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

(Amelia) #1

Raids and Retaliation 37


Konstanz’s lordships of Hallau and Neunkirch, which had been occupied by


the  Swiss in April that year,187 in the teeth of the cantons’ opposition.188


Schaffhausen’s success in incorporating these lordships into its city-state had to


wait until the 1520s.189


Given the undeniable differences over strategy between the cantons, on the one


hand, and the poorly coordinated actions of the Swabian League, on the other, it


is legitimate to ask, therefore, whether the purpose of the campaigns along the


Hochrhein was primarily plunder and revenge, rather than a concerted attempt to


seize and hold enemy territory.190 Both sides hired mercenaries alongside the


deployment of regular troops. Any delay or default in paying their wages was a


ready excuse to plunder in kind what they were owed in cash.191 The problem was


compounded by the activity of irregulars outwith the control of the field com-


manders; these were mostly bands of footloose youth whose only loyalty was to


themselves. In addition, there were spies at large: one such, Hans Önli, admitted


to being a member of a gang plotting acts of arson in the Hegau, at Radolfzell,


Überlingen, and elsewhere. Önli claimed to be acting on the instructions of a


Zürich spymaster, but it is just as likely that he and his associates—curiously


described as ‘lepers’—were marauding on their own account.192 Some Swiss even


hired themselves out to the Swabian League or the Hegau nobility, and thus found


themselves fighting their own countrymen.193


Forays for booty followed by a swift retreat became the norm. That was the case


in the various Swiss sorties into the Hegau and Klettgau, and in the retaliatory


attack by Habsburg troops on Eglisau in February 1499.194 Just how confused—


and confusing—motives might be is graphically illustrated by the capture of


Stühlingen in April 1499. Towards the end of the month Zürich’s commanders in


the field reported to the city council that their men had taken Stühlingen castle.


Because of its strategic location on Schaffhausen’s border it was agreed to install a


garrison of ten men drawn from each canton. But once a cache of wine and corn


was discovered, it was decided to loot the castle—described as ‘the pleasantest little


tower of Babel you could imagine’!—but to leave the town unscathed.195 After


fisticuffs had broken out over the correct division of the spoils, however, the mood


changed. Against their own undertaking, Zürich’s troops then set about plunder-


ing the town, which earned the city a stiff rebuke from Luzern, which insisted that


the matter be brought before the diet.196


187 SAZH, Akten 159, 90, 28 April 1499. 188 Meyer, ‘Thurgau’, 92.
189 Rüedi, ‘Schaffhausens Erwerbungen’, 227–31.
190 Niederhäuser, ‘ “Kriegs”-Geschichte’, 155.
191 Niederhäuser, ‘Kampf ums Überleben’, 34–5.
192 GLA 123/98a, n.d. (1499). He called his associates Malentzen (Malatz is a leper): perhaps their
feigned illness allowed them to go about unmolested.
193 Niederhäuser, ‘ “Kriegs”-Geschichte’, 172.
194 Niederstätter, ‘Schwaben- oder Schweizerkrieg’, 58–60; Niederhäuser, ‘Kampf ums Überleben’, 35.
195 SAZH, Akten 159, 146, 24 April 1499: das lustigest baberbuwnest Schloß, das man finden
mochte.
196 SAZH, Akten 159, 160, 28 April 1499.

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