both minor and major European powers—Denmark,
Sweden, France, and Spain—made the war a Europe-
wide struggle (see Map 15.1). The struggle for European
leadership between the Bourbon dynasty of France and
the Habsburg dynasties of Spain and the Holy Roman
Empire was an especially important factor. Nevertheless,
most of the battles were fought on German soil, with
devastating results for the German people.
The Peace of Westphalia, which officially ended the
war in Germany in 1648, ensured that all Germanstates, including the Calvinist ones, were free to
determine their own religion. The major contenders
gained new territories, and one of them, France,
emerged as the dominant nation in Europe. The more
than three hundred states that made up the Holy
Roman Empire were recognized as virtually independ-
ent, each with the power to conduct its own foreign
policy. The Habsburg emperor had been reduced to a
figurehead. The Peace of Westphalia also made it clear
that religion and politics were now separate in theMediterranean SeaAtlantic
OceanNorth
SeaBaltic
SeaCreteSicilyCorsicaSardiniaBaleari
c^ Islands^
SPAINPORTUGALFRANCEENGLANDSCOTLAND
DENMARKNORWAY
SWEDENFINLANDPOLANDHUNGARYAUSTRIABRANDENBURGBOHEMIASILESIAPRUSSIASPANISH
NETHERLANDSSWISS
CONFEDERATIONSAVOY
GENOA
TUSCANYPAPAL
STATESREPUBLICBAVARIAUNITED
PROVINCESKINGDOM OF
DENMARK
AND NORWAYMILANKINGDOM OF SWEDEN ESTONIA
LIVONIAPALATINATEVENICEOFMadridLisbonParisLondonToulVerdun MetzAmsterdam
BerlinWarsawDanzigBergen
StockholmVienna
BudaRome
NaplesAugsburgPragueHamburgLübeck
BremenRocroi Westphalia
1643Lützen
1632White Mountain
1620Nördlingen
1634ALSACEEbro R.Seine(^) R.
Rh
ine
(^) R
.
(^)
(^) R.
(^) Dan
ube R.
Danub
e
(^) Vi
stula
R.
(^) Pyrene
es
Alp
s^
Kingdom of Denmark
and Norway
Brandenburg
Kingdom of Sweden
Habsburg (Austrian)
Habsburg (Spanish)
Holy Roman Empire
boundary in 1648
Battle site
0 200 400 Miles
0 200 400 600 Kilometers
MAP 15.1The Thirty Years’ War.The conflict began in the German states as Europe’s major
powers backed either the northern Protestant Union or the southern Catholic League. As the war
progressed, religion receded in importance, replaced by a dynastic struggle between the French
Bourbons and the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs.
Q Compare this map with Map 13.2. Which countries engaged in the war were
predominantly Protestant, which were predominantly Catholic, and which were
mixed?
Social Crises, War, and Rebellions 361
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