Emperor Charles V (1520-1555)
The man who ruled an empire where the sun never set. That being said, he did have three major challenges, the constant rivalry with Francois I, the charismatic French king, the invasion by, the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent and of course – the Reformation.
Born during a ball in Ghent on 24 February 1500, Charles of Habsburg would grow up to rule an empire stretching from the Philippines to Prague and from Lima to Lauwersoog. But who was the man behind one of history’s most powerful titles — and how did an unremarkable teenager come to be elected Holy Roman Emperor?
In this episode, we explore the remarkable — and often dysfunctional — upbringing of Charles V. Raised like an orphan in the Burgundian Netherlands while his mother Joanna of Castile was confined at Tordesillas, Charles was shaped by two very different mentors: the theologian Adrian of Utrecht, who introduced him to Erasmus and laid the groundwork for his complex relationship with the Reformation, and William de Croy, Lord of Chièvres, who drilled into him the discipline of statecraft.
We examine how Charles’ worldview was rooted in Burgundian chivalric tradition, why his advisors kept him politically cautious in his early reign, and how the death of his grandfather Maximilian I in 1519 forced him to step up and fight for the imperial crown against the formidable Francis I of France.
We also cover the extraordinary financial muscle of banker Jakob Fugger, the crucial diplomatic role of Margaret of Austria, and how a brief stop in Dover to visit Henry VIII helped prevent a Franco-English alliance that could have derailed everything at the Field of Cloth of Gold.
Topics covered in this episode:
- Charles V’s childhood in Mechelen and his education under Adrian of Utrecht and Lord Chièvres
- The Burgundian chivalric culture that shaped his worldview
- The death of Maximilian I and the scramble for the imperial election of 1519
- The role of the Fugger banking dynasty in funding Charles’ election campaign
- The Field of Cloth of Gold and Habsburg diplomacy with Henry VIII
- The coronation at Aachen in October 1520 and what it meant for the future of the Holy Roman Empire
Plus: an update on upcoming episodes and a summer break announcement.
The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.
#235: The Youth and Election of the Emperor Charles V
Buying the Imperial crown
Charles V grew up to become the most powerful European monarch in centuries, but most of his youth was spent in thrall to his advisors
#236: The Battle of Pavia
The Four Princes who Ruled Europe in the early 16th Century
There is one moment in the 16th century when the political picture flips – the battle of Pavia. Nothing will ever be the same…
#237: From the Treaty of Madrid to the Sack of Rome
Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory
in 1525, Charles V had his main opponent, the French King Francois I in his power. Still, 2 years later his soldiers sacked Rome and he was about to lose it all again..
#238: The Habsburg Empire at its Zenith
Ferdinand I and the Siege of Vienna 1529
By the Middle of the 16th century the Habsburg empire reached its largest extent as well as its biggest challenge to date at the Siege of Vienna