be created. The Duke of Württemberg, however, started to adopt the trappings of the Arch-Bannerbearer.
The electors discharged the ceremonial duties associated with their offices only during coronations, where they bore the crown and regalia of the Empire. Otherwise, they were represented by holders of corresponding "Hereditary Offices of the Household". The Arch-Butler was represented by the Hereditary Butler (Cupbearer) (the Count of Althann), the Arch-Seneschal by the Hereditary Steward (the Count of Waldburg, who adopted the title into their name as "Truchsess von Waldburg"), the Arch-Chamberlain by the Hereditary Chamberlain (the Count of Hohenzollern), the Arch-Marshal by the Hereditary Marshal (the Count of Pappenheim), and the Arch-Treasurer by the Hereditary Treasurer (the Count of Sinzendorf). After 1803, the Duke of Württemberg as Arch-Bannerbearer assigned the count of Zeppelin-Aschhausen as Hereditary Bannerbearer.
[Please clarify why some of these offices do not feature in the table immediately above.]
History
[edit]The German practice of electing monarchs began when ancient Germanic tribes formed ad hoc coalitions and elected the leaders thereof. Elections were irregularly held by the Franks, whose successor states include France and the Holy Roman Empire. The French monarchy eventually became hereditary, but the Holy Roman Emperors remained elective. While all free men originally exercised the right to vote in such elections, suffrage eventually came to be limited to the leading men of the realm. In the election of Lothar III in 1125, a small number of eminent nobles chose the monarch and then submitted him to the remaining magnates for their approbation.
Soon, the right to choose the monarch was settled on an exclusive group of princes, and the procedure of seeking the approval of the remaining nobles was abandoned. The college of electors was mentioned in 1152 and again in 1198. The composition of electors at that time is unclear, but appears to have included bishops and the dukes of the stem duchies.
1257 to Thirty Years' War
[edit]The electoral college is known to have existed by 1152, but its composition is unknown. A letter written by Pope Urban IV in 1265 suggests that by "immemorial custom", seven princes had the right to elect the King and future Emperor. The pope wrote that the seven electors were those who had just voted in the election of 1257, which resulted in the election of two kings.[6]
- Three ecclesiastical Electors:
- Four secular Electors:
The three Archbishops oversaw the most venerable and powerful sees in Germany. Since 1214, the Palatinate and Bavaria were held by the same individual, but in 1253, they were divided between two members of the House of Wittelsbach. The other electors refused to allow two princes from the same dynasty to have electoral rights, so a heated rivalry arose between the Count Palatine and the Duke of Bavaria over who should hold the Wittelsbach seat.
Meanwhile, the King of Bohemia, who held the ancient imperial office of Arch-Cupbearer, asserted his right to participate in elections. Sometimes he was challenged on the grounds that his kingdom was not German, though usually he was recognized, instead of Bavaria, which, after all, was just a younger line of Wittelsbachs.[7]
The Declaration of Rhense issued in 1338 had the effect that election by the majority of the electors automatically conferred the royal title and rule over the empire, without papal confirmation. The Golden Bull of 1356 finally resolved the disputes among the electors. Under it, the Archbishops of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne, as well as the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony, and the Margrave of Brandenburg held the right to elect the King.
The college's composition remained unchanged until the 17th century, although the Electorate of Saxony was transferred from the senior to the junior branch of the Wettin family in 1547, in the aftermath of the Schmalkaldic War.
Thirty Years' War to Napoleon
[edit]In 1623, the Elector Palatine, Frederick V, came under the imperial ban after participating in the Bohemian Revolt (a part of the Thirty Years' War). The Elector Palatine's seat was conferred on the Duke of Bavaria, the head of a junior branch of his family. Originally, the Duke held the electorate personally, but it was later made hereditary along with the duchy. When the Thirty Years' War concluded with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, a new electorate was created for the Count Palatine of the Rhine. Since the Elector of Bavaria retained his seat, the number of electors increased to eight; the two Wittelsbach lines were now sufficiently estranged so as not to pose a combined potential threat.
In 1685, the religious composition of the College of Electors was disrupted when a Catholic branch of the Wittelsbach family inherited the Palatinate. A new Protestant electorate was created in 1692 for the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who became known as the Elector of Hanover (the Imperial Diet officially confirmed the creation in 1708). The Elector of Saxony converted to Catholicism in 1697 so that he could become King of Poland, but no additional Protestant electors were created. Although the Elector of Saxony was personally Catholic, the Electorate itself remained officially Protestant, and the Elector even remained the leader of the Protestant body in the Reichstag.
In 1706, the Elector of Bavaria and Archbishop of Cologne were outlawed during the War of the Spanish Succession, but both were restored in 1714 after the Peace of Baden. In 1777, the number of electors was reduced to eight when the Elector Palatine inherited Bavaria.
Many changes to the composition of the college were necessitated by Napoleon's aggression during the early 19th century. The Treaty of Lunéville (1801), which ceded territory on the Rhine's left bank to France, led to the abolition of the archbishoprics of Trier and Cologne, and the transfer of the remaining spiritual Elector from Mainz to Regensburg. In 1803, electorates were created for the Duke of Württemberg, the Margrave of Baden, the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, and the Duke of Salzburg, bringing the total number of electors to ten. When Austria annexed Salzburg under the Treaty of Pressburg (1805), the Duke of Salzburg moved to the Grand Duchy of Würzburg and retained his electorate. None of the new electors, however, had an opportunity to cast votes, as the Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806, and the new electorates were never confirmed by the Emperor.
In 1788, the ruling family of Savoy pushed to receive an electoral title. Their ambition was backed by Brandenburg-Prussia. Nonetheless, the French Revolution and subsequent Coalition Wars soon rendered this a moot point.[8]
After the Empire
[edit]After the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire in August 1806, the Electors continued to reign over their territories, many of them taking higher or alternative titles. The Electors of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Saxony styled themselves Kings, while the Electors of Baden, Regensburg, and Würzburg became Grand Dukes. The Elector of Hesse-Kassel, however, retained the meaningless title "Elector of Hesse", thus distinguishing himself from other Hessian princes (the Grand Duke of Hesse(-Darmstadt) and the Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg). Napoleon soon exiled him and Kassel was annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia, a new creation. The King of Great Britain remained at war with Napoleon and continued to style himself Elector of Hanover, while the Hanoverian government continued to operate in London.
The Congress of Vienna accepted the Electors of Bavaria, Württemberg, and Saxony as Kings, along with the newly created Grand Duke of Baden. The Elector of Hanover finally joined his fellow Electors by declaring himself the King of Hanover. The restored Elector of Hesse tried to be recognized as the King of the Chatti. The European powers refused to acknowledge this title at the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818), however, and instead listed him with the Grand Dukes as a "Royal Highness".[9] Believing the title of Prince-Elector to be superior in dignity to that of Grand Duke, the Elector of Hesse-Kassel chose to remain an Elector, even though there was no longer a Holy Roman Emperor to elect. Hesse-Kassel remained the only Electorate in Germany until 1866, when the country backed the losing side in the Austro-Prussian War and was absorbed into Prussia.
Marks of office
[edit]Electoral arms
[edit]Below are the State arms of each Imperial Elector. Emblems of Imperial High Offices are shown on the appropriate arms.
Three Electors Spiritual (Archbishops): all three were annexed by various powers through German Mediatisation of 1803.
Four Electors Secular:
-
Kingdom of Bohemia. The white lion bears in his right paw a simple crown, the device of the office of Arch Cupbearer. Restored directly from Medieval, hand-drawn armorials.[a][b][c]
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The Palatinate was an electorate until 1777, when the Elector acceded to Bavaria. The office of Arch-Treasurer transferred to Hanover.
Electors added in the 17th century:
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Bavaria was granted electoral dignity by Ferdinand II in 1623, removing the dignity from the Count Palatine of the Rhine.
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Hanover (Brunswick-Lüneburg), made an elector by Leopold I in 1692 as a reward for aid given in the War of the Grand Alliance. Later, the ceremonial office of Chief Treasurer was transferred here from the Palatinate.
Napoleonic additions
[edit]As Napoleon waged war on Europe, between 1803 and 1806, the following changes to the Constitution of the Holy Roman Empire were attempted until the Empire's collapse. The arch-chancellor of Germany and archbishop elector of Mainz continued to be an elector, but as the prince of Regensburg, which took over Mainz's arch-episcopal status. The prince of Württemberg received the formerly defunct office of Arch-Bannerbearer, while the other new electors were not given augments or high office in the imperial household, though new offices were planned.[10]
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In 1777, the number of Electors dropped from nine to eight, until 1803, when Württemberg was raised to an electorate by the Imperial diet, while the prince himself was elevated from Standard-Bearer (Bannerherr) to Arch-Standardbearer.[10]
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Hesse-Cassel was added in 1803.
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Principality of Regensburg, ruled by the former prince-archbishop of Mainz was added in 1803, after the annexation of Mainz by the French.
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Grand Duchy of Salzburg was added in 1803. After it was mediatized to Austria in 1805, its electoral vote was transferred to Würzburg. Salzburg and Würzburg were ruled by the same person, Ferdinand III.
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Duchy of Würzburg was added in 1805.
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Margraviate of Baden was added in 1803.
Timeline of electors
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]Armorials
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ "Precedence among Nations". www.heraldica.org. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- ^ Even a small Free Imperial City such as Schwäbisch Gmünd had been granted the Privilegium de non appellando in 1475. Cf. Kaiser Friedrich III.: Privilegium de non appellando für Schwäbisch Gmünd, 1475
- ^ a b c The augmentation was borne as an inescutcheon continuously and without interruption by the Electors of Hanover from 1714-1837. There is no evidence that this inescutcheon was ever borne by the Elector Palatine (House of Wittelsbach).
- ^ Noack, Konstantin (2017-12-10). Die neun Kurfürstentümer des Heiligen Römischen Reiches Deutscher Nation (in German). GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3-668-62294-4.
- ^ “The Holy Roman Empire”, Heraldica
- ^ Bryce, James (1866). The Holy Roman Empire (Revised ed.). London: Macmillan. p. 252.
- ^ Wolf, Armin (2020-04-23). "Electors". Historisches Lexikon Bayerns. Archived from the original on 2021-11-05. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
- ^ Peter Wilson. Heart of Europe: A History of the Holy Roman Empire. Cambridge: 2016. p. 227. [ISBN missing]
- ^ Satow, Ernest Mason (1932). A Guide to Diplomatic Practice. London: Longmans.
- ^ a b "the Holy Roman Empire". www.heraldica.org. Retrieved 2023-05-17.
Sources
[edit]- Bryce, J. (1887). The Holy Roman Empire, 8th ed. New York: Macmillan.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 173–175.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728). "Elector". Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al.
External links
[edit]- The Avalon Project. (2003). "The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A.D."
- Oestreich, G. and Holzer, E. (1973). " Übersicht über die Reichsstände." In Gebhardt, Bruno. Handbuch der Deutschen Geschichte, 9th ed. (Vol. 2, pp. 769–784). Stuttgart: Ernst Ketler Verlag.
- Velde, F. R. (2003). "Royal Styles."
- Velde, F. R. (2004). "The Holy Roman Empire."
- New International Encyclopedia. 1905. .
- Armin Wolf, Electors, published 9 May 2011, english version published 26 February 2020 ; in: Historisches Lexikon Bayerns
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