The Swiss and Their Neighbours, 1460-1560. Between Accommodation and Aggression

(Amelia) #1

2 The Swiss and Their Neighbours, 1460–


European stage, and the period in which the Confederation is supposed to have


achieved a degree of institutional consolidation (analogous to, but distinct from,


the evolution of the Empire as a whole described by Peter Moraw).


Yet there is a tension running through many of the recent accounts. On the one


hand it is recognized that the Confederation was erected upon and sustained by a


network of leagues, alliances, and pacts of mutual assistance which had stamped


the medieval centuries within the German-speaking lands and beyond: the urban


leagues of Germany and Italy, the Hanseatic League of merchants, the nobles’ asso-


ciations in southern Germany, the Alsatian Decapolis, or the Swabian League of


1488 combining cities, princes, and then the emperor himself. These leagues form


a major theme of Peter Wilson’s new survey of the Empire spanning one thousand


years, Heart of Europe.5 On the other hand there have been attempts, not so much


to construct a spurious ‘modernity’ for Switzerland, as to emphasize parallels with


other composite polities elsewhere in Europe, especially by comparing Switzerland


and the Dutch United Provinces as early modern republics, whose republicanism


represented the transcendence or rejection of medieval monarchism.6 Whether


Dutch republicanism had much in common with the enclosure of the Swiss civic


patriciates, republican in name but aristocratic in practice (and culture), is, how-


ever, a theme not yet fully explored.


Within Switzerland itself historians have questioned how in the mid-sixteenth


century what was famously described as a ‘league of discordant members’ managed


to survive: where is the balance to be struck between political and institutional


achievements over against cultural and mental attitudes? In this regard, the flower-


ing of a heroic Swiss historiography contained in the chronicles of the later fifteenth


century, coupled with the increasing animosity between Swiss and Swabians (that


is, south Germans in general), must be weighed against the development of the


Confederal diet, in which the administration of the so-called common lordships,


ruled by the cantons collectively, took up much of its business.


It is here that the present essay begins. It presents two contrasting case-studies.


The first examines the common lordship of the Thurgau in Konstanz’s hinterland,


which the Swiss occupied in 1460. The Thurgau, far from serving as an exemplar


of political and administrative cooperation, became something of a legal night-


mare for the Swiss, poisoning relations between the cantons themselves, with the


city of Konstanz, and more broadly with the Habsburgs and their feudatories and


clients in southern Germany, whose jurisdictions and estates straddled the Rhine.


Though the Swiss (or Swabian) War of 1499 had its origins in remote conflicts over


sovereignty between the Austrian Habsburg Tirol and the prince-bishopric of


Chur, subsequently potentiated by Emperor Maximilian’s search for safe military


5 Peter H. Wilson, Heart of Europe: A History of the Holy Roman Empire (Cambridge, MA, 2016).
The original title of the British publication was The Holy Roman Empire: A Thousand Years of Europe’s
History. See also Marquardt, Alte Eidgenossenschaft, 40, who points out that, although three such
leagues existed into the early modern period (Decapolis to 1678; Hanseatic League until 1669), only
the Helvetic Confederation survived after 1678.
6 André Holenstein, Thomas Maissen, and Maarten Prak (eds), The Republican Alternative: The
Netherlands and Switzerland Compared (Amsterdam, 2008).

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