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Between Bourbon and Habsburg: Elite Political Identities at Freiburg im Breisgau, 1651–1715

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

Extract

In his classic analysis of state building by the Austrian Habsburgs in early modern Central Europe, R. J. W. Evans argues that the dynasty's eventual success in asserting its will over a conglomerate of separate, coherent territories with time-honored claims to political liberties followed the sometimes troubled trajectory of crown-aristocratic relations. The cultural impetus for political centralization was the mix of reform within the Catholic Church and counterreform measures taken against powerful Protestant subjects among the nobles and civic elites. By the 1650s the ability of Habsburg officials in Vienna to govern effectively the dynasty's various holdings rested firmly on a dyarchy of the ruling house and regional nobles who shared a common baroque Catholic faith and an investment in a system of court patronage that fostered collaboration rather than resistance in the far-flung empire.

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Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 2002

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References

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14 For an excellent and recent overview of all aspects of Freiburg's early modern history, see Heiko, Haumann and Hans, Schadek, eds., Geschichte der Stadt Freiburg im Breisgau, vol. 2, Vom Bauernkrieg bis zum Ende der habsburgischen Herrschaft (Stuttgart, 1994)Google Scholar. On the city's population, see Helmut, Schyle, Freiburg im Breisgau und seine Einwohner im 17. Jahrhundert (Würzburg, 1993), 3639, here at 39Google Scholar; see also Martina, Reiling, Bevölkerung und Sozialtopographie Freiburgs im Breisgau im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert (Freiburg, 1989), passimGoogle Scholar. On Freiburg's university and religious establishments, see Hugo, Ott, “Aus der Frühzeit der Freiburger Universität,” in Freiburg in der Neuzeit, ed. Wolfgang, Müller (Bühl, 1972), 723Google Scholar; and Petra, Rohde, “Die Freiburger Klöster zwischen Reformation und Auflösung,“ in Votn Bauernkrieg bis zum Ende der habsburgischen Herrschaft, ed. Haumann, and Schadek, , 418–43. In 1695 Freiburg's capitation register identified nineteen religious foundations separate from the university. See Stadtarchiv Freiburg im Breisgau (hereafter StAFr), El Aii b, Militärsteuern 1696.Google Scholar

15 Tom, Scott, Freiburg im Breisgau: Town-Country Relations in the Age of Reformation and Peasants‘ War (Oxford, 1986), 1519 and 2731Google Scholar. See also Friedrich, Hefele, “Freiburg als vorderösterreichische Stadt,” in Vorderösterreich. Eine Geschichtliche Landeskunde, ed. Friedrich, Metz, 2d ed. (Freiburg, 1967), 343–66.Google Scholar

16 The early modern terminology that described the territories varied from Vorlande to vorderösterreichische Lande to Vorderosterreich. The assumed coherency of the term Vorderösterreich became more common in correspondence in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries once the Alsatian domains had been ceded to France. Throughout, the Breisgau remained one piece in a broader puzzle. I have chosen to use the term Outer Austria as opposed to Further Austria in an effort to highlight the distance from the core duchy. See Norbert, Ohler, Von Grenzen und Herrschaften. Grundzüge territorialer Entwiddung im deutschen Südwesten (Buhl, 1989), 3361Google Scholar. Overall, the Outer Austrian territories included Austrian holdings in the Breisgau, Black Forest, Hauenstein, the four “Forest Cities,” Upper Alsace, and the Sundgau. Seidel, Karl Josef, Das Oberelsaβ vor dem Übergang an Frankreich. Landesherrschaft, Landstände und fürstliche Verwaltung in Alt-Vorderösterreich (1602–1638) (Bonn, 1980), 1424Google Scholar; and Martin, Wellmer, “Der vorderösterreichische Breisgau,” in Vorderösterreich, ed. Metz, , 271342Google Scholar. See also Georges, Bischoff, Gouvernés et gouvernants en Haute-Alsace ά I'époque autrichienne: Les états des pays antérieurs des origines au milieu du XVIe siècle (Strasbourg, 1982)Google Scholar; and Tom, Scott, Regional Identity and Economic Change: The Upper Rhine 1450–1600 (Oxford, 1997). Scott also translates Vorderösterreich as Outer Austria. On the political systemGoogle Scholar, see Otto, Stolz, “Das Verhältnis der vorderösterreichischen Lande zu den landesfürstlichen Regierungen in Innsbruck und Wien,” in Vorderösterreich, ed. Metz, , 111–22Google Scholar; see also Volker Press, “Vorderösterreich in der habsburgischen Reichspolitik des späten Mittelalters und der frühen Neuzeit,” in Vorderösterreich, ed. Maier, and Press, 1–42.Google Scholar

17 Brady, Thomas A. Jr., Turning Swiss: Cities and Empire, 1450–1550 (Cambridge, 1985)Google Scholar; and more recently in Idem, Protestant Politics: Jacob Sturm (1489–1553) and the German Reformation (Atlantic Highlands, N.J., 1995), esp. 81–89.

18 Seidel, , Das Oberelsaβ, 94–99Google Scholar. On the special assemblies (Ausschuβtage), see Ibid.., 117–31. On Freiburg's role, see Ulrich, Ecker and Heiko, Haumann, “‘Viel zu viele Beamte,’” in Vom Bauernkrieg bis zum Ende der habsburgischen Herrschaft, ed. Haumann, and Schadek, , 163.Google Scholar

19 Seidel, , Das Oberelsaβ, 137–44.Google Scholar

20 Benoit, Jordan, La noblesse ďAlsace entre la gloire et la vertu: les sires de Ribeaupierre 1451–1585 (Strasbourg, 1991).Google Scholar

21 Seidel, , Das Oberelsaβ, 149–53.Google Scholar

22 Ibid., 154–61. See also Karl-Heinrich, Oldendorf, “Die Errichtung des vorderösterreichischen Regiments in Freiburg nach dem Dreißigjährigen Krieg,” in Freiburg in der Neuzeit, ed. Muller, , 25.Google Scholar

23 Tom, Scott, “Die Territorialpolitik der Stadt Freiburg im Breisgau im ausgehenden Mittelalter,” “Schau-ins-Land”. Zeitschrift des Breisgau-Geschichtsvereins 102 (1983): 7–24Google Scholar; Idem, Freiburg im Breisgau, 15–46, 114–54.

24 Between the constitutional reforms of 1554 and the end of the Thirty Years' War, at least thirty-seven noblemen served in Freiburg's civic regime. Several families were reservoirs for officials: von Sickingen (4), Stürtzel von Buchheim (3), von Wangen (3), von Reinach (3), Snewlin von Kranznau (2), Snewlin Bärlapp von Bollschweil (2), von Blumeneck (2), von Bernhausen (2), Summerau zu Pressburg (2), von Lichtenfels (2), von Hohlandsberg (2), von Wessenberg (2), and von Ampringen (2). In addition, several other families had one member appear on the electoral rolls: Philip von Schwalpach, Eucharius von Reischach, Hans Thüring Reich von Reichenstein, Marx Joachim Schenk von Castell, Joachim Adolph von Sandizell, Adam von Pforr, JohannChristoph von Baden, and Adolph Rau von Weinenthal. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 3 β, passim.

25 For the character of the sixteenth-century civic regime, see Scott, , Freiburg im Breisgau, 48–56Google Scholar. For a description of the civic constitution of 1554, see Franz, Laubenberger, “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert und ihre gesellschaftliche Struktur,” in Verwaltung und Gesellschaft in der südwestdeutschen Stadt des 17. und 18. Jahrhunderts, ed. Erich, Maschke and Jürgen, Sydow (Gottingen, 1969), 4665.Google Scholar

26 Ursula, Huggle, Johann Simler. Kupferschmied und Rat zu Freiburg im 17. Jahrhundert. Beitrage zur Sozialgeschichte der Stadt Freiburg aufder Grundlage der Einsichtnahme weitgehend unerschlossenen Archivmaterials (Freiburg, 1989), 137–47Google Scholar. On the city's legal code, see Wendt, Nasall and Winterer-Grafen, Heidi Verena, “Das Rechts und Gerichtswesen,” in Vom Bauernkrieg bis zum Ende der habsburgischen Herrschaft, ed. Haumann, and Schadek, , 371–77.Google Scholar

27 In 1560 the Oberhauptmann and the Landvogt from the regime at Ensisheim, Philip Graf von Eberstein, witnessed the elections. Only Hans Christoph von Bernhausen agreed to serve as Bürgermeister, and the officials appointed Herr Hans Baldung as Statthalter of the Schultheiss's office, which was “taken from the nobles.” By 1563 Pangratz von Lichtenfels had joined von Bernhausen and secured the office. See StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 6, p. 83. The regime regularly sent invitations to the noble officials to attend meetings—even the elections themselves. For example, it reminded Hans Wendel von Bernhausen to attend the election in June 1587 (StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /2 1587). A similar invitation went out to Ruprecht von Wessenberg in 1645, (StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4,1445–1776 /2 1645).

28 StAFr, Al Va, June 15,1579.

29 StAFr, Al Va, 30,1596 and Va, 31, Oct. 23,1598. Conditions had returned to normal by 1600 as the Statthalter from Ensisheim, Hans Christoph von Ramstein, and the chancellor, Dr. Andreas Harsch, attended the civic elections, where Hans Wendel von Bernhausen, assumed the office of Bürgermeister and Ulrich Srürtzel von Buchheim became Schultheiss; joining them on the Standing Council were Gabriel Snewlin Bärlapp von Bollschweil, Hans Thüring Reich von Reichenstein, Hans Caspar von Ampringen, and Hans Philip Vogt von Alten Sumerau und Pressberg. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 6, p. 88.

30 Hochenberger, H. Johann, the ObristzunftmeisterGoogle Scholar, and Pflaumen, H. Joachim von, the Statthalter for the Schultheiss post, along with Christoph Mang, a member of the Standing Council. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr 4–19, pp. 492 's departureGoogle Scholar, see Huggle, , Johann Simler, 137; and Laubenberger, “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 57–59.Google Scholar

31 Schyle, , Freiburg im Breisgau, 36–39Google Scholar. See also Horst, Buszello and Hans, Schadek, “Alltag der Stadt - Alltag der Bürger. Wirtschaftkrisen, soziale Not und neue Aufgaben der Verwaltung zwischen Bauernkrieg und Westfälischem Frieden,” in Vom Bauernkrieg bis zum Ende der habsburgischen Herrschaft, ed. Haumann, and Schadek, , 69–152, esp. 138–52;Google Scholar and Clemens, Bauer, “Freiburgs Wirtschaft im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert,” in Freiburg in der Neuzeit, ed. Müller, , 72–74.Google Scholar

32 Oldendorf, , “Die Errichtung des vorderösterriechischen Regiments,” 29.Google Scholar

33 StAFr, Al, Di, 8, Sept. 16, 1651. The city retained rights over the officials in several specific areas, which normally resulted in payments of half fees for services. See StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 18, 1525–1881/24 1651.

34 Heinrich, Schreiber, Geschichte der Stadt und Universität Freiburg im Breisgau (Freiburg, 1857), 3:171–72.Google Scholar

35 StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 18, 1525- 1881/24 1651, fol. 3v. See also Reiling, , Bevölkerung und Sozialtopographie, 33–35. The first Vice-Statthalter was the Breisgau noble Humbert von Wessenberg. He was joined by a jurist, Dr. Johann Theobald Zeller, as vice chancellor. A noble and two jurists rounded out the regime's RegimentsratGoogle Scholar. See Oldendorf, , “Die Errichtung des vorderösterreichischen Regiments,” 30–33.Google Scholar

36 Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 52–53Google Scholar. Given the demographic losses among the city's guilds, many of the regime's highest officials, including Johann Simler, came from relatively humble artisan roots. Simler was elevated to the Standing Council in 1643, when a former member, Christoph Mang, had left the city. See Huggle, , Johann Simler, 137–38. StAFr, B5 (P), la, Nr. 4, pp. 602–11.Google Scholar

37 Ecker, and Haumann, , “‘Viel zu viele Beamte,’” 164.Google Scholar

38 Erich, Pelzer, “Der vorderöstereichische Adel im Breisgau,” in Vorderösterreich. Nur die Schwanzfeder des Kaiseradlers? Die Habsburger im deutschen Südwesten, ed. Volker, Himmelein (Ulm, 1999), 183–84Google Scholar. On Stürtzel von Buchheim, see Idem, Der elsässische Adel, 59.

39 Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 56–57.Google Scholar

40 Martina Reiling argues that the ordinances themselves were symptomatic of efforts to respond to social tensions in the community. Reiling, , Bevölkerung und Sozialtopographie, 14.Google Scholar

41 StAFr, Al, Ig Priviligia hodierni aevi, 15, Jan. 5, 1666.

42 StAFr, Al, Ie Ordnungen, 43, Oct. 2–4, 1666.

43 Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 60.Google Scholar

44 For the elections of 1650, nobles included Franz Friedrich von Sickingen zu Ebnet, Johann Sebastian Stürtzel von Buchheim, Johann Christoph von Baden, Adolph Rau von Weinenthal, Johann Reinhard von Pfirdt zu Bingen, and Adolph von Roggenbach. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr 4, p. 595. In ensuing elections for the 1650s and 1660s, Marx Jacob Reich von Reichenstein, Gervasius von Pfort, Franz von Roggenbach, Johann Erhardt von Falckenstein, Franz Ludwig von Kageneck zu Neuershausen, Johann Wilhelm Stürtzel von Buchheim, Franz Schnewlin Barlapp zu Bollschweil und Bietzighofen, Beat Melchior von Reinach zu Munzingen, Otto Heinrich von und zu Schonau, Wolfgang Wilhelm Schnewlin Barlapp zu Bollschweil, and Georg Christoph von Andlau zu Bollingen held office. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 5, passim. On the election of 1675, see Ibid., pp. 89–90.

45 Ibid., 90. Outer Austrian officials sent in a report on these leaders to officials at Innsbruck. Laubenberger, “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 60”61.

46 Detailed in Schreiber, , Geschichte der Stadt, 172–75.Google Scholar

47 Ibid., 174.

48 Ibid., 178.

49 Only cammeral officials dealt directly with Vienna. Oldendorf, , “Die Errichtung des vorderosterreichischen Regiments,” 36–38.Google Scholar

50 From the election of 1680 onward, the nobles are no longer mentioned in the list of civic officials. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 5, p. 95f.

51 Georges, Livet and Nicole, Wilsdorf, Le Conseil souverain ďAlsace au XVIIe siécle: les traités de Westphalie el les lieux de mémoire (Bar-le-Duc, 1997), 267.Google Scholar

52 Hermann, Kopf, Freiburg im Breisgau unter der Krone Frankreichs 1677–1697 (Freiburg, 1970), 4973Google Scholar; the quote derives from Georges, Livet, Ľintendance ďAlsace sous Louis XIV de la guerre de Trente Ans á la mort de Louis XIV 1634–1715, 2d ed. (Strasbourg, 1987), 431.Google Scholar

53 Schyle, , Freiburg im Breisgau, 37Google Scholar; compare Friedrich, Noack, “Die französische Einwanderung in Freiburg im Breisgau 1677–1698,” Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte 23 (1930): 324–41, here at 326 and 329–38.Google Scholar

54 Kopf, , Freiburg im Breisgau, 32–49 and 76–80.Google Scholar

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57 57StAFr, B5 (P), la, Nr. 5, 90v–95r.

58 StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /3 1679–1698, fol. 3r. On Dietremann, see Kettering, , Patrons, 135–37Google Scholar. Compare Wallace, , Communities and Conflict, 223–26.Google Scholar

59 StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /3 1679–1698, 1683. Laubenberger notes that the meal in 1681 cost 209 florins. Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 54.Google Scholar

60 StAFr, Al Ig, 21, Sept. 3, 1692. On the Savoyard merchants, see Noack, , “Die franzosische Einwanderung,” 333–34.Google Scholar

61 Livet, and Wilsdorf, , Le Conseil souverain ďAlsace, 417.Google Scholar

62 StAFr, Al Ig, 22, 1693.

63 On the contract with the tax farmers, see StAFr, Al Ig, 17, Mar. 15,1681; for the fairs, see StAFr, Al Ig, 18–19.

64 StAFr, Al Ig, 20, Aug. 6, 1686. On Colmar, see Wallace, , Communities and Conflict, 180–206.Google Scholar

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66 Schreiber, , Geschichte der Stadt, 217–18.Google Scholar

67 StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /3 1698, provides a detailed account of events from late August to the end of November.

68 StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 6, p. 101.

69 Livet, and Wilsdorf, , Le conseil souverain ďAlsace au XVIIe siécle, 527. See also StAFr, B5 (P), la, Nr. 5,103v.Google Scholar

70 StAFr Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /3 1698. Compare Laubenberger, “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 62.

71 StAFr, Cl Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /3, 1698, fol. 2r-v.

72 On the Oberschultheiss, see Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 61–62. On relations with the Satzbürger, see StAFr, Al Ig, 1700, Aug. 28, 1700.Google Scholar

73 StAFr, Al Va, Aug. 29,1703; StAFr, Cl Priviligien, 1\8, 1698–1703.

74 StAFr, Cl, Diener und Dienste 4, 1445–1776 /4 1701–1750, fol. 1r. Compare Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 62. When the French returned in 1713, they replaced Günther with Franz Michael Gabriel Preis and replaced two other Bürgermeister as well. By 1717 the Outer Austrian Regime had ejected Preis and the other French appointees while restoring the surviving Bürgermeister Johann Christoph Reiher.Google Scholar

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78 In June 1747 Freiherr von Ramschwag, as imperial commissioner, ordered new elections, after having suspended the regime in February in response to a thirty-nine-point complaint from the citizenry over fiscal frustrations and other grievances. The interim regime attempted to resolve the problems but failed. It in turn was dissolved in 1756, and a restructured government was installed. The new civic regime consisted of the Inner Council, with six senators joining the two executive officers, the Biirgermeister and Schultheiss. An Outer Council composed of the twelve guild masters represented the citizenry. See Laubenberger, “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 63–64.

79 StAFr, Al Va, 43, 1756.

80 Laubenberger, , “Die Freiburger Stadtverwaltung,” 62–65.Google Scholar

81 Livet, , Ľintendance, 905.Google Scholar

82 Greissler, , La classe politique á Strasbourg, 45–112Google Scholar; Wallace, , Communities and Conflict, 180–206.Google Scholar

83 The process is summarized in Pelzer, , Der elsässische Adel, 284–86.Google Scholar

84 Evans, , The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, passim.Google Scholar

85 Richard, Handler, “Is ‘Identity’ a Useful Cross-Cultural Concept?” in Commemorations: The Politics of National Identity, ed. Gillis, John.R (Princeton, 1994)2740.Google Scholar