The Council of Constance Part 2

The Council of Constance, which took place from November 1414 to April 1418, became a monumental event in history, not just for its pivotal decisions like the election of Pope Martin V and the execution of Jan Hus, but for the dynamic and often chaotic atmosphere it fostered among its diverse attendees.

Over the course of three and a half years, the city transformed into a melting pot of intellectual exchange, as leading minds from across Europe converged to debate pressing issues of the time, including the rights of indigenous groups and the justification of tyrannicide.

Amid cramped living conditions and a thriving entertainment scene, scholars exchanged ideas and manuscripts, paving the way for the Renaissance. The presence of 718 licensed sex workers also highlighted the social complexities of the gathering, reflecting the era’s attitudes towards prostitution and morality, even among the clergy.

The Council served as a critical juncture that would shape not only religious but also political landscapes in Europe for years to come.

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TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 172 – The council of Constance Part II, also episode 9 of season 9 The Reformation before the Reformation

In November 1414 30,000 academics and aristocrats, bishops, blacksmiths and bakers, cardinals, counts and chefs, doctors, dancers and diplomats, princes, prelates and public girls descended on a town in Southern Germany built to house 6 to 8,000 people. They planned to stay a few weeks, 2-3 months max. But 3 and a half years later most of them were still there.

What did they get up to? The great tentpole events, the trial of John XXIII, the burning of Jan Hus and the election of Martin V is what the council of Constance is remembered for, but what about all that time in between?

When I began working on this episode, I had planned to move straight to the showstoppers. I think I said something to that effect at the end of the last episode. But when I dug deeper, I realised that this world event was so much more than a papal election and the trial of a dissenter. For 3 years Constance was at the same time a never-ending G20 summit, the greatest academic conference of the Middle Ages, a permanent imperial diet and the centre of the catholic church. Everybody who was anybody was there either in the flesh or had at least sent a delegation.

Issues and concerns were brought before the council that still plague people today. Is it ever right to kill a tyrant, and if so, when can it be justified? What rights should be guaranteed for indigenous groups, in this case Pagans, and how should their dignity be protected? Other attendees sought justice for crimes committed against them in a world where political murder had become commonplace. Others still demanded their reward for years of service or simply wanted their rights recognised.

Living cheek by jowl in tiny Constance the leading minds from across Europe, from the ancient universities of Paris, Oxford and Bologna as well as from the newly founded seats of learning in Krakow, Prague, Heidelberg and Vienna shared their ideas, opinions, books and discoveries, paving the way for the intellectual shift we call the Renaissance.

Enough, me thinks to provide 30 minutes of great historical entertainment….

But before we start here are the customary 90 seconds of pleading for support. Let me keep it short – no I do not own a mattress from the internet, or have a razor subscription, nor do I put my precious mental health into the non-existent hands of a disembodied voice on Zoom. And if I did, you would not hear about it. Because the History of the Germans is advertising free. And to keep it that way many of you have already made a one-time donation or have subscribed on historyofthegermans.com/support. In particular we thank Thomas Barbeau, Robert K., James P., CC, Mit S., and Beau W. for having signed up already.


Constance: A Cultural Hub

The Council of Constance lasted from November 1414 to April 1418. All this time the participants had to live in incredibly cramped conditions. The great cardinals and imperial princes stayed in the splendid mansions of the patricians, Bishops and counts in the local inns or living with the more prosperous members of the artisan’s guilds. But the 5,000 prelates and hundreds of knights had to move into bedsits and further down the food chain we hear of simple folk moving into empty wine barrels.

Much of their time was taken up with building consensus within and between the nations, a process that was drawn-out and laborious. Position papers were exchanged, academic essays published, sermons reported, letters sent back and forth between the representatives and their principals and much backroom work undertaken, not dissimilar to modern day political gatherings.

But that still left room for other pursuits. The city and the various princes and prelates called on the hundreds of buglers and pipers, dancers and acrobats to put on entertainments. Tournaments were held.

But sometimes one had to breathe some fresh air. Many ventured out of the overcrowded city in their spare time, often to the spa town of Baden near Zurich. There, you could find hot springs that had been enjoyed since Roman times. And much like today, foreigners would write home in astonishment that the locals enjoyed their sauna in the buff.

Talking about the delights of disrobing, there is one topic that comes up in the lore of the council again and again and even made it into a symbol for the city of Constance, and that are the sex workers coming to service the councillors. I think this needs to be seen in context. Prostitution in the Middle Ages was largely tolerated, even by the church, and for simple pragmatic reasons. It was better men went to prostitutes than ending up messing up marriages or even worse raping women. Ok, the church also thought that it was better than masturbation and homosexuality, but let’s leave that to one side. Thomas Aquinas put it best when he said that if you remove the latrines from the palace, the staterooms will start to smell. There is the well documented case that the bishop of Winchester ran the brothels of Southwark  in London. Clergy too used prostitutes, for instance in Dijon, about 20% of the brothel customers were members of the clergy. Attitudes to clergy using prostitutes are hard to gage. We have preachers who railed against the hypocrisy of priests demanding moral standards of their flock whilst building a special gate to facilitate their tete a tetes. But there are also reports of people believing that sex was a natural urge and that it was better the vicar went to the bathhouse than seducing the members of the congregation. And we have to remember that a lot of men and women had taken vows of chastity who weren’t necessarily that pious. Many a second son or daughter were sent to monasteries because there weren’t enough funds to provide a living or a dowry. For ambitious men from humble backgrounds the church provided the only route to wealth and status and many an archbishop had been lifted into the post by his princely father purely for political reasons. None of these had signed up to the lifestyle that Bernhard of Clairvaux or St. Francis expected. That is why Rome had one of per head largest populations of prostitutes.

What made the story of the whores of Constance so famous was for one the sheer scale. 718 licensed sex workers in a town of 6-8,000 are pretty visible. It would be the similar to the Las Vegas night entertainment crowd coming in force down to Bismark, North Dakota for a  the National Party Conference. Nothing against Bismark. I have been there and loved it, even got myself an UffDa hat, but if such a thing happened, we would talk about it for a century.

And then the story of fornicating prelates made good copy in support of the Reformation agenda, further embellished by prudish 19th century writers.

What definitely did not happen was that there was a great courtesans called Imperia who steered council proceedings from her bedchamber as Balzac imagined. The reality was more likely grim. When I mentioned people living in upturned wine barrels for three years, that story referred to one of these prostitutes.

Constance was more than a place for powerful lords and bishops to gather (sometimes naked). It was first and foremost a place for the leading intellectuals of the Late Middle Aged to congregate. The universities sent their most prominent professors, the theologians and canonists of the papal court were out there in force and the chancellors and lawyers of the temporal princes joined in as well. And they did what intellectuals do to this day, they researched, they wrote and they debated.

But one thing was different. In a world before printing, intellectuals also came together to swap books. Not just to read, but also to copy, or to have copied by one of the hundreds of scribes who now lived in the city. Smart entrepreneurs quickly realised that this was a great opportunity and brought in books from all across Europe. Council participants went to the local monasteries to sift through their ancient libraries. Two of the oldest and greatest were nearby, Reichenau and St. Gallen, centres of learning, art and culture since the 9th century.

These works were read and copied over and over again, so much so that the libraries of europe filled with manuscripts that bear the postscript “Compilatum Constantii tempore generalis concilii”, compiled during the general council at Constance.

The Swedish prelate Tore Andersson copied theological works for his monastery at Vadstena as well as Cessolis’ book on chess. The city scribe of Brunswick copied legal documents, the bishop of Ermland in Prussia collected copies of the classics, of Florus and Vitruvius that are now in the library of Krakow. The cardinal Filastre, who we met before, developed a passion for cartography. He obtained a copy of Ptolomy’s Geography from Manuel Chrysoloras, the envoy of the Byzantine emperor. Later Filastre would encourage the Dane Claudius Clavus to create his map of the Nordics, the first map ever to show Iceland and Greenland, places Clavus had actually visited.  

Leonardo Bruni who had arrived with the now deposed pope John XXIII made a living from his translations of the works of Plato and Plutarch.

Early Humanists finding ancient Roman and Greek texts in monasteries

But more than writing and copying, book hunting was the supreme discipline that early humanists engaged in. What they sought was the wisdom of the ancients, the long lost Greek and Roman texts that would open up a new perspective on the world, a world that was to replace the medieval certainties that were gradually fading away.

The reason so much of the ancient texts were lost was simply the material they were written on. Plato, Aristotle, Ovid and Virgil wrote on papyrus and parchment, organic materials subject to decay unless they are preserved in the dry soil of Egypt.

The only reason we can still read the works today is because for hundreds of years monks in their scriptoria or Islamic scholars in their libraries had copied them, not once but four, five , six times over the millennium since the fall of Rome.

Hence, for a 14th century humanist the only place where he may hope to find, say Catullus poem 16 or Ovid’s metamorphoses was an ancient monastery or a cathedral library. One can only wonder what these pious scribes must have thought when faithfully copying some lurid tale or materialist philosophy. But we must be grateful that they did revere these ancient works enough to not let them disappear for ever. That being said, they did not put them on the eye level in their libraries, forcing the book hunters to bend down in the search for the  intellectual treasures. Echte Bückware.

Book hunters have been uncovering these works since Charlemagne seeded the idea that ancient civilisations could hold the key to knowledge. And much has been recovered. You may remember Einhard wo used Suetonius “Lives of the Caesars “ as a model for his life of Carolus Magnus in the 9th century, Widukind who drew on a wide range of Roman sources when he produced his chronicles in the 10th, the scholastics dug up Aristotle and took inspiration from Muslim scholars in the 12th. By the late 13th and early 14th century hounding Italian monasteries in the search of relics from the Roman or Greek past had become a preoccupation of the likes of Petrarch and Dante. The aforementioned poems of Catullus for instance came to light in 1305 at the cathedral library of Verona.

One of the most prolific book hunters was Poggio Bracciolini. He had come to Constance in the service of John XXIII, but once his master was convicted and deposed he found himself at a bit of a lost end. He was a notary and had worked in the papal chancery for 11years. Since his career was tied to the church and the church had pretty much in its entirety decamped to Constance, he had to stay to find a new job.

And in between jobhunting and networking, he visited monasteries all across the German speaking lands and even in France. And my god did he bring in a great haul: lost speeches by Cicero, Quintilians 12 volumes on rhetoric, poems by Statius Silvae, the histories of Ammian, handbooks on civil architecture, grammar and early theology.

Two finds made him famous across europe, the first was Lucretius De Rerum natura, a didactic poem explaining the main tenets of epicurean philosophy. Lucretius wanted to release humanity from its fear of the wrath of the gods. He postulated that the world was made of atoms that veer randomly through time and space, leaving it up to us humans to use free will to determine how we wanted to live our lives. As I said, not very much in line with the faith of the copyist who might have spent months writing these 7,400 hexameters down thereby preserving a whole school of Greek philosophy.

The other find was a complete copy of Vitruvius the Roman architectural writer and theorist. One of Bracciolini’s copies ended up in the hands of Leon Battista Alberti. Alberti then used Vitruvius as a basis to write his De re aedificatoria that became the textbook of Italian renaissance architecture. In 1459 he was commissioned to build the first planned city in Europe since antiquity, the city of Pienza for Enea Silvio Piccolomini the pope Pius II. The circle was closed by the personal physician of pope Pius II, Andreas Reichlin von Meldegg. Meldegg picked up his patient’s architectural ideas and when he returned to his hometown of Űberlingen just across the lake from Constance, he built his family palace, arguably Germany’s first renaissance building.

The elevation of Friedrich of Hohenzollern as margrave of Brandenburg

Talking about palaces, what made life in Constance during the council so uncomfortable for even the most eminent cardinals and bishops was that they had to compete for suitable accommodation with the imperial princes, the dukes, counts and even lesser nobles.

What brought them there was in part the church council. Since there was no acting pope for almost two years it was the council that decided whether their younger sons would get into an attractive benefice, how to resolve a long-running conflict with the neighbouring bishop or whether to place the local monastery under their direct control.

But it wasn’t just matters of the church that brought them there. Constance had also become the seat of the imperial court. Sigismund stayed in Constance from December 1414 to July 1415 and then again from January 1417 to the end of the council in April 1418.

The Holy Roman Empire famously never had a formal capital. The ruler was perennially on the road and would occasionally call the princes to an imperial diet that would last a few weeks and would take place on different locations.

But when Sigismund was in Constance, he had most of the participants of an imperial diet right on hand. As we mentioned last week, all of the Prince-electors not only the three archbishops of Mainz, Cologne and Trier but also the duke of Saxony, the king of Bohemia and the count palatinate were in the city either in person or represented by an envoy. On top of that we have various dukes, of Bavaria, Austria, Schleswig, Mecklenburg, Lothringia and Teck as well as hundreds of lesser nobles who had taken up residence in the city.

So whenever an issue relating to the empire came up that would normally require a full assembly, one could be called immediately. As we heard last week, Sigismund was able to place duke Friedrich of Austria under the imperial ban and raise an imperial army within just 10 days, not in months as would normally be the case. These few years were by far the most proactive of Sigismund’s reign as emperor.

One of the main roles for an imperial administration to perform was to enfeoff vassals and to receive their oath of allegiance. These were splendid events that celebrated the power of the empire and the emperor, all lavishly depicted in Richental’s illustrated chronicle.

One of these elevations would have implications far out into the future. Smart observers may have notice that there was someone missing in my list of prince electors – the Margrave of Brandenburg. That was not an oversight. Because the margrave of Brandenburg was Sigismund himself. You may remember that he had received the electorate in his inheritance and then pawned it to his cousin Jobst to fund his wars in Hungary. Jobst died in 1411 and that was when Sigismund took his margraviate back.

But he did not keep it. Instead he enfeoffed a certain Frederick, Burgrave of Nurnberg with  the mark of Brandenburg. Why give it away.?  His father had paid the astronomic sum of 500,000 silver mark for this precious principality that came with one of the seven votes in the election of an emperor and was to be the second centre of Luxemburg power alongside Bohemia. And then why give it to Friedrich, the Burgrave of Nurnberg.

His family name was Hohenzollern, I guess you have heard that name before. Just a recap on who the Hohenzollern were. They are originally from Swabia, where they were first mentioned as counts of Zollern in the 11th century. Their ancestral castles at Hohenzollern and Sigmaringen still stand.

They had a knack of staying close to the imperial family, whichever it happened to be. Emperor Frederick Barbarossa rewarded their loyalty by making them burgraves of Nurnberg, the city they had so actively sponsored. You heard that another Frederick of Hohenzollern had been instrumental in the election of Rudolf of Habsburg as king of the Romans in 1272. This brought rich reward in Franconia, the area surrounding Nurnberg.

In 1331 they acquired Ansbach and in 1340 Kulmbach, gradually building a asizeable land holding in Franconia. That brought them on the radar of emperor Karl IV who was keen to build a land bridge from Bohemia to Nurnberg and from there to Frankfurt and Luxemburg. The land of the Hohenzollern was right in this corridor. Hence Karl IV regularly offered marriage alliances to the Bruggrave and even though these never materialized, the two houses remained closely associated. This alliance survived the death of Karl IV and was inherited by both Wenceslaus and Sigismund.

Therefore, it was not a surprise that when Sigismund regained the margraviate of Brandenburg after his cousin Jobst had died, he turned to Frederick of Hohenzollern to be his governor in these lands. At the time Brandenburg was still an absolute mess. Though in Luxemburg hands for nearly forty years, the owners had rarely visited and left the place to its own devices.  Local families had taken over the countryside, without being able to suppress the robber barons or becoming robbers themselves. The cities had thrown off any semblance of princely overlordship and bishops and abbots hardly took notice of the margrave.

Frederick of Hohenzollern embarked on a campaign of reconquest that would take his family a good fifty years to complete. From Sigismund’s perspective Brandenburg was a money sink. Whatever revenues these lands generated – all was ploughed back into Frederick’s military campaigns. And as long as the Hohenzollern was just a governor, Sigismund was the ultimate bill payer. And paying bills was not his strong suit.  So, in April 1417 Sigismund could no longer prolong the inevitable. He enfeoffed his friend and governor with the margraviate. Making him not just an imperial prince but a prince elector in one fell swoop.

The Hohenzollern had arrived in the top flight of imperial society. From here they would build out their lands, become archbishops and grand masters of the Teutonic Order. The latter post was most important since Albrecht of Brandenburg ended up being the last of the grandmasters. He turned Prussia into a secular state in 1525 that would later be inherited by the margraves of Brandenburg and the rest is a history we will spend a lot of time with in the future. If you want to double check on the transition of Prussia from the Teutonic Knights to the house of Brandenburg, check out episode 137.

The feud between Heinrich the rich of Landau and Ludwig the Bearded of Ingolstadt

Having all these imperial princes to hand meant that Sigismund could also convene the imperial lawcourt, the Hofgericht much more often. The court went through more cases in this period than it did during the remainder of Sigismund’s long reign.

One case became notorious. The duke Heinrich of Bavaria-Landshut had fallen out with his cousin Ludwig of Bavaria Ingolstadt, over – what else – but the inheritance of another cousin, the duke of Bavaria-Straubing. If there was one tradition amongst the Wittelsbachs, it was to constantly squabble amongst their cousins.

These two took family feuding to new heights, even by Wittelsbach standards. Heinrich who everybody called ‘the Rich’ tried to put together an alliance of interested parties against his cousin Ludwig, who everybody called the Bearded.

This creation of a league against him irritated Beardy and he went before the entire imperial diet in Constance and said something exceedingly rude about his cousin’s mother that cast serious doubt about him being his cousin in the first place.

You can imagine how that went down. The rich duke hired 15 henchmen to attack the bearded one on his way home from a council meeting. Ludwig the Bearded was severely injured but survived. The imperial court was ready and on hand and was willing to convict Heinrich the Rich of attempted murder. Only by paying a fine of 6,000 guilders to king Sigismund and the intervention of his son-in-law Friedrich of Hohenzollern could he retain his freedom. Heinrich and Ludwig did get their war in the end, which devastated their lands and destroyed any future hopes of putting a Wittelsbach on the throne for the next 400 years.

Heinrich the Rich’s attempts to murder his opponent wasn’t an isolated incident. As the 14th century gave way to the 15th political violence had become a fact of life. Hungary had always been a particularly rough place where the killing even of anointed kings had happened on regular intervals. But not only there. We have encountered attempts at poisoning several times in these last few episodes. You remember king Albrecht of Habsburg who was saved from poisoning by hanging upside down for days until his eye had popped off? Our friend Sigismund had to undergo a similar treatment but luckily kept his eye. Then there was the last of the Premyslid kings of Bohemia, Wenceslaus III who was stabbed to death by an unknown assassin, and Sigismund’s half-brother Wenceslaus IV who was also poisoned but survived.

Political murder was even more common in Italy where the local lords had taken power in military coups. That made them vulnerable to both internal rivals vying for their position, idealists who wanted to revive the institutions of their ancient commune and outside forces trying to dislodge them. This is the world that bred a Cesare Borgia and his admirer, Machiavelli.

In England we even had a genuine regicide when Richard II ran into a red hot poker – backwards – allegedly.

The tyrannicide decision on Jean Petit

But it was a political murder in France that became the case that triggered a debate over tyrannicide, the question under which circumstances it was acceptable to murder the ruler of a country. The murder in question was the killing of Louis of Orleans, the brother of King Charles VI on November 23rd, 1407 by henchmen of the duke of Burgundy, John the Fearless.

You remember John the Fearless, famous for a feckless foray into the fierce fire of the Janissaries at Nikopol. And you may remember Louis of Orleans, one of the many rivals of Sigismund for the inheritance of Hungary

The disagreement between these two men had however nothing to do with Hungarians of Ottomans. This was over control of France itself.

The reigning king Charles VI had experienced ever more severe bouts of mental illness. He once attacked his own men, forgot who he was or who his wife and children were and towards the end famously believed he was made of glass, terrified to shatter at the lightest touch.

France was ruled by a regency council made up of the royal uncles of Berry, Anjou and Burgundy, the queen, the gorgeous Isabeau of Bavaria, and Louis of Orleans, the brother of the king. To say the members of the regency council struggled for consensus does not quite cover it. They constantly tried to outmaneuver each other, used the hapless king, the royal children, the administration of France, the schismatic church, even the English enemies, anything they could get hold of to get one over their opponents. And on this fateful November night, in the rue Vielle du Temple in Paris backstabbing became front-stabbing. The duke Louis of Orleans lay dead in a ditch, courtesy of his cousin John the Fearless, the duke of Burgundy.

John’s plan did however not work out and the party of Louis of Orleans, the Armagnac’s regained supremacy in the council. But the infighting had weakened the French side so much that King Henry V, Bolingbroke of England saw his opportunity and attacked. The result was the battle of Agincourt that took place in 1415, in the middle of the Council. And that was followed by the Burgundians allying with the English against the king and then the dauphin of France, who was saved by Jeanne d’Arc..etc., etc., basically 100 years war Shekespeare and all that.

What brought this case before the council of Constance was that immediately after the attack on Louis of Orleans a Dominican friar, Jean Petit, had publicly proclaimed that the murder was justified because it was a tyrannicide. In consequence the court granted an amnesty to John the Fearless for the killing. That was later withdrawn when the Burgundians had lost influence and a synod of the French church condemned Jean Petit’s defense of the murder. The Burgundians then appealed to pope John XXIII which is how the council in Constance found itself discussing one of the most famous political murders of the Middle Ages.. 

One of the great voices at the council, Jean Gerson took a strong interest in this question. He believed the church had to take a stance against this proliferation of political murder and in particular against those who defended it. He asserted that the killing of a ruler, in particular a legitimate ruler was always prohibited, even if the ruler may have acted as a tyrant.

This thesis was opposed for obvious reasons by the Burgundians, but also made many other delegates feel queasy. After all the son of the man who had Richard II killed was now king of England. Equally many Italians had supported the murder of the duke Gian Maria Visconti of Milan a few years earlier.

The Council of Constance was too divided to make a clear decision. It refuted the statement of Jean Petit that tyrannicide was not only allowed but demanded by faith, but even that decision was later withdrawn.

So the church failed to weigh in on political murder as Jean Gerson had hoped. It is doubtful whether they would have been able to reign in on the brutality that was ever faster spiraling out of control. But it would have been nice if they had at least made an effort, in particular because the topic came back before the council concluded.  

The debate about the Teutonic Order

The reason the council had to look at tyrannicide again had to do with the Teutonic order. In 1410, four years before the council opened, the Knight Brothers had experienced the utterly devastating defeat at Tannenberg /Grunwald.

Being defeated by the Poles was bad enough. But what turned it into a life threatening calamity was that the chivalric brothers had also lost their raison d’etre the moment Jogaila, the grand prince of Lithuania, had converted to Christianity in order to become king of Poland. The now Christian ruler of Lithuania made it his job to convert those of his subjects who were still pagan. And reports were reaching Constance that his peaceful approach had been a lot more successful than the conversion by fire and sword propagated by the Teutonic Knights.

That meant there was nothing left of their mission to defend Christendom in the Baltics. Moreover, the Reisen, the chivalric adventure trips they had organized for the European aristocracy to play at crusading had stopped. And with it the warm rain of cash and free soldiers the order had enjoyed disappeared.

Sigismund had offered them to relocate to the Hungarian-Ottiman border to defend Christianity there, but the brothers declined.

Instead, they went all out on Jogaila and his cousin Witold. They argued these Lithuanians were fake Christians, their conversions had just been a show and their souls still black with pagan beliefs. And that they had made alliances with heretics, aka the orthodox rulers of Moscow and Novgorod. And then the usual rundown of depravity and cruelty that was the stock-in-trade when talking about people of a different faith.

Sigismund was trying to find a compromise between the Poles and the Teutonic order, both of which had sent large delegations to Constance. But the discussions led nowhere. There was no real compromise possible. If the order admitted that Lithuania was now being converted peacefully by the Jagiellons, then they had to either find a new job or call it a day. If the Jagiellons admitted that they had only converted to gain the crown of Poland, then they had to give it all up again.

And even a negotiation genius like Sigismund could not build a bridge between these positions….

But there was a second leg to it. Another Dominican, a somewhat deranged man called Johannes Falkenberg had fully embraced the Teutonic Knight’s position, even though he was neither a brother nor did he have a close relation with the order before 1412. For some reason he published a treatise where he called Jogaila a worshipper of false idols, all Poles he declared were idolaters, shameless dogs who had returned to their ancestral pagan religion. Hence it was an obligation for all good Christians to oppose these vile stains on the mantle of the faith, all the princes were called upon to raise armies to wipe them from the face of the earth.

This was plain silly. It did not need the extraordinary skills of the rector of the recently founded university of Krakow, Paulus Vladimiri to refute this pile of false accusations. In February 1417 the council formed a commission investigating Falkenberg’s claims and easily dismissed them as heretic. Falkenberg was captured and put in prison.

Meanwhile his opponent, the Polish envoy Paulus Vladimiri made an impressive speech to the council where he argued that pagans and Christians shared the same humanity. Their beliefs he argued was no justification to kill, hurt, or destroy their lands, as long as they lived peacefully alongside their Christan neighbors. And then he cited multiple cases where the Teutonic knights had killed, hurt or destroyed the lands of the Lithuanians and Samagitians without provocation.

If that had become church law and the atrocities could have been proven, the Order of the House of St. Mary of the Germans in Jerusalem would have had to be dissolved. Which is why that did not happen.

If you want to get deeper into the Teutonic Knights and the issue of their behavior in Prussia and Lithuania, we have produced a whole series on their story. Check out episodes 128 to 137.

A hundred years later the Spanish Conquistadors arrived in South America and destroyed the Mayan and Aztek civilizations, Paulus Vladimiri’s ideas of peaceful co-existence had by then been comprehensively forgotten outside Poland. The Dominican Bartolomea de Las Casas who pointed out the horrific crimes committed against the indigenous population did not reference Paulus Vladimir’s attempts at getting the church to do the right thing.

Conclusion

And that is all we have got time for today. Next week we will go on to the two events that have made the Council of Constance famous, the election of pope Martin V that ended the Western Schism for good. And the crucial moment in Czech history that is commemorated in the dead centre of their capital, the Teyn square in Prague’s Old Town, I speak of course of the condemnation and execution of Jan Hus and Hieronymus of Prague which triggered the Hussite uprising and paved the way for a very different approach to organize religion. I hope you will join us again.

And before I go, just a last reminder that if you want to support the show, go to historyofthegermans.com/support where you can make a one-time donation or link to the Patreon website where you can make a longer term commitment – jus make sure to not do it on the Patreon iPhone App.

Council of Constance Part 1

The Council of Constance marked a pivotal moment in the history of the Catholic Church and the history of Europe in general.

One issue on the agenda was the ongoing schism that the council of Pisa had failed to resolve. Another the reform of the increasingly corrupt clergy all the way up to the pope himself. And then there were a number of individual questions this gathering of thousands had to address.

Whilst all these were crucial questions, the way the council constituted itself foreshadowed a fundamental change in the way European saw themselves.

This part 1 deals with the establishment of the council and the removal of the popes, most importantly the pope who had convened the council on the first place, John XXIII and his counterpart, the emperor Sigismund.

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TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 171 – The Council of Constance Part 1 – Cleaning House, which is also episode 8 of season 9 “The Reformation before the Reformation”.

On a cold night in October 1414 a most unusual procession appeared near the village of Klösterle on the Arlberg pass. Not an army but almost as large. 600 men, some soldiers and bodyguards, a few high ranking aristocrats but mostly men of the cloth. Clerics, doctors of theology but also abbots, bishops and archbishops as well as the true princes of the church, cardinals, dozens of them. And at the center of the procession an enormous cart and in it the true lord of all of Christendom, the bearer of both swords, pope John XXIII.

The roads they had travelled on for days were terrible. Whatever was left of the old roman infrastructure had long been buried underground or had deteriorated so badly, it had gone out of use. So through the autumn mud the processions ploughs on. Just as they were passing the hamlet of Klösterle, in the holloway that masked as one of Europe’s busiest north-south connection the attendants watched in panic as the right hand side wheels of the papal wagon climbed the bank of the road. Before anyone could reign in the horses and prevent disaster, the carriage rose, went past the point of vanishing stability and with a terrifying thump landed on its side. The holy father was thrown out of his vehicle and lay buried deep in the snow. His lords and bishops run to him and ask: “Oh Holy father, has your holiness been harmed?” and he responded “here for devil’s sake I lie”.

Shaken but unharmed the vicar of Christ kept going. As the panorama widened and he could see the city of Bludenz down in the valley that leads to the lake and the city of Constance he uttered, full of premonition “So this is where they catch the foxes”.

And the old fox was right to be worried. For a year later he will find himself in prison in Mannheim, then just a solitary tower by the shore of the Rhine. How that happened and why he is now resting in a magnificent monument in the Baptistery of Florence paid for by the Medici family and bearing the inscription: John the XXIII former pope, Died in Florence A.D. 1419, on 11th day before the Calends of January is what we will look at in this episode!

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And with that – back to the show

Here we are, the pope John XXIII is travelling across the Alps to go to a general church council in Constance. Which begs just one question – why? Why would Baldassarre Cossa, elected pope and recognized as head of the church in dozens of lands, born on the sundrenched island of Procida near Naples call a church assembly to discuss the schism and in a foggy mid-sized town in the German lands to boot?

Well, the answer is, he didn’t. Or at least he did not call a church council to debate the schism. As far as John XXIII was concerned, the schism was done and dusted. The Community of the Faithful had come together in Pisa in 1409 and had deposed the two competing contenders, Gregory XII and Benedict XIII and had replaced them with his predecessor Alexander V. And he, Baldassarre Cossa had been canonically elected as the successor of Alexander V. The fact that Gregory XII and Benedict XIII were still around claiming supremacy was a logistical and maybe military problem, but not one we need a church council for.

So the reason he did still call a church council had to do with one of the provisions of the previous council the one in Pisa. The Pisan gathering had made pope Alexander V swear he would call another council within the next three years to deal with the open issue of church reform. Because in all that debate about how to put an end to the schism, the important issue of how can we make a church a little less corrupt had fallen off the agenda.

That was why John XXIII found himself in a bind to call a church council. And he wasn’t opposed to the idea. Presiding over a major reform council would elevate him on to the level of the great popes Innocent II &III, Alexander III and  Gregory X. That would make everybody forget his – how can  say that politely – somewhat checkered past.

But as so often, Pope John XXIII struggled to find a suitable venue for his grand ecumenical council. Initially he wanted to do it in Rome, after all his capital and a categorical statement that the time when the Pope had to live away from the eternal city was now well and truly over.

The problem was that John XXIII had to live away from the eternal city except for very brief periods. His neighbor, King Ladislaus of Naples kept conquering papal lands and sacking Rome on regular intervals. That is the same Ladislaus who had inherited and pursued a claim on the crown of Hungary from his father Charles the Short who was made even shorter by Elisabeth of Bosnia. If that last sentence was complete gobbledygook for you, listen back to episode 169.

A lasting peace with Naples was unlikely. Pope John XXIII did not like Ladislaus of Naples very much ever since Ladislaus had his two brothers hanged as pirates. Ladislaus did not like the pope very much, because he could.

With Rome off the list of suitable venues, John needed to find a neutral place in Italy. But by then, the peninsula was in the grip of near perennial war. Many of the former communes have become principalities ruled by local strongmen. And strongmen do what strongmen are wont to do, they go after other people’s lands, cities and treasure until there are armies crisscrossing the land from early spring to late autumn.

Enter stage left our old friend Sigismund of Luxemburg. By now this extremely intrepid man had not only secured his reign over Hungary but had finally achieved his great ambition and had become king of the Romans. And best of all, his hated half-brother Wenceslaus was still around to see it happening.

How did he become King of the Romans, that was simple. Nobody really wanted the job any more. The reign of Rudolf of the empty pocket had shown beyond any doubt that there was no money left to establish any kind of imperial authority. Only the very, very richest could afford to don the imperial coronation mantle. And even after 4 decades of infighting and mismanagement, the house of Luxemburg was still the richest of the great eligible families of the empire. And being a squabbling lot, two Luxemburgs put their hat in the ring, Sigismund, king of Hungary and Jobst, margrave of Moravia. Weirdly, Jobst had the inferior title but a lot more money. But what he lacked was longevity. Both were elected by a mixture of correct and incorrect prince-electors but Jobst died in 1411. Sigismund had the election repeated and was confirmed by all.

Being king of the Romans and future emperor came with the role supreme protector of the church. And whilst John XXIII may think the schism is over, Sigismund did not see it like that. He had to deal with the fact that some imperial principalities, the Palatinate and Baden for instance kept their allegiance to the deposed pope Gregory XII. So this needed to be cleaned up. And he knew that one way to gain true control over the empire and with it the leverage to initiate much needed imperial reform, was to rescue  Holy Mother church.

That is why Sigismund pops up in Lodi in Northern Italy in December 1413 to discuss the long overdue church council with the pope. By now John XXIII had considered Bologna and even Avignon of all places, but both had been turned down by his advisors as either too dangerous or totally inappropriate.

At which point Sigismund suggested they all come over to his yard. Yard being the word my teenage son uses to describe a home and I thought I use it since I am a bit tired of using the same words again and again.

To tell what happened next, I have to introduce the chronicler Ulrich Richental. He was a citizen of Constance and he wrote a very detailed account of the council that – despite some biases – is still the #1 source for the events during that period. Richental is a big fan of Sigismund not so much of the popes. So he does make things up occasionally, like the road accident at the start of the episode. But he does it so nicely, I couldn’t stop myself pretending it did actually happen.

And here is Ulrich’s account of the two heads of Christendom discussing the venue for the most momentous event of the 15th century:

When Sigismund proposed to come to Germany John XXIII responded: “I cannot convince my cardinals to travel north across the Alps”

Sigismund: “In that case I cannot get the princes and electors to travel south across the Alps”

Gridlock

Sigismund then turns to one of his entourage, the duke of Teck: “Isn’t there an imperial city close to the Alps?  Teck: “Sure Sire, the city of Kempten”. At which point a count of Nellenburg intervenes: “nah, there is not enough food in Kempten. But there is another city, just an hour’s ride away, Constance on the lake. They have a bishopric and everything”

Sigismund: “Holy father – do you like Constance?”

John XXIII: “Oh my beloved son, I do like Constance”

That’s it – That is how that went down – Richental told us so, so definitely true!

That is why on the 27th of October Pope John XXIII and his entourage of 600 entered the city of Costance under a golden baldachin carried by four eminent burghers of the free imperial city. The Imperial bailee performed the service of the groom and a group of schoolchildren sang appropriate hymns. The pope grateful for the friendly welcome blessed the congregation.

Everything was going swimmingly. The pope and his immediate entourage was given accommodation in the bishop’s palace opposite the cathedral. The others were distributed amongst the homes of the locals who were all too happy to AirBnB their spare rooms for outrageous rents.

Because it wasn’t just the 600 papal delegates, which included humanists like Leonardo Bruni and Poggio Bracciolini as well as the various prelates. There were also a total of 3 patriarchs, 23 cardinals, 27 archbishops 106 bishops, 103 abbots, 344 doctors of theology, all of whom came with their scribes, procurators and administrators of various kinds. Then there were the princes, a full complement of the prince electors, the dukes of Bavaria, Austria, Schleswig, Mecklenburg Lothringia and Teck as well as  a further 676 noblemen Those who did not come themselves like the kings of France, England, Scotland, Denmark, Polen, Naples, Castile and Aragon, sent representatives, as did the patriarch of  Constantinople and the emperor of Ethiopia. And then there were all these people who came hoping to make some money of this incredible gathering, goldsmiths, cobblers, furriers, blacksmiths, bakers, shopkeepers, apothecaries, moneylenders, buglers, pipers, entertainers, barbers, heralds, merchants of any kind and the often mentioned whores and public girls. All of them needed to stay somewhere and somehow all of them did.

The city museum at the Rosgarten hosts a wonderful model of Constance from around the time of the council which gives a great idea of its size or lack of it. Constance had maybe 6-8,000 inhabitants at the time which isn’t huge now and wasn’t even at that time. Places like Augsburg or Nurnberg were more than twice the size. How many people came in total to the council is hard to determine, in particular since our friend Richental tends to exaggerate a bit. Plus not everyone stayed all throughout the 3 years and some the council lasted. In one of my secondary sources they talk about 5000 monks and 16,000 priests which would suggest a total number of 25,000-30,000 new arrivals. I struggle to believe that but it is likely that the population at least doubled during that period and maybe more than tripled in the initial phase.

Given there is so much information available about Constance during that period, I may dedicate a future episode to the conditions not just during the council, but more generally. We have not done a Germany in the year 1400 episode yet, so this may be a good one.

But for now we leave the cramped conditions behind and go back to the high politics.

The pope was here, but the emperor had not yet arrived. The reason for the delay was that Sigismund had been elected three years earlier but had not yet been crowned, not even as king of the Romans. That had to happen before he went toe to toe with the pope. So on November 8, 1414 he was crowned in Aachen and then progressed south towards Constance. In Strasburg he told everyone that he and John were like totally aligned on everything. From there he took the road along the Neckar valley to Stuttgart and then down to the lake where he arrived in Űberlingen at midnight on the 24th of December.

He had called ahead and asked for transport to cross the lake. So in the middle of Christmas eve the boatmen of Konstance set off across the lake to bring their emperor into their city. It was  3 in the morning when he finally arrived with his wife, several princes and their attendants all loaded up on torchlit boats. The city council came to the harbor to greet him and led him to the town hall where he was given a drink. And then they dashed across the square to the cathedral where – and that is still hard to believe – the pope was waiting for him. John XXIII had halted Midnight Mass for the emperor. And not only that, he had allowed Sigismund to do what the Luxemburg rulers have been doing since Karl IV, he let him read the gospel according to Luke where it says “In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world.” He read this whilst wearing his crown and holding the imperial sword. No previous pope, not even the king of France had allowed such a display to go ahead. Nobody wanted to be reminded that even the bible acknowledged that the empire was an institution older than the papacy and one that was meant to rule the whole of the Roman world.

John XXIII left no record of his thoughts that night.

The council had started debating before Sigismund had arrived, but as the cardinal Fillastre noted, nothing of substance had yet been discussed, because nobody aka the pope himself, wanted to touch on the actual subject, the unity of the church and the continued schism.

That being said, the council wasn’t stalling. If you think about the sheer scale of what was going on. These thousands of delegates are pushed together into this mid-sized medieval town. The grand debates take place in the Münster, the cathedral, but few delegates get the chance to address the whole council. So they start to meet in smaller groups to debate specific issues, initially spontaneously and after a while in a formal structure of committees and working groups. But what also happened was that factions were forming. And these did not form around political programs or theological perspectives, but along geographic and cultural lines.

The council was establishing nations. The idea of nations came from the way medieval universities were organised as we have heard about Paris and Prague in previous episodes. And since most delegates had studied at university or were practicing academics, these divisions appeared natural. They were also a way to break up the hierarchy structure of the church that monopolised decision making in the hands of the pope and his college of cardinals.

But is not just that, it is also a sign of a changing world. Whilst on the outset it looked as if the council was resurrecting the idea of a unified Christendom under one pope and one emperor, the reality was that this concept was fading away not just as a political structure but also as a cultural entity. Instead the peoples of europe were developing separate identities. We are still centuries away from people seeing nationality as one of their primary defining characteristic and source of belonging, but there is clearly something shifting.

The vernacular has taken over from Latin on much of the cultural and administrative output of the times. For instance our chronicler Richental writes his work in German, more precisely in his native dialect. It’s not that he does not know Latin, more that he does not feel he needs to use it to be taken seriously. In Italy we have Dante and in England Chaucer who elevate the vernacular to a literary language, whilst French has become the language at the court of the Valois. I am not that familiar with developments in Poland and Hungary, but as we have seen last week, the Czech language has become a crucial marker of belonging in Bohemia.

Still the nations that form in Constance were not yet as rigidly defined by etymology and culture as modern nations are. The conciliar nations are created through a mixture of political significance, compass orientation and language. There were in the end five. There was Italica, Gallicana, Germania which included Scandinavia, Poland, Lithauania, Croatia, Hungary and Bohemia, Anglca which was England, Scotland and Ireland and Iberica, which comprised the various Spanish kingdoms and Portugal.

There were discussions about the structure of these nations, but interestingly from the Iberian side. Aragon wanted to be its own nation. That was turned down because in that case Castile and Portugal would also have their separate nations. And if that happened the Germanica nation would splinter as well, making the whole concept of nations unworkable.

Do you remember the cardinal Fillastre, the one who had been moaning that nothing was moving forward in this great church council? Well, in January 1415, two months into the debates he had had enough. He issued an treatise stating that all three popes should resign. And that the council had the power to force all three popes to step down if that was in the interest of the unity of the church.

The response from John XXIII and his supporters was the obvious. Sorry, last time we did that and deposed two popes, we got three. Why do you think by deposing three you will not end up with four? And what was wrong with me as pope?

Well on the last question, quite a lot, an awful lot. Most it were rumours at the time, but still. He might have been a pirate in his youth, after all his brothers had definitely been. Pope Alexander V, the one the council of Pisa had chosen had died only days after having lunch at the house of the man who became his successor. Then the bribes that were paid to the cardinals at his election were legendary, almost as legendary as his income from the sale of church benefices once he was made pope.

John XXIII’s opponents put together a list of 18 accusations, each one of them pretty damning.

But that would not have meant that he was done for. He had made sure that the majority of the participants at the council were Italians and the Italians would be very wary to opening up the ballot again, potentially ending up with a Frenchman who could take the church back to Avignon.

But that line of defence crumbled when Sigismund used his immense charm and power of persuasion to introduce a change in the voting process. No longer should it be by heads or by rank, but by nation. Each of the five nation was to have one vote, as would the college of cardinals.

Voting by nations totally undermined the church hierarchy, because suddenly the archbishops and bishops find themselves acting alongside the priests, monks and doctors of their nation, rather than with their brother bishops. And where it was even harder to take was for the cardinals. They had become accustomed to being a sort of cabinet of the church that would make all the major decisions along with the pope. But here in the council, they were relegated to having just one vote that ranked equal to any one of the nation’s votes.

John was a smart politician and he realised the non-Italian nations had a majority. His line of defence had crumbled and the game was up. So to avoid the publication of the 18 accusations he agreed to resign. Conditions were negotiated over for another 2 weeks but then, at the end of February 1415, three months after he had seen the fox trap from his vantage point above Bludenz, that trap had snapped shut. Pope John XXIII declared his resignation.

Immediately after that Sigismund put Constance into lockdown. The deposed pope must not be able to escape. Because if he escaped and gathered new supporters he could dissolve the council that he had called in the first place. And if he did that, the horror scenario of four popes would almost certainly materialise.

And what happened, well, what do you think? The pope escaped. Disguised as a groom and sitting on – for added humiliation – on a tiny horse.

As we heard at the beginning, John had had had his premonitions when he crossed the alps. So he took out life insurance. With Frederick of Habsburg, the duke of Austria. Frederick promised to help and protect him should the worst happen.  And the worst had happened. So it was to neighbouring Schaffhausen, one of the duke’s possessions that ex-pope John XXIII or to give him his correct name, Baldassare Cossa went. The helpful duke immediately came to his side to face down Sigismund and the council members.

Sigismund did not waste a second. He gathered the imperial princes who were in Constance anyway and formed an imperial court. The court gave Frederick 3 days to show and defend himself and when he failed to come they condemned him. They put duke Frederick of Austria in the imperial ban. He was made an outlaw, his vassals released from their oaths and an imperial army was gathered. 10 days after the spectacular flight of the pope, Sigismund’s forces oved on the gates of Schaffhausen.

Baldassare Cosssa fled on to Laufenburg another 30 miles down the Rhine but that was no solution, so on he ran towards Basel. But before he left Laufenburg, he issued a papal bull revoking his resignation and dissolving the council.

At that point the future of the church and the future of Sigismund hung in the balance. If the majority of the council attendants recognised his dissolution order it was over.

At that point the church and the universities had been discussing the role of the council and its relationship with the pope for decades. The schism created by the selfishness of cardinals and popes had undermined Holy mother church to a point a Gregory VII or an Innocent III would barely have recognised her any more. It was time for the congregation of the faithful to put their foot down. The council agreed the decree Haec Sancta which became a sort of Magna Carta of the church. Its opened with (quote)

“First [the council] declares that, legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit, constituting a general council and representing the catholic church militant, it has power immediately from Christ; and that everyone of whatever state or dignity, even papal, is bound to obey it in those matters which pertain to the faith, the eradication of the said schism and the general reform of the said church of God in head and in members.” (end quote)

It banned the pope from dissolving the council, from moving the curia from Constance or to do anything that would undermine its power.

The ecumenical council continued and Baldassare Cossa kept running. Until he could run no more. He was caught near Radolfzell and brought back to Constance to stand trial. The ruling was no surprise. He was convicted and declared unworthy, useless and dangerous and stripped of all his church offices. The next four years he spent as a prisoner of the count Palatinate in a customs tower at Mannheim. In 1419 he paid an enormous ransom and was allowed to return to Rome where he submitted to the new pope Martin V  who made him a bishop and cardinal again. He died shortly afterwards in Florence. His memorial in the great Baptistery is a spectacular piece created by the renaissance masters Donatello and Michelozzo. Who paid for it? Not Baldassare Cossa, but Florentine bankers including the Medici family who one can only assume owed the pope their rise to the top of the financial industry in Italy. And yes, the name John XXIII was taken off the official list of popes, which is why we have two popes called John XXIII, the last one reigning from 1958 to 1963 as one of the most popular and sympathetic figures of recent church history and – ironically – a pope who presided over a church council.

That left the council with still two false popes, Gregory XII and Benedict XIII, who needed to be removed before a new, universally recognised pope could be elected and unity of the church could be restored.

Gregory XII was relatively easy. He was already a thousand years old, had lost all support in Italy and had been elected with the explicit provision to resign when asked. All he demanded was that he would not be deposed by a council that had been called by his enemy, the no longer pope John XXIII. So a weird charade took place. Two of Gregory’s ambassadors arrived in Constance and formally called a council in the name of Gregory XII. The council then reconstituted itself, now as one called by Gregory XII. It endorsed all previous decisions. And then they read a letter from Gregory resigning as pope. That was it. Gregory XII stepped back into the college of cardinals and died two years later. His much more modest memorial is in the small town of Recanati in the Marche. But he remained on the list of canonical popes.

One effect of this strange castling was that Sigismund was no longer the president of the council. He had taken that role during the proceedings against Baldassare Cossa, but now that a viable pope had resumed the reigns, if only for a technical second, he was no longer needed.

The task he took up instead was to rail in the last of the popes, the Avignon pope Benedict XIII. This was the most stubborn of the whole lot, who never yielded, not even when he had lost the support of the French. By 1415 he was living in Aragon, enjoying the support of his last remaining ally, king Alfonso V.

Benedict XIII agreed to meet with Sigismund who had come to Perpignan to speak to him directly. But this time the legendary charmer failed. Yes, Benedict XIII promised to resign but only under one condition. Since he was the only surviving cardinal who had participated in the election of Urban VI, back in 1378, he was the only truly legitimate cardinal in the whole world. All other cardinals have been appointed by contested popes. Therefore he was the only person in Christendom entitled to elect the new pope. He promised would do so within 24 hours and promised not to elect himself. Let’s say, argument was compelling, but there wasn’t the resounding support that Benedict might have expected.

Sigismund gave up on the stubborn Spaniard. Instead he worked on the Iberian monarchs and by December 1416 King Alfonso V of Aragon abandoned his pope and submitted to the council of Constance.

And that was all that really mattered. Benedict went to Peniscola a town and castle overlooking the sea between Valencia and Barcelona where he would spend the next 8 years ranting and raving against the council, the king and everybody else. When he died his ragtag band of cardinals elected a new pope they called Clement VIII. It took until 1429 before this pope finally resigned. The last negotiator who brought this sorry tale to an end was an Aragonese bishop by the name of Alfonso de Borgia. He would later rise to become pope Calixtus III who paved the way for his nephew Roderigo Borgia, Alexander VI the most notorious of the Renaissance popes.

Hurrah – we have done it. The Schism is over. Three popes are gone. But we still need a new one, and ideally one that everybody will agree on. Spoiler alert, they will find one. But the council is not done. There are still many other matters to discuss, including the matter of a certain Jan Hus, a complaint from the Teutonic Knights and some Frenchmen wanting clarification on the term Tyrannicide. So, there will be a part 2 of the Council of Constance which I hope you will join us again next week.

And before I go just a quick reminder, the website to make a one-time donation or sign on for Patreon is historyofthegermans.com

Jan Hus and the Seeds of Reformation: A Tale of Faith and Revolt

Jan Hus emerges as a pivotal figure in the early Reformation, representing the clash between the burgeoning calls for reform and the entrenched power of the Catholic Church. Born around 1372 in what is now the Czech Republic, Hus began his journey as a humble student at the University of Prague, eventually becoming a prominent preacher at the Bethlehem Chapel. His growing influence was fueled by his criticisms of clerical corruption, particularly the practice of simony and the Church’s exploitation through indulgences. As tensions escalated between the Czech reformers and the German-speaking clergy, Hus found himself increasingly at odds with both the Church and the monarchy, leading to his eventual excommunication. The episode delves into how Hus’s teachings and the socio-political climate of Bohemia set the stage for a rebellion that would reverberate through the subsequent centuries, culminating in his fateful summons to the Council of Constance.

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TRANSCRIPT

Quote “Master Jan Hus, preacher of the Holy Scriptures from the chapel of Bethlehem, was also present at this council, who in his preaching continuously criticized and exposed the hypocrisy, pride, miserliness, fornication, simony, and other sins of the clergy, in order to bring the priesthood back to the apostolic life. He was immensely hated by these pestiferous clerics.”

This is how Laurence of Brezova introduced the great reformer and Czech national hero Jan Hus in his 15th century chronicle of the Hussite uprising.

Why should we care about the trials and tribulations of another holy man railing against corrupt prelates and the subsequent “quarrel in a faraway country, between people of whom we know nothing”.

Well, that quote itself should be reason enough. It is from Neville Chamberlain speech of September 27, 1938 weighing the importance of protecting Czechoslovakia against an expansionist Nazi Germany.

But Jan Hus is interesting beyond his status as a towering figure in Czech history. When he came to Prague in 1390 he was just another ambitious young man from a modest background who wanted to rise up in the world on the back of intelligence and hard work. But by the time he leaves for his fate at the Council of Constance in 1414 he has been excommunicated, exiled and unwillingly or willingly become he face of a brewing revolt against king and clergy. This is a story about collapsing certainties and emerging truths, about individual beliefs and institutional order. About what the community of the faithful is supposed to be and who is in and who is out.  And its tentacles reach deep into the next centuries…

Before you can meet master Jan Hus and his fellow Bohemian reformers I will now subject you to a brief treatise on history podcasting. There are now 3.5 million podcasts, though only 380,000 are classed as active. That means if you were inclined to give every one of these active shows a 5 minute listen you would be listening all day all night for 3 years and 7 months, 11 days and 8 hours and 42 minutes. And that is why so many great shows give up, they simply cannot find anyone willing to invest five minutes to find out whether it is any good. So how do people find podcasts? Simple, 30% of podcast listeners come to a show on a personal recommendation from friends and family. So, if you know anyone in your wider circle who may enjoy the History of the Germans, tell them about the show. It makes a huge difference. As does the generous support of our patrons who have signed up on historyofthegermans.com/support. This week we thank Ryan B., Mick, fan of my singing voice, Mark G., Tim T of knightly crusader stock, Tiia Reinvald and CS.

And then we have a few corrections. Last episode I said that Wenceslaus IV was Sigismunds stepbrother. That was obviously wrong, they were half brothers. An even more significant error was picked up by listener Raluca and some others. Vlad the impaler, aka Dracula was Mircea the elder’s illegitimate grandson, not his son as I stupidly claimed. And it was also not Mircea’s honor but Vlad’s father’s membership of the order of the dragon that brought about the nickname “little dragon”. I should just stop trying to pointlessly spice things up with random facts I picked up from secondary literature. Again I promise to do better next time and will fail again.

And with that – back to the show

Jan Hus was born probably around the year 1372. His father was called Michael, but we do not know what he did as an occupation. Of his mother we do not even know her name. Even his own name is an invention, he called himself after his home village of Husice, Goosetown which is why his surname is actually goose, uncomfortably prophetic.

In 1390 he started his studies at the university of Prague. He would later say that he spent far too much time playing chess and that he occasionally participated in carnival processions. That is the medieval equivalent of running through a field of wheat – a reference for our British listeners. For the rest of you, Jan Hus was a bit of a swot. Not that much of a surprise given he was a poor boy from the provinces trying to get a job in the church. An ambition he was certainly not alone in. After all, the church was one of, if not the largest employer in a city like Prague and many coveted a comfortable vicarage or – even better – just the income from a parish without doing anything. And he had come to the right place.

Prague in 1390 was a city on the move.

Thanks to emperor Karl IV’s grand plans his capital of Prague had grown from about 10-15,000 inhabitants to one of northern Europe’s largest cities with a population of nearly 40,000. Building work on the New Town had begun in 1347 but was still ongoing in 1390.

The emperor had endowed the new city’s churches with some of the greatest pieces of his immense collection of relics. These included such items of reverence like a fragment of the staff of Moses, a finger of St. Nicholas, the head of St. Wenceslaus, half of St. Sigismund and the most venerated of them all, the breastmilk of the Virgin Mary. That was on top of the imperial regalia that included the holy lance and purse of St. Stephen to name just two.

These holy objects attracted pilgrims by the thousands, even tens of thousands. Praying before a holy relic was one of the few ways one could cut down the thousands and thousands of years in purgatory the average sinner had to endure. But it also attracted a lot of permanent residents who sought not just work and advancement but also spiritual nourishment from the presence of so many objects of veneration. Prague had become a holy city, a second Rome, just as Karl IV had intended.

The other major draw of the city and the reason Jan Hus had come to the shores of the Vltava was its university, the first to be founded in central Europe. Thanks to the sponsorship of Karl IV and then even more significantly, his son Wenceslaus IV, it had become one of the great centers of learning in Europe. Students from the lands of the crown of Bohemia as well as Germans and Poles came to train with some of the great doctors of theology and law.

The purpose of the university had been two-fold. One was simply to elevate the status of the city of Prague. If Paris, the capital of the French monarchs had a university then the home of the emperor needed one too. The other, more prosaic objective was to produce a class of well-educated bureaucrats and clergymen that could be deployed in the increasingly sophisticated management of the Bohemian state. As for Jan Hus, he was very much in this latter category.

Organizationally, the university of Prague, like all medieval universities, was split into different nations. These nations were usually established along linguistic and cultural lines. In Prague there were four of them, Bohemians, Bavarians, Poles and Saxons. Since the Polish nation was mainly staffed with German speaking Silesians, three out of the four nations were actually German speaking, giving them dominance over the Czech speaking members of the university.

The situation at the university was replicated across much of Prague. German-speaking immigrants had come on the invitation of king Ottokar II in the 1250s and had gradually obtained leadership positions in civil society. They dominated trading and manufacturing, as they did across much of central europe. The German speaking merchants had developed efficient trading networks based on trust and cultural affinity, if not intermarriage. Goods and money moved across these networks comparatively efficiently based on a system of mutual trust and social control. We did a couple of episodes about that in the season on the Hanseatic league, particularly Episode 119 if you want more detail on how these networks functioned. Access to the network was extremely difficult for anyone not speaking German and not being immersed in the culture. And competing against these networks as a sole trader was even more difficult.

Beyond just trading, these German merchants also provided loans to the government and the church. These loans were secured by pawns, often estates, mines and other money generating assets, which then gradually shifted into the hands of this German-speaking upper class. Being the source of finance, the bankers also had ready access to the king who would bend the state to their will.

Bottom line, many Czechs outside the nobility, felt as second class citizens in their homeland and language was an important marker of this division. That occurred despite both Karl IV and Wenceslaus IV making a point of speaking Czech as well as German and French at court.

If you combine these three things, a religiously motivated citizenship, a university that churns out progressive ideas and a population chafing up against a linguistically and socially superior group and you have a medieval powder keg.

The long fuse that will ultimately explode the device was lit a long time before Jan Hus first set foot into the golden city. It all began in a notorious brothel on a street called Venus street. That is where John Milic, a canon of St. Veits cathedral who had an epiphany, began dissuading the prostitutes from their illicit lifestyle and offered them shelter. Milic became a very popular paster, much admired for relentlessly laying out the hypocrisy of the official church. Having good contacts amongst the ladies of the night, he exposed their clerical customers, one of whom had even built a separate entrance to his house to facilitate his partying. But where he really hurt the clergy was when he exposed the rampant simony in its ranks, the purchase of spiritual appointments for money. That was something the population hated even more than the lack of sexual probity.

Despite or maybe because of his relentless criticism and demands for reform, Milic was popular with the highest ranks of society, even with the emperor himself, so popular indeed that Karl overlooked that Milic had once called him the antichrist.

Under imperial protection, Milic built up a community of preachers, often laymen rather than trained clergy who spread his ideas. This community moved into the brothel where Milic had started preaching and that had now become a home for rescued women. He called this community his new Jerusalem and acquired more and more of the surrounding buildings.

Milic preached not just in Latin as was commonplace at the time. He firmly believed that the faithful should understand the word of god and should hence be preached to in their own language, namely Czech and German, the two main languages used in Prague. Milic also demanded that the bible should be translated into Czech, though he never got round to doing it. Another of his ideas was that everyone should receive the sacraments as often as possible, in particular the eucharist, to be closer to the spiritual body of Christ. This focus on the spiritual body then led him to question whether all these dusty relics had any real relevance, and even the veneration of saints was in his eyes a distraction from the true faith.

His community of the new Jerusalem did however not survive its founder’s death in 1374. But his ideas continued to circulate. One of his disciples, a certain Matthew of Janov pushed Milic’s ideas even further. Matthew was another one of those ambitious men who had studied at university, in his case, even at the famed university of Paris, and had returned to Prague in the hope of a plumb job with the church. But that did not work out and instead he became a radical critic of the holders of such offices.

He embraced Milic’s criticism of the worldly clergy, the focus on regular prayer, the eucharist and the use of the colloquial language. But by now the schism had happened and many of the ideas we discussed in our episode about the impact of the schism on European thought had begun circulating. When he was in Paris he witnessed the debates at the university about whether a church council was superior to the pope and by 1390 he had heard that the French church had subtracted itself completely from papal obedience.

This terrified him and he was looking for reasons why the church had ended up in such a calamitous place. He zoomed in on the year 1200 when the church abounded in the greatest riches and glory and when “magna Mulier formicaria” the whore of Babylon took her seat upon the scarlet beast, and antichrist extended his swollen body throughout the church. What he meant was the pontificate of Innocent III , the most powerful of the medieval pope and convener of the fourth Lateran council – and initial sponsor of emperor Frederick II – Episode 75 if you are interested.  

According to Matthew of Jenov the primitive church of the apostles who had been poor and dedicated to the people had been distorted by “Greek rules, Aristotelic justice and Platonic sanctity”. What he meant by that were the rules and regulations of canon law and scholastic theology that obfuscated the true faith and in the process made its practitioners rich and powerful. His opposition was against the lawyers who had taken hold of not just the papal administration but the papal throne itself.

Into this already febrile climate of anticlerical, anti-papalist sentiment dropped the teachings of John Wycliff. Wycliff was an Englishman, a professor in Oxford whose theories we have already encountered in episode 168. His thoughts travelled down to Prague through the entourage of Anne of Bohemia, the sister of Wenceslaus and Sigismund who had married King Richard II of England in 1382.

Wycliff’s ideas poured oil on the fire of the Bohemian reform movement. Bohemian scholars would travel to Oxford and bring back treatises that members of the Prague university debated, translated into Czech and adapted into their own thinking.

They zoomed in on one particular element of Wycliff’s investigation, the question of what the church was. The sanctioned view was that the church was the community of the faithful and that Christ had put St. Peter in charge of this community when he said that Peter was the rock on which he built his church. And St. Peter had thereby inherited all of Christ’s powers in the temporal world, to bind and to loose. And that power passed through him to every one of his legitimate successors. That was the justification for Gregory VII’s claim that all monarchs are to kiss his feet and that he could depose them, even the emperor and Boniface VIII statement that there was no salvation outside the Roman church.

This stringent argument fell apart when the Western schism appeared. We now have two popes, but only one could be the true successor of St. Peter. As the schism progressed and the popes refused to yield as we discussed, the only viable solution was to call a church council that would decide who was the true pope and depose all the false popes, which is what they did in 1409 in Pisa.

Now by doing this the church council claimed to represent the community of the faithful, the holy church itself, that ranked above false and corrupt popes. If these popes could be ousted on account of their sinful claim on St. Peter’s throne, then they weren’t members of the Holy Church any more. Which leads to the next question, which is – who is a true member of the holy church?

That will only be conclusively revealed at the last judgement, when the faithful are admitted to heaven and the sinful are cast down to hell. That does not help because we need to find out right here and now who is one of the faithful and hence a member of holy church with a vote on who should be pope and who is a black sinner who can be ignored. And that runs into a major problem. It would not be just preposterous but outright blasphemous to preempt the final judgement by stating that John was a faithful and Jack was a sinner. So the only thing we can do right now is to look for the signs. Someone whose demeanor and actions emulates the teachings of Christ is more likely to be predestined to heaven, whilst someone living a dissolute life was more likely to end up in hell.

That makes a lot of sense, but is totally explosive. Because if you come across a drunken, fornicating bishop, who acquired his post through simony,  well that guy is unlikely to be one of the faithful. If he is not one of the faithful, then he is not a member of the church. If he is not a member of the church he cannot tell me what to preach or who to preach to. Meanwhile someone with an impeccable lifestyle and deep faith but no church license would be not just entitled to preach but should be listened to above the debauched prelate.

What Wycliff proposed would lead to a complete dissolution of discipline in the church in its current state of corruption, which is why he proposed a fallback. The temporal authorities, the kings and princes were to maintain the discipline in the church until such time that it was completely reformed.

That was grist to the mill of the Bohemian reformers, who had been looking for the theological justification for their rejection of the corrupt prelates at the top of the church.

Jan Hus was one of these Bohemians who picked up and digested Wycliff’s theses. There is a tremendously complex debate about what of Wycliff’s theses Hus exactly endorsed and which ones he did not. That mattered for the legality of the judgement that led to his execution at Constance, but did not matter much for what went down in Bohemia. Bohemia embraced much of Wycliff’s theses.

But I am jumping ahead.

Last we saw Jan Hus the person was in 1390 when he arrived in Prague. He studied at university and by 1401 was ordained as a priest and took holy orders. He preached in a number of churches in the Old Town before he was appointed the main preacher at the Bethlehem chapel. The Bethlehem chapel was an unusual set-up. Though called a chapel, it was huge, able to take 3,000 worshippers. The reason it wasn’t a full church was because it was a private chapel created and funded by two pious Prague merchants. That made it on the one hand less prestigious than a full parish appointment, but left Jan Hus with a  lot more freedom than an ordinary priest.

When he took up the role in 1402, Jan Hus was well within the mainstream of the Bohemian clerical set-up. Though many ideas the reformers promoted were radical and not in line with general church doctrine, the majority of the established church, all the way up to the archbishop were supportive of their demand for reform. They even tolerated the preaching in Czech practiced by the reformers and something Jan Hus did very much from the beginning.

But though he had helped translate some of Wycliff’s works, his theological writings of that time were fairly tame.

What radicalized him were a sequence of events that unfolded over the coming decade.

In 1405 he became part of a commission to investigate a miracle a parish priest of a burned down church claimed to have witnessed. Something about a bleeding host. What Hus uncovered was a greedy priest who had made the whole thing up to raise money for the rebuilding of his church and the recovery of his main income stream. That investigation led him then to doubt not just the veracity of some of the relics but also whether any relics, in particular those directly physically related to Christ himself were compatible with scripture.

At the same time his career as a preacher was going great. Bethlehem chapel filled up with worshippers not just on Sundays but also on workdays. Jan Hus was a gifted orator and had a knack to convey rather complex theological ideas in a way the common people could understand. His most famous quote is: “Seek the truth, hear the truth, learn the truth, love the truth, speak the truth, hold the truth and defend the truth until death.” And at another point he said “Love the truth. Let others have their truth, and the truth will prevail.” This made it even into the national motto of the Czech Republic “truth prevails”.

When I first read this I stumbled over the term “their truth” which is one of my bugbears. There is no such thing as my truth. There a facts and fiction. But then I do not think that Jan Hus was talking about the modern idea of “my truth”. For him, like his contemporaries faith was truth and truth was faith. There was no differentiation between scientific truth and faith as we see it today. So the correct interpretation of these statements would be to replace the word truth with faith. And then these statements take on a different and a much more amenable connotation. Hus was prepared to die for his truth, his faith, when he said “defend the truth until death”but he did not want to do harm to those who held different beliefs. He demanded “Let others have their truth, their faith”. Because he believed that they would come around to his beliefs sooner or later. And there is another one of his statements I like: quote “From the very beginning of my studying I made it a rule that whenever, in any matter, I heard a sounder viewpoint, I abandoned the one I had – since I know well that we know far less than what we do not know.” Or to say it with Keynes, if the facts change I change my opinion, what do you do? So whatever his teachings are later used for, he himself was no fanatic.

I like that and so it seems did many inhabitants of the city of Prague. And what they also liked was that he would celebrate the eucharist almost every time as Milic and his reformers had demanded. That went straight against church rules that wanted to restrict the sacrament to only once a month.  Hus responded quote: “if ever a pope should command me to play on the flute, build towers, to mend or weave garments, and to stuff sausages, ought I not reasonably judge that the pope was foolish in so commanding” end quote.

Alongside this thriving business, Hus kept a role at the university. He published further treatises which now incorporated elements of Wycliff’s thinking. How much and how far away from the official doctrine these views were is again ultimately irrelevant. What mattered was that Hus was increasingly seen as one of the followers of Wycliff.

In 1409 tensions at the university boiled over. The Czechs who were the most numerous nation kept getting voted down by the three German-speaking groupings. And this was not just a linguistic and social conflict but also a theological one. Whilst the Czechs embraced Wycliff and became increasingly radical, the Germans stuck with the orthodoxy. When it became clear that the squabbling parties could not reach compromise, they brought their case before King Wenceslaus IV. By now Wenceslaus had succumbed to full on alcoholism, so it is unclear how much of the proceedings he really understood. But his wife Sophia was very much on the side of the Czech reformers. The crown also needed the university’s support as they wanted to transfer their allegiance from the Roman pope Gregory XII to the Pisan pope Alexander V. The Germans were leaning to the Roman pope, the Bohemians to the Pisan. So the crown passed a decree that from now on the Czech nation’s vote would count as much as the vote of the other three nations combined. That outraged the German-speaking nations and they simply walked out. Many of these doctors and students left for the recently founded universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg, which propelled these schools up the European academic rankings, whilst the university of Prague turned into a more provincial institution catering for Bohemians only.

What also happened was that the king appointed Jan Hus as rector of the University. And since the university was now free to embrace Wycliff’s theories, Jan Hus as its rector became the face of Wycliff’s theories in Bohemia, irrespective of his personal conviction.

Over the next 3 years the university doctors embraced more and more radical ideas. That triggered a backlash by the archbishop who referenced 45 Wycliffian theses that had been declared heretic. In this debate the king sided again with the reformers against the archbishop. This time it was mainly for monetary reasons. In the tradition of Matthew of Janov, the reformers supported the idea that the king should not only maintain discipline in the church, but should also cleanse it from the swollen body of antichrist, aka take away all the church’s lands and estates. And that was exactly what Wenceslaus did. He took the reins of the church, forced the archbishop into submission and diverted the church funds into his own pocket.

This alliance between king and reformers fell apart, as one would expect, over the same thing it had kept it together in the past – money. The new Pisan pope, John XXIII had declared a crusade against king Ladislaus of Naples, the one who had attempted to take the crown of Hungary from Sigismund and whose father had died trying. To fund this most Christian effort John was selling indulgences all across the lands of his obedience, including Bohemia. As we mentioned in episode 168, indulgences had become key to papal finances now that the church was split into three and many obediences regularly refused to pass through tithes and other incomes. The  indulgences of 1412 were so egregious, they truly shocked Jan Hus. Already deeply skeptical of saints and relics, this blatant money grab pushed him over the edge. He began to equate John XXIII with antichrist and declared all prelates selling these papers corrupt. And when he found out that Wenceslaus was supporting the indulgences because he had been promised a cut of the profits, he condemned his king as well.

The pope immediately excommunicated Hus. The king was still more interested in continuing the cooperation and first tried to calm him down. But Hus kept preaching against indulgences, called the archbishop a Simoniak, which was true, and just generally turned from a useful tool of royal politics to a genuine nuisance.

After Wenceslaus had tried several time to get Hus back on side, he sent a brutal message. Three of Hus’ young supporters had protested against the selling of indulgences and stopped the pardoners from going about their business. The king had them arrested and the next day, he had them hanged. Meanwhile the  pope had declared an interdict over the city of Prague, banning all church services and sacraments for as long as Jan Hus was allowed to preach.

That was too much for Jan Hus. To protect his friends and fellow citizens, he went into exile.

In the following 2 years, from 1412 to 1414 he did write like a man possessed. He published no fewer than 15 books, the culmination of the previous decade of thought. The most important one was de ecclesia, about the church.

There he compared the church to a field where wheat and weeds grow together. But only the wheat, the good parts belongs to the actual church. And if the church itself was unable to pull out the weeds, it falls to the king to do that, and if the king was unwilling or unable to do it, it was down to the laity to clean up the field. And since most of the weed, the corruption in the church stems from the property they had obtained over time, that should be all be given over to the secular authorities.

This is where the rubber hit the road. Dietrich von Niem, a German chronicler called Hus’ ideas as great a threat to Christendom and papal power as the Qur’an. And it was this book that the judges in Constance used most extensively to prove the heresy of Jan Hus.

These books, but even more the relentless persecution by the church had made Hus the face of the Bohemian dissent, a dissent that was about to tip over into revolt. As early as 1412 pamphlets were circulating that mixed religion with violence. They declared that all those intended to be Christian were to take up swords and be prepared to wash their hands in the blood of God’s enemies. Jan Hus they declared was no longer a timid goose, but a ferocious lion prepared to confront the papal antichrist and all its wickedness. There is no evidence that Hus endorsed or encourages such talk, nor is there evidence that he made efforts to stop it.

It is in late 1414 that Jan Hus is summoned to the council of Constance that had gathered since November of that year. He was asked to come and subject his teachings to review by the doctors and senior clergy at the greatest of church councils. Sigismund, by now elected king of the Romans and presiding over the council promised Hus safe conduct.

One cannot know whether Hus believed Sigismund’ promise or whether he willingly walked straight into his martyrdom. This again mattered as much or as little as the question whether or not he was guilty of heresy. Because what mattered was what the people back in Prague believed happened and what actions these beliefs triggered.

Some of that we will find out next episode when we finally talk about the great council of Constance. I hope you will join us again.

In the meantime, should you feel so inclined, listen back to some of the older episodes when we talked about Bohemia, for instance way back in episode 26 when we look at the murderous Bohemian succession crisis in the early 11th century, episode 54 when a Bohemian ruler tilts Barbarossa’s campaign in Italy in favour of the Germans, or some of the more recent ones, like episode 140 about the fight between Rudolf of Habsburg and the Golden King Ottokar II. And what you could also do is make a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support, just in case you feel like it.

Sigismund of Luxembourg emerges as a pivotal figure in the late Middle Ages, grappling with the dual crises of the Schism and the Ottoman threat while navigating a complex web of political intrigue. Born into the powerful House of Luxembourg, his journey is marked by ambition, charm, and a significant lack of funds, which shapes his tumultuous rise. The episode delves into his early life, including his education and the challenges he faced within his family, particularly the rivalry with his brother Wenceslas. As Sigismund seeks to secure his position through marriage to Maria, the heiress of Hungary and Poland, he encounters fierce opposition, especially from his mother-in-law Elizabeth. The narrative unfolds with Sigismund’s relentless pursuit of power, ultimately leading to his coronation as King of Hungary, albeit under precarious circumstances that reveal the intricacies of 14th-century politics and the personal struggles he faces along the way.

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TRANSCRIPT

The late 14th and early 15th century was a period of upheaval, the certainties of the Middle Ages, that the pope ruled the world and that knights were invincible were crumbling away, the long period of economic growth, of eastward expansion and conversion of the pagans made way for war, plague and famine. The church was split in half and the Ottomans were coming.

This was an age that called forth larger-than-life characters: Joan of Arc, fierce and holy; Henry Bolingbroke, seizing a throne; Jadwiga and Jogaila, uniting kingdoms; the audacious Gian Galeazzo Visconti and fiery Cola di Rienzo; the ever-scheming John the Fearless and Jacob van Artevelde; the tragic Ines de Castro and the unflinching Jan Žižka.

Into this glittering and turbulent lineup steps a man whose reputation has not exactly been polished by time. Despised in his kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia and even Constance, the city that owes him so much, decided to remember him as a fat naked crowned guy with skinny arms and legs, worn-out face, forked beard and disproportionate genitalia balancing on the hand of a nine-meter-tall sex worker. No, I am not making this up.

Sigismund, because that was his name, was a true enigma of the late Middle Ages. He had inherited his father’s charm and ruthless cunning, his knack for negotiating compromise in impossible situations, and his unshakeable belief in his role as the head of Christendom. But what he hadn’t inherited was his father’s performative piety, his zeal for relics, his asceticism—or his wealth. Instead, Sigismund was left with a volatile mix of ambition, enormous self-confidence, a lust for life, and, crucially, a chronic shortage of funds.

Yet despite his flaws, he took on Christendom’s two greatest crises—the schism and the Ottoman threat—and in doing so, managed to create a third…This is his backstory.

But before we start let me tell you that adverts on podcasts have now reached 7.2% of the total length of shows and in the most popular shows reached 10%. That means if this episode had podcast ads, you would have to skip through 4 minutes of a mix of me droning on about VPNs or dodgy mental health services. I guess you know how to prevent that. Do what Yordi V., Adam F., Risch S, John R., Karen G. and Edward R. have done, go to historyofthegermans.com/support and make a one-time donation. For that you gain my eternal gratitude but most importantly the thanks of all your fellow listeners who you protect…

With that, back to the show.  

Sigismund was born on February 15th, 1368, the second surviving son of emperor Karl IV. We have heard enough about his father, so he needs no introduction, but his mother was no less remarkable.

By most accounts, she was a striking beauty, a full thirty years younger than her husband and, by all testimonies, deeply devoted to him. Though her frame seemed slight—”of weak appearance,” as one chronicler delicately put it—her strength was legendary, the kind spoken of in awe-struck whispers. She could twist horseshoes as if they were mere ribbons, shatter swords as easily as snapping a twig, and rend chainmail with her bare hands. Her son, Sigismund, was no stranger to physical prowess himself, though even his strength paled when measured against hers.

How much he saw of her is unclear, but probably not a lot. Like most princely children during this period he was likely raised by wetnurses and servants in one of the imperial castles, like the magnificent one at Karlsteijn, whilst his parents pursued the itinerant lifestyle of medieval monarchs.

By the mid-14th century, princely education had taken on a new dimension. Young aristocrats and future rulers still learned the essentials—swordsmanship, jousting, hunting—but this wasn’t the whole picture anymore. Sigismund, along with his brothers, was taught to read and write—a skill not taken for granted among nobility a hundred years earlier. Being groomed for a leadership role in the multicultural realm of the house of Luxemburg, languages were a priority. He was fluent in Latin, German, Czech, Hungarian, French, Italian, and possibly Polish as well. His education even included a respectable grounding in theology and both canon and Roman law, giving him a broad base of knowledge that would serve him well as a ruler.

Though he did neither became a writer or embarked on grand building projects like his father, Sigismund’s contemporaries couldn’t help but notice—and remark upon—his relentless curiosity, sharp intellect, and remarkable drive. Even from a young age, he was known for probing questions and an eagerness to master every topic placed before him.

Sigismund appeared in the historical records for the first time in 1373 when he was enfeoffed with the margraviate of Brandenburg, alongside his two brothers. In 1376 he showed up at his brother Wenceslaus coronation as king of the Romans. As Margrave of Brandenburg and Arch Chamberlain of the empire the eight year old was entrusted with carrying one of the imperial regalia, the sword of St. Maurice at the head of the procession.

Sigismund was still only 10 and his brother Wenceslaus 17 when their father must have noticed that the two of them were not getting in. Where Sigismund was full of energy, ambition and ideas, Wenceslaus was pondering and slow. A terrible constellation in a system of Primogeniture, where the obviously less qualified was to inherit everything and the smart one is left with nothing.

Karl IV tried to pre-empt potential conflict by giving Sigismund both a task and resources to achieve it. The task was for him to acquire the crowns of Hungary and Poland through marriage to Maria, the eldest surviving daughter of Louis the great the king of Hungary and Poland.  And the resources to push through his claim was the Margraviate of Brandenburg, the territory Karl IV had only recently acquired from the house of Wittelsbach for the astronomic sum of 500,000 Mark and Sigismund now received in sole ownership.

And he made the brothers exchange letters in which they pledge to forever honestly and truly support each other, exercise their vote in the college of Electors jointly and that under no circumstances would they attack each other’s castles and cities.

Not exactly watertight, but the best Karl could do in the few months he had left.

Let’s have a look at where Sigismund stood in November 1378 when his father breathed his last.

Being margrave of Brandenburg sounds great, after all future holders of the title would indeed build an empire out of this poor soil. But in 1378 it had 200,000 inhabitants most of them battered and impoverished after the decades of feuds and civil wars that had followed the death of margrave Waldemar, the last of the descendants of Albrecht the Baer who had founded the principality way back in 1157 (episode 106 if you are interested).

As for his claim on the Hungarian and Polish crowns, that wasn’t nailed down pat either. Karl had agreed with king Louis I of Hungary that Sigismund would marry his daughter Maria. That was in 1372 and 1375, when Maria’s elder sister Catherina had still been alive. And Catherine was to marry Louis of Orleans, the younger son of King Charles V of France. King Louis of Hungary had even got his vassals to swear fealty to Catherine, not Maria in case of his demise. In one of his last acts, Karl IV resolved that issue in a secret pact with the king of France that granted the French crown de facto control of Provence and the Rhone Valley in exchange for letting Sigismund and Maria succeed Louis of Hungary. We discussed that bit of skullduggery in more detail in episode 163.

I hope you understand why there are so many episodes about all these goings on in the late 14th century. It is just unspeakably complex with dozens upon dozens of players in the empire, in Poland, Hungary, France, Naples, Rome, Avignon, Constantinople, all with their own backstories. It is like Balzac’s novels where protagonists show up here and then there and then their get their own novel where others from previous plots show up, or for the modern listener, it is like the Marvel Universe. But do not worry, the Avengers endgame is in sight.

But first we need to get through Sigismund’s backstory.

By some miracle this complex web of arrangements between Prague, Paris and Buda survived the death of its creator Karl IV. In August 1379 Louis of Hungary and Wenceslaus, king of the romans hosted the official engagement of 11-year old Sigismund and 8-year old Maria heiress of the crowns of Hungary and Poland. The actual marriage was planned for 1382 when Sigismund would be 14 and hence and adult and Maria 11, apparently old enough for conjugal duties. Louis publicly recognised Sigismund as his chosen successor and took the young man in to live at his court.

That arrangement suited all concerned. For Wenceslaus, it was the perfect opportunity to send away his little brother, whose charm, good looks, and boundless energy were beginning to grate against his own surly, lethargic disposition. And for Louis, the greatly admired  chivalric king of Hungary, this was a golden chance to shape his young son-in-law into a fitting heir, grooming him with the skills and values that would one day serve as the backbone of his vast realms.

Just to recap where Louis came from and more importantly, what Sigismund hoped he would bring to him. Louis was from the house of Anjou, the cadet branch of the French royal family that had wrestled Sicily out of the hands of the Hohenstaufen – and had killed young Konradin.

Louis’ father had become the first Anjou king of Hungary pretty much the same way Sigismund was aiming to gain the crown, in the horizontal. Louis succeeded him in 1342 and reigned for 40 astonishingly successful years. He pursued broadly speaking three main policy aims.

The first was to expand Hungary southwards into the Balkans and along the Dalmatian coast. This worked really well. He picked up parts of Stefan Dusan’s  Serbian empire after the great ruler had died in 1355, established suzerainty over Transylvania and Walachia, became king of Croatia and took on the overlordship of Ragusa, modern day Dubrovnik. His zone of Influence comprised modern day Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Romania, Moldova and parts of Bulgaria.

His second ambition was to regain his family’s homeland, the kingdom of Naples that was ruled by the childless queen Joanna I he accused of having killed his brother. But that effort was not quite as successful. He did invade a couple of times, burned and plundered but could not oust queen Joanna against the opposition of the papacy. All he left behind was a shedload of bad blood between the Neapolitan side of the family and his own.

The third leg of his policy was Poland. Its king, Kasimir the Great had consolidated the once fragmented kingdom but found himself without a male heir. Louis supported Kasimir in multiple campaigns and formed an attachment that convinced the Polish king to name him his successor. And in 1370 he was crowned king of Poland in Krakow.

Louis realm was in other words huge and thanks to its mineral wealth that the clever Nurnberg merchants were exploiting, extremely rich. (for how they managed that, check out episode 153)

This sounds almost perfect. Young Sigismund lives at one of the most splendid courts in europe under the wing of his father in law, one of “great kings” of the 14th century who is willing to hand him all of it on a silver platter. What else can a bright, ambitious 11 year old want.

But there is no such thing as a free royal banquet. Whilst Louis really liked him, not everybody shared the kings enthusiasm for the bouncy little prince. And those who did not were all called Elisabeth.

The first of these Elisabeths was king Louis’ mother, a sister of the much beloved king Kasimir III of Poland. As much as her son was shrewd and capable, she had a habit of rubbing people up the wrong way until they lashed out. Her intervention in the kingdom of Naples cost her youngest son Andrew his life and her attempts at establishing a regency in Poland after her brother’s death nearly cost her hers. Not even her son Louis liked her very much and she retaliated by hating his chosen successor, young Sigismund.

That problem resolved itself when Elisabeth of Poland died just a year after Sigismund had arrived in Hungary. But her disaffection of the young man passed on to the next Elisabeth, Elisabeth of Bosnia, the wife of king Louis and therefore Sigismund’s mother in law.

Why she first disliked him, then despised him and finally fanatically hated him has never been properly explained. He might have slighted her in some way or done something foolish in the exuberance of youth. Or she simply hoped for something better for her daughter. After all, the couple was only engaged, not yet married. And better could mean a man who would be more caring and respectful to her darling daughter, or someone less forceful and younger who would allow her to establish her own regency once king Louis was dead.

What turned this from a bad 1960’s mother-in-law joke to full blown Greek tragedy was that Elisabeth passed her hate for young Sigismund on to her daughter Maria, the woman he was going to marry.

In 1382 King Louis declared Sigismund officially as his heir in Poland and  called on his vassals to swear an oath to serve him faithfully. Sigismund was given the command over a small contingent of soldiers and the task to calm down some minor disturbance and to prepare his ascension to the Polish throne.

Aged 14, Sigismund’s political career had begun

….Music?

And he was not given much time to settle in. He arrived in Poland in July 1382. The country was in chaos. Though properly crowned and everything, his father in law had not really gained much of a foothold in Polish politics. The regents he had deployed there were universally hated and were confined to the few castles they held. The magnates fought them and also amongst themselves.

The Polish nobles did not like the idea of an absentee landlord king who regarded Polish affairs as secondary. Polish affairs meaning getting the lands back the Teutonic knights had acquired over the years (episodes 130-138 if you are interested) .

They all agreed Louis wasn’t the king who would do it, but hoped things would improve once the old man had shuffled off his mortal coil. What they did not agreed on was what should happen then. One group was broadly amenable to Maria and Sigismund taking over, provided they would live in Poland. Others believed Poland should break with the house of Anjou and choose its own dedicated ruler.

This question became a lot more acute a lot earlier than anybody expected – because king Louis the Great of Hungary died in September of that same year.

Sigismund immediately demanded that the magnates of Poland recognise him as their lord, which some did before really thinking about it. The nobles of Wielkopolska had considered the situation more thoroughly and said, yes they would happily swear allegiance, but only if Sigismund promised to permanently reside in Poland. That was a no go for Sigismund, since it would mean abandoning the hope to ever becoming king of Hungary. And Hungary looked a lot easier since his future wife, Maria had just been recognised and crowned as king, not queen of Hungary without the slightest delay or hick-up.

Sigismund’s refusal prompted the nobles to form an alliance that demanded that if they were to recognise any of Louis’ daughters, it would be the one who was prepared to reside permanently in Poland. If neither were prepared to do that, well then – they would choose someone amongst themselves to be  their king.

If Sigismund ever had a chance to push back against the Polish nobles’ demands, it was taken away when his enemy mother -in-law Elisabeth pulled the rug from under him. She wrote to the Polish nobles, thanked them for their loyalty to the house of Anjou and promised them to select one of her daughters to come to Poland very soon. But in the meantime she urged them not to do anything rash, in particular not to recognise Sigismund as king.

So  much for familial loyalty. Sigismund sat down with the grand master of the Teutonic Knights who told him that the idea of becoming king of Poland was for the birds. You better go back to Hungary.

Oh yes. Let’s go back to Hungary. That is where his bride would be waiting for him and now that he had turned 14 and was an adult, the marriage could finally proceed. And once married he would be crowned king and everything would be as old king Louis had wanted.

But, not so.

There were three main parties amongst the Hungarian nobles and only one of them could see Sigismund wearing the holy crown of St. Stephen.

The Garai family wanted Hungary to align more with France, basically revive the old plan of bringing in the French duke of Orleans as the new king. The equally powerful Lackfi family preferred a closer alignment between Hungary and the empire as a way to fend off the ottoman threat that was slowly but surely coming up the Balkans. And finally there were the Horvati who preferred the king of Naples, Charles III, called the Small as their new ruler. Charles was a pretty ruthless man who had grown up in Hungary and had at some point been Louis’ designated successor.

Whilst Sigismund had been detained up in Poland, the queen mother Elisabeth had made herself regent on behalf of her 11-year old daughter. And she had sided with the pro-French party of the Garais. Envoys were on their way to Paris to negotiate a new marriage for little Maria, replacing Sigismund with duke Louis of Orleans.

If Maria married Lous of Orleans that would have been curtains for our friend Sigismund. Without a marriage to Maria he was just a foreign prince with no claim on the Hungarian or Polish crown, and not even a particularly wealthy one at that.

Elisabeth would have loved to call off the engagement right away and send Sigismund back home to Brandenburg, but did not dare to do it yet since the two other factions, the pro-imperial Lackfis and the pro-Neapolitan Horvatis were stirring up revolt. So she did the second best thing and sent him to Poland.

Sigismund went in the hope he could still convince his mother-in-law of his suitability as ruler and win the heart of little Maria. That wasn’t a great plan, but at least it was a plan.

What is less clear is what game Elisabeth was playing in Poland. Elisabeth knew she had no resources to force the Poles into recognising Maria as king unconditionally. So it was either sending her younger daughter Jadwiga up to Krakow or to give up on the Polish crown entirely. But she did neither, she tried to stall the Poles. That gave the anti-Hungarian party in Poland the justification to strike and they proposed one of their own as king. A full-blown civil war broke out in Poland. The pro-Hungarian party asked Elisabeth for help and she sent Sigismund with an army of 12,000 to put thing back in order in the north.

Sigismund burned and pillaged the oppositions lands but failed to take Krakow. So negotiations resumed and Elisabeth finally promised to send Jadwiga after all. A time was set for Jadwiga to be handed over, but then Elisabeth stalled again. And again she sent Sigismund to deal with the Poles, but this time without an army.  

Sigismund met the members of the Sejm who were now seriously angry and even those loyal to the Hungarian royal house had enough. If Elisabeth does not want to let Jadwiga become king, that is fine, we will just go with the Polish candidate, thank you very much.

It was Sigismund who talked them around. This is the first time his charm and diplomatic skill came to the fore. After long and arduous negotiations, and – knowing Sigismund probably including some serious partying – he and his mother in law is given one last and absolutely, completely final extension.

So, on October 15th, 1384 the beautiful Jadwiga is crowned king, not queen of Poland. Shortly afterwards she married Jogaila, the grand prince of Lithuania, creating the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The amazing thing is that this great political juggernaut would never have come into being had Sigismund taken the Polish crown and promised to stay in Krakow.

Having saved the kingdom of Poland for the house of Anjou, having proven his allegiance to Elisabeth and her daughters by forsaking the Polish crown he once believed should be his, Sigismund returned to Buda to rapturous applause, his mother-in-law offering him the kiss of peace and young Maria getting excited about her upcoming nuptials.

Oh no, none of that. You completely underestimate how much the queen mother Elisbeth hated Sigismund. In 1385 she struck what she thought was the final blow that would rid her of that pesky Luxemburger. She called the engagement between Sigismund and Maria off. Immediately thereafter Maria married Louis of Orleans by proxy.

Now the chips are really down . Sigismund is outplayed, his grand plan is in tatters. But then  Sigismund, still only 16, can be very, very determined if he wants something badly. And he wanted the crown of Hungary very, very badly.

So badly, he did go for help to the man he never ever wanted to be dependent upon, who he not necessarily despised but regarded as mediocre and undeserving of the wealth and honours he had received, his stepbrother, King Wenceslaus.  Wenceslaus, as it happened, was riding high at this point in his reign. He had concluded the general peace of Eger, the great project their father had never managed to achieve, and was preparing his journey to Rome to obtain the imperial crown. Wenceslaus had the military resources to help.

And there were their cousins, the margraves of Moravia, Jobst and Prokop. They had inherited a very well run principality that was throwing up cash like nobody’s business. They had the means to bankroll Sigismund’s claim on the Hungarian crown.

Looks like the Luxemburg family is pulling together to put one of them to obtain the holy crown of St. Stephen…well, that is what the Habsburgs would have done. The Luxemburgs – different kettle of fish. Yes, dear brother and cousin, we are happy to help, but it’ll cost you. And dearly. Sigismund had to pawn them big chunks of his margraviate of Brandenburg and hand over some of his various rights, castles and income streams.

Having been stripped down by his relatives, he did at least gets his army and with that he returned to Hungary to force the queen regent to give her daughter over in marriage to him. Not the most romantic move, but then love did not really get into this.

Whether the plan would have worked on its own, we will never know. Because events outside his control pushed little Maria into his bed anyway.

You remember there were three political parties in Hungary, the Garai who were pro French and allied with evil mother-in-law Elisbeth, the Lackfi who supported Sigismund and the Horvati who wanted Charles the Small of Naples on the Throne.

This Charles of Naples was a tough nut. Once he had been dismissed as Louis of Hungary’s heir presumptive he went to Naples where he captured and then killed his cousin Queen Joanna I. This effort had been sponsored by pope Urban VI. But Urban found out that Charles had double crossed him when he was casually torturing a brace of cardinals. So Charles attacked the pope and besieged him in Nocera from where the pope escaped by a hairs breadth. The late 14th century is no time for sissies and Charles may have been small, but he was definitely no sissy.

In 1385 this very much not a sissy Neapolitan landed on the Dalmatian coast to stake his claim on the Hungarian crown. His supporters, the Horvati raised their banners and they marched on Buda.

Elisabeth is panicking. Her regime had become quite unpopular for all the usual reasons, taxes, favourites etc. And her allies, the Garai alone weren’t strong enough to fend off the other two parties. She had no choice but to seek support from the man  who happened to be just about to muster a military force, even if that was the man she hated more than anyone else, our friend Sigismund. And Sigismund’s price was simple, marriage to the heiress Maria. In November 1385 the not very happy couple stood before a hastily prepared altar and were finally married.

Sigismund returned to Bohemia to take command of his troops whilst Elisbeth and Maria prepared the defence of Buda against Charles of Naples. As part of that they called an assembly of the Hungarian nobles, promised them remediation of all their grievances and asked for their support. But they refused. Instead they told her to make an arrangement with Charles of Naples.

So it happened that a month later Charles the small was crowned king of Hungary at Fehérvár where Hungarian kings have been crowned since time immemorial. But he did not stay king for very long though. Two months later, on February 7th, 1386 his cupbearer attacked him, injured him severely. He was thrown into a prison where the queen regent who presumably had paid the cupbearer had him killed. Not nice but effective.

That kicked off a civil war between the Neapolitan party and the party of the queen regent. And the queen regent also went back on her deal with Sigismund, refusing to support his coronation as king. Sigismund had to go back to his relatives and ask for even more money and even more troops. Which they provided, pulling even more chunks out of his inheritance.

Sigismund took his troops into Hungary and occupied the western part of the country to force Elizabeth to hand over his bride and get him crowned. At this point the queen regent called upon Sigismund’s brother, Wenceslaus to mediate in the conflict.

Wenceslaus did pass judgement as one would expect. Hungary was to pay some astronomical sum to pay for the cost of the war, Maria was to accept Sigismund as her husband for real now and he was given some property to live off. But what Wenceslaus did not demand, what he even precluded, was his brother’s coronation as king of Hungary. These two really did not get on that well.

Sigismund was now broke. He was only nominally margrave of Brandenburg, but all the income from the territory was going to his cousins. He even passed over the right to inherit Bohemia should Wenceslaus die without an heir. And for what – no coronation, a wife who hated him so much, even he did not want to enforce conjugal rights and no real position of power in Hungary.

But in this super volatile environment things can sometimes brighten up in rather unexpected and unpleasant ways. This way was paved by the foolishness of the queen regent. Her paladin, Miklos Garai felt that after Charles’ of Naples death and some successes against the Horvati, it was possible for the queens to come down to Dalmatia and to inspect their lands. But he was wrong. The land was not yet pacified. When the ladies travelled along with a small bodyguard, Janos Horvati came out of the bushes, killed the Garai and the rest of the guards and then carried the queens away into captivity.

Hungary was now without ruler and in the midst of a civil war. To fill the vacuum, the Hungarian magnates declared themselves the guardians of the realm and took control of the kingdom. And these guardians of the realm recognised Sigismund as captain of the Hungarian cause, though not as king.

The ladies’ position was very precarious. The widow of king Charles, the one Elisabeth had murdered bayed for her blood. Not being able to kill Elisabeth with her own bare hands, the queen of Naples ordered the Horvati to do the deed on her behalf. In mid-January 1387 Elisabeth, the daughter of the king of Bosnia, widow of king Louis the Great of Hungary, Poland and lots more was strangled before the eyes of her daughter and her body thrown in the castle’s ditch. Maria was 15 years of age when that happened. Sigismund had months to mount a rescue, but did not send his army to the castle where they were kept.

Elisabeth’s death convinced the Guardians of the realm that to properly incentivise him, they had to crown him king of Hungary after all. Still Sigismund had to make far reaching concessions to the nobles, including the promise only to appoint Hungarians to  key positions and to pardon everyone who had risen up against him or opposed him. The already quite modest royal power was further undermined by these promises, making Hungary more of an aristocratic republic than a kingdom. Sigismund had to reward his supporters after his coronation with expensive gifts. 85 of the 150 royal castles and manors passed on to the magnates. This financial and political weakness meant that Sigismund remained hampered in his rule of Hungary for decades. The way he tried to wriggle out of the clutches of the barons was by building up his own parallel bureaucracy that gradually took over tax collection and the management of the defence of the country against the Ottomans.

That being so, at least after 5 years of fighting and frustrations, Sigismund is finally king of Hungary.

Music

The first item on the to do list of the freshly elected and crowned king was to free his wife Maria from the clutches of the Horvati. This took until the end of 1387 and a month-long siege.

The married couple were finally united, but the relations remained cold, professional until her death in a riding accident in 1395. Sigismund may be charming and all that, but wooing a young girl who had just seen her mother getting killed due to her suitors reluctance to come to her aid would go beyond the capabilities of even the most accomplished of seducers.

The subsequent 5 years from 1387 to 1393 were taken up with defeating the Horvati and the reconquest of Dalmatia, which again was extremely costly. The Hungarian estates and magnates did not provide the funds he needed despite regular assurances. Sigismund finally bit the bullet and pawned all that he had left to his cousin Jobst for the astonishing sum of 565,263 Guilders. By doing that Sigismund had severed all his links to the Holy Roman Empire. He was now 100% committed to his kingdom of Hungary.  

The funds were enough to muster an army capable to defeat the Horvati and regain Dalmatia. Janos Horvati was captured, brutally tortured, pulled through the streets of the city of Pecs tied to the tail of a horse and then drawn and quartered.

This success did however not mean that Sigismund could now kick back and enjoy being king. As we heard last week, the Ottomans were coming. In 1389 they had defeated and then incorporated the despotate of Serbia. They were standing at the Hungarian border.

Sigismund’s predecessor, the great king Louis of Hungary had not worried too much about the Ottomans. He had fought and won a couple of battles against them and remained unconcerned. What he had not realised was that the Ottomans had learned from their early defeats against armies made up of armoured knights and had developed their unique combination of light cavalry and janissary infantry that prove so successful. After the battle on the Kosovo field in 1389 where the whole Serbian army perished, the major players on the Balkans woke up to the power of the Ottomans.

Sigismund was a player on the Balkans and he did understand that the Ottomans would be unstoppable unless he could muster an army far larger than anything Hungary alone could raise. Hence his involvement in the crusade that ended in the battle of Nikopol we discussed in the last episode.

After the crushing defeat at Nikopol Sigismund was rescued by two of his closest supporters, count Johann von Zollern and Count Herman of Cilli who commandeered a ship on the Danube to take him away.

From there Sigismund could have easily returned home to Hungary, but instead decided to take a little detour to see the famous sites of Constantinople. This was borderline on madness given the Ottoman army was standing undefeated on the Hungarian border, thousands of Christian knights had been captured and either enslaved or killed and his opponents in Hungary had gone  on manoeuvres.

That was the other side of Sigismund’s character. Whilst he could doggedly pursue an objective for years and bet everything in the outcome, sometimes he would suddenly drop everything and just give up, looking for adventures and opportunities elsewhere.  

Hence the spa trip to Constantinople where he was received with great honours by a deeply disappointed emperor Manuel II. Whilst his host was falling into despair, Sigismund dreamt up grand plans to defeat the Ottomans. He embarked on a journey across the levant, taking in Rhodes and the Greek islands before returning to Buda via Ragusa and Split.

Back home he had the magnate Istvan Lackfi and his nephew killed for barely provable treason. This act, together with his previous brutality against the Horvati made him despised by the Hungarians, a sentiment that continued to this day. And that sentiment was at least for a time mutual. The concessions Sigismund had granted at his coronation and the vast wealth he had to transfer to the Guardians of the Realm left him with very limited room to exercise actual power in Hungary. Tired of being pushed around by the magnates he began looking for new opportunities abroad.

..Music

His next project was to gang up with his cousins to unseat his step-brother Wenceslaus. We did discuss Wenceslaus demise in episode 165 so there is no point going through all of this complex story once again.

Wenceslaus was dealt a tough hand upon his father’s death and turned out being pretty bad at playing it. Between the simmering resentment of Bohemian nobles, discord with the church, his absence from the Empire, and his utter failure to address the schism in the papacy, Wenceslaus was left isolated, vulnerable, and ultimately a perfect target for Sigismund’s ambitions.

Sigismund had his hand in every one of the various conspiracies and uprisings that made his brother’s reign even more untenable than it needed to be. His comrades in crime were his cousin Jobst of Moravia and various Habsburg dukes. These guys would backstab and betray each other in a wild merry go around I simply cannot be bothered to recount. To call this self-destructive is an understatement of epic proportions. The house of Luxemburg, which once held a quarter of the empire and provided order and peace had formed an orderly circular firing squad.

By 1400, they’d managed to strip Wenceslaus of the rule of the hre, and they  nearly cost Sigismund his Hungarian throne as well.

The magnates of Hungary were disappointed with Sigismund’s constant trips to Bohemia and the mostly foreign administrators he left behind in Buda. So when he came down for a short visit, they seized him and locked him up in a castle. But then they had no idea what to do next. Some wanted to get Ladislaus of Naples,  the son of the murdered king Charles to return, others favoured a union with Poland, whilst a third party preferred a Habsburg duke. And cousin Jobst came down with an army claiming the Hungarian throne for himself. That was even by 14th century Hungarian standards an awful mess.

In the end they decided it was better to stick with their disappointing monarch than to embark on a civil war. Sigismund promised to do better, to fire his foreign advisers and spend more time in Hungary and in exchange, the Hungarians let him be.

Sigismund said, thanks. That was great fun and buggered off back to Bohemia where he spent another 2 years trying to oust his brother, double cross his cousins and merrily signing and breaking alliances with nobles and neighbouring monarchs.

In 1403 the Hungarian magnates had again enough of their absent monarch and rose up. King Ladislaus of Naples landed in Dalmatia. Sigismund came back with an army, and now it was the final showdown. His followers gathered support and Ladislaus – in fear if ending like his father – rushed back to Naples. Sigismund acted the magnanimous victor for once and received the members of the opposition back into the fold. But this time he did not apologise or promise to do better. Instead he removed the magnates one by one from their positions of power claiming, quite accurately – that they lacked loyalty to their lord. Meanwhile more and more Hungarians realised that the incessant infighting was seriously undermining their ability to defend the kingdom against the Ottomans.

For almost 7 years Sigismund gave up o wild goose chases and focused on his job in Hungary. He expanded the state apparatus, reorganised taxes and the church, introduced military reform that created the famous Hussars, suppressed the robber barons and unjust feuds and generally rebuilt the country. His most notorious reform was the creation of the order of the Dragon he bestowed on local magnates and allies, including Mircea the elder, the Voivode of Walachia. Mircea was so proud of the honour he asked people to call him Draco, Latin for dragon and his son Vlad became little dragon or Dracola in Latin, a name you may have heard before.

This period of benign rule in Hungary lasted until 1410 when King Ruprecht of the empty pocket, the rather ineffectual ruler of the Holy Roman Empire unexpectedly died. And with that the throne of the empire became vacant. And Sigismund, always on the lookout for another crown, another adventure another grand plan, put his large ermine hat in the ring.

But that is a story for another time. Next week we will meet the next and last important participant in the Council of Constance, Jan Hus, professor at the university of Prague, follower of John Wycliff and radical preacher. And I promise, once we have talked about him, we will finally come back into Germany, get to the shores of lake Constance and watch pope John XXIII, 3 patriarchs, 23 cardinals, 27 archbishops, 106 bishops, 103 abbots, 344 doctors of theology, 676 noblemen of high birth, 336 barbers, 516 buglers, pipers & entertainers and 718 whores and public girls determine the fate of Christendom.

Just before I go just a quick reminder about the website where you can support the show – it is historyofthegermans.com/support.

Hope to see you back here next week.

Albrecht of brandenburg, Grandmaster of the Teutonic Knights becomes a protestant duke of Prussia

This week we will talk about the end of the rule of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia. Instead of a land ruled by a chivalric order answering to the pope, Prussia became a secular state, ruled by a protestant prince and run by a newly created class of land-owners, the famous Prussian Junkers whose impact on German history stretched well into the 20th century.

But the conversion of the last Grand Master and his submission to the Polish crown wasn’t the end of the order. In fact the order still exists to this day, though on a fundamentally different form, which is another fascinating history we will explore in this episode. 

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 137 – The Conversion

This week we will talk about the end of the rule of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia. Instead of a land ruled by a chivalric order answering to the pope, Prussia became a secular state, ruled by a protestant prince and run by a newly created class of land-owners, the famous Prussian Junkers whose impact on German history stretched well into the 20th century.

But the conversion of the last Grand Master and his submission to the Polish crown wasn’t the end of the order. In fact the order still exists to this day, though on a fundamentally different form, which is another fascinating history we will explore in this episode. 

But before we start a big thank you to our supporters who have signed up on patreon.com/history of the Germans and or have made a generous one-time contribution at historyofthegermans.com/support. And this week I want to acknowledge James H. S., Oliver K., cole P., Flouritz and Dominique who have already signed up!.

Last week we left the scene in 1466 when grand master Ludwig von Erlichshausen signed the second peace of Thorn bringing an end to devastating 13 years war. At the end of the conflict Prussia was divided into two parts. Royal Prussia that comprised the old Polish duchy of Pomerelia and Western Prussia and then the order’s state of east Prussia with its capital at Koenigsberg, modern day Kaliningrad. Royal Prussia, as the name indicates was ruled by the king of Poland whilst East Prussia was all that was left of the order’s territory in Prussia.

Eastern Prussia was by far the poorer part. The great centers of Gdansk, Elblag and Torun were lost to the order and with it the trade along the Vistula River that connected the rich agricultural lands and mineral wealth of central Europe to the Baltic.

The agricultural surplus such as it was was exported either via Koenigsberg, or the busy harbors of Gdansk and Elblag. Apart from grain and wood, the other main export was the oldest product of the region, amber on which the order still retained a de-facto monopoly.

The Second peace of Thorn did not only result in a material change in territory, but also in a change in status. Up to 1466 the order in Prussia managed to stay fairly independent. Based on the Golden Bull of Rimini and the papal letter from 1234 the grand master was both an imperial prince and an immediate vassal of the pope. They had also some sort of link to the Polish crown as Konrad of Masovia had given them the Kulmer land on terms that the order argued was full independence and Polish chroniclers claim included some for of vassalage. It is likely that the order liked to keep things vague, because having multiple masters meant they had none.

In 1466 Ludwig von Erlichshausen was forced to swear an oath of allegiance to the king of Poland and he had to further promise that from now on at least half of the new recruits into the order were Poles. This latter provision ended up being unenforceable due to the resistance within the order and the reluctance of the Polish nobility to join. And on the former, the vassalage to the polish crown, each grand master following Ludwig von Erlichshausen tried to wriggle out of.

The war had also brought significant social change to east Prussia. As we said before, the state of the order had tried to hold on to most of the land and castles for itself and restricted the creation of a local aristocracy. And that was particularly the case in east Prussia where the nobles such as they existed were either descendants of the leadership of the Old Prussian tribes or former settlers who made good. During the 13 years war a new nobility appeared in Prussia. These were the mercenary commanders the grand master had been unable to pay. So instead of gold coin, they were given land, either land of the order or land taken from the local nobility that had sided with the Prussian League. Some of the more famous names amongst the East Prussian nobility like the von Dohna, von Eulenburg, von Schlieben, von Lehndorff came into Prussia during this period. These new landowners weren’t tied to the order and its ancient ways of working. In particular they had no qualms pushing the formerly fee peasants into a dependency to the local lord that was on the verge of turning into actual serfdom. Given how weak the grand master had become, there was little he could do to stop them.

And the order itself began to fracture. The Komturs, the senior officers and the heads of the castle convents began to treat their estates as if they were their own. They refused to pass on their profits to the headquarters in Koenigsberg. One of them zeven became a pirate who menaced Hanse shipping and could only be stopped when the Garnd master raised an army and stormed his castle at Memel. Those who did not act so blatantly still demanded to be treated like magnates within the state and get a seat in the Landrat, the representation of the estates of Prussia alongside the bishops, cities and nobles.

The grand master’s income was limited to the manors linked directly to Koenigsberg. Which meant any major investment, war or action of any kind required the consent of the various estates represented in the Landrat.

And then there was the bishopric of Ermland. The bishops of Ermland always had a more independent position than the other three bishoprics and as we heard last week had become neutral in the latter stages of the 13 years war which was another nail in the coffin of the order’s struggle. In the peace of Thorn, the bishop too had accepted vassalage to the King of Poland. But his diocese was made part of Royal Prussia rather than east Prussia. The problem with that was that Ermland sits right in the middle of East Prussia.

So unsurprisingly the conflict between the order and Poland resumes with Ermland. When the bishopric becomes vacant in 1467 the chapter elects Nikolaus von Thungen as bishop. King Kasimir of Poland does not like von Thungen, rejects his appointment and puts someone else in place. At which point the pope gets involved and insists on von Thungen. Von Thungen cannot get to Ermland and has to take refuge in Riga, from where he tries to build an alliance in support for his claim. He finds a sponsor in the form of the king of Hungary who pays for an army that captures some of Ermland on the bishop’s behalf. In 1477 the grand master feels that things have moved on sufficiently that he joins the fight. And since he was now at war with Poland anyway, he rescinds his vassalage to the King of Poland. At which point the Poles come down with a sizeable army. The usual burning and pillaging ensue though the Poles fail to take any of the major cities. However, the grand master’s resources are quickly exhausted, and the king of Hungary withdraws his support. So, another war ends with a defeat for the order. Ermland returns under Polish control and the grand master is made to bend the knee again.

The whole ramshackle structure limps on for another 20 years until the Grand Master Johann von Tiefen suggests a way out. So far, the members of the order and its grand masters had been recruited mainly from the lower nobility of the empire. There were the occasional grand masters from the princely houses but all of them had joined the order as simple knights and had worked their way through the ranks. The downside of this process was that none of the magnates of the empire had a personal relationship with the order. And given the lack of resources the order now needed powerful sponsors. The proposed way to acquire one of these sponsors was to offer the role of grand master to a second son of a great magnate who would then provide money and men to help the order. 

The person they settled on was Friedrich von Sachsen, youngest son of the duke of Saxony. Friedrich had been destined for a career in the church and had studied in Siena, Bologna and Leipzig. He ticked all the boxes. In 1497 he was admitted to the order and immediately elevated to grand master.

Friedrich von Sachsen set down to restructure the state. Part of the agreement he had made the leaders of the order to sign before joining was that they would materially increase the financial support to the center. Once elevated he pushed through further reforms, very much on the model of the territorial principality he had grown up in. He reintroduced regular visitations to the various castles and towns where he inspected the discipline of the brothers and held court, solving disputes between the people and the order. He restructured the army and established a professional bureaucracy. Basically, he operated like a 15th century territorial prince. He even held festivities in Koenigsberg palace for the local nobility with music and – shock horror – in the presence of ladies.

As for the main political objective he made some progress. As the senior officers of the order had hoped, Friedrich gathered support in the empire for a secession from the Polish crown. The emperor Maximilian encouraged him to refuse the oath of vassalage to the king of Poland. On e he had declared his intention, Prussia had to expect retaliation from Poland any minute. Though that did not happen, or at least not on the scale feared, Friedrich felt unsafe in Koenigsberg and relocated back home to Rochlitz in Saxony, leaving a governor in his place.

Despite this rather disappointing result, the order continued in his policy and sought another high aristocrat as grand Master when Friedrich died in 1510. This one was a certain Albrecht, who happens to be the very first member of the House of Hohenzollern making an appearance as a story protagonist on this podcast. And little shows how far the order has fallen that they could not even affords a second son, but only one of the 10 sons of margrave Friedrich von Brandenburg Ansbach, an over indebted incompetent ruler of the small county of Ansbach, who himself was only the second son of the elector of Brandenburg, the one with the actual power.

That being said, Albrecht von Brandenburg will leave an indelible mark on the history of the Teutonic order.

He picks up where his predecessor had left off. Like him, he had settled with the leadership of the order on some ground rules. Even more support for the central authority, willingness to accept reforms and granting him the lifestyle of a lord rather than a master of a chivalric order. One request close to his heart was that he should be relieved from the oath of chastity, celibacy he was ok with, just not chastity. As they say, getting a good CEO one has to make some sacrifices. Though it seems his new brothers too had developed a laxer attitude towards the rules of St. Benedict.

The transition to a territorial state continued. Albrecht relied mainly on close associates like the bishop of Pomesania and civil bureaucrats to run the administration and refused to appoint replacements for the senior officers of the order who had retired or died.

The other main political project he continued was the attempt to get out from under the Polish vassalage. So he went on a public relations campaign in the empire arguing that east Prussia, or all of Prussia in his mind, was part of the Teutsche Lande, the German Lands. And he had some success. The Reichstag in Augsburg in 1512 declared the second peace of Thorn invalid. The Polish king then went to the pope, who ordered Albrecht to do as he was ordered and swear allegiance to his uncle, king Sigismund of Poland. In 1515 emperor Charles V changed his mind and withdrew his support. Albrecht found a new supporter though, grand duke Vasili III of Moscow who had been at war with Poland Lithuania for a while. What that was worth is unclear because when Albrecht kicked off hostilities in 1519, not a lot of Muscovy soldiers were seen in his army. This war lasted just 18 months and though Albrecht was in fact ill equipped for such an endeavour, the |Polish army that inevitably showed up failed to take any of the major strongholds, and in particular failed in its siege of Koenigsberg. Abrecht rustled up some Danish mercenaries from Livonia when the Livonian master refused to aid him who were expensive but effective, pushing the Poles back to the Vistula…and then the money ran out, the Danes went home and thanks to mediation by the emperor and the pope the two sides agreed a 4 year truce.

It is now 1522 and Albrecht von Brandenburg travels to the empire to find out why nobody came up to help him and whether they would be coming when the truce runs out in 1525. But everywhere he went, he hit a brick wall. Even his brother in Christ the German Master of the Teutonic Order outright refused to spend any more money on futile, expensive wars in Prussia. Most of the German princes took their lead from that and withheld support safe for their best wishes.

But he did meet someone who was offering a solution. Whilst Albrecht was busy fighting the Poles, a professor at the university of Wittenberg had printed a list of 95 theses and distributed them widely, including having them posted on the door of All Saints church. That professor you obviously know was Martin Luther.

Luther’s demands for reform had spread rapidly. In 1521 he had defended them before the Reichstag in Worms which had made them a topic of discussion all over Europe. Already in that same year one of Albrecht’s associates had proposed to consult with Luther about possible ways to reform the order. But that attempt failed as the elector of Saxony, who protected Luther on the Wartburg was unwilling to act as middleman.

In June 1523 Luther is back in Wittenberg receiving visitors, and Albrecht sends his associate in a secret mission to discuss possible changes in the structure of the order. In November Albrecht himself goes to Wittenberg and meets with Luther and Melanchthon. The reformers are blunt. Quote Monks are nothing but wizards and associates of the devil who have fooled the world with their bogus tricks and artifice” end quote. He has some more choice words about monasticism that I will refrain from mentioning here, but let’s just say, only a ex-monk can be so harsh on his former vocation. And if monks should leave the monasteries to become useful members of society, that is what chivalric brothers should do too. Their proposal: Make yourself the duke of a secular state and cast the order into the dustbin of history.

And, as is Luther’s habit, he follows the meeting up by writing a public proclamation suggesting that the  quote “lords of the Teutonic Order, give up false chastity and seek the true chastity of the marriage bed”. End quote

Albrecht meanwhile returns to Prussia where he finds many of his close associates thrilled by Luther’s proposals. So are the estates of Prussia, the cities and nobles who would much rather have a secular duke as overlord than a corporation of monkish warriors. Some of the bishops had picked up the protestant faith as well, whilst preachers have come to Prussia proclaiming the time for fundamental change had come.

Whilst all this is going on, the timeline of the truce has been running down. Albrecht explores one more time whether there is anyone willing to give him the funds to continue the fight, but has to conclude that this is no longer a viable option.

He meets up with king Sigismund who suggests that Albrecht dissolves the order and becomes a duke and vassal to the Polish king.

With options running out, Grand Master Albrecht von Brandenburg signs on the dotted line, puts his hand in the hands of the Polish Monarch and rises again as duke Albrecht of Prussia. That was on April 10, 1525.

It is only 2 months later that Albrecht then formally declares for the Lutheran faith.

Are these things connected? The historian Jurgen Sarnowski argues that these two events, the creation of ducal Prussia and the conversion to Protestantism had been independent events. The emperor Charles V, Pope Clement VII and King Sigismund supported the creation of the duchy and dissolution of the order in the belief that a duke Albrecht would remain a faithful son of the church. If so, it was quite naïve. Luther’s pamphlet and Albrecht’s visit to Wittenberg cannot have gone unnoticed and many observers in Germany had already voiced concerns that the grand master was at least tilting towards the Reformation.

This first conversion of a spiritual principality not only changed the status of the Grand Master. It also had a huge impact on the remaining Knight Brothers. Some were unwilling to accept the Reformation and left for the order’s convents in Germany that had stayed faithful to the Pope. But the majority were happy to leave their convents, marry and make babies. And they did not leave empty handed. Many of the possessions of the order were handed over to the knights brothers as private property. The former knight brothers were now nobles or as the east Prussians were often called, Junker. They followed in the footsteps of the mercenary Junkers who had come into land 50 years earlier and established large estates with dependent peasants tilling the land.

A lasting peace, the secularisation of the bishoprics and other monastic lands and the establishment of a tax gathering bureaucracy provided Albrecht finally with the funds to rebuild his battered state. And he did that fairly successfully. He invested in particular in education, founded schools in the major cities and the university of Koenigsberg, the future alma mater of Immanuel Kant. He reigned a solid 43 years as duke and passed away in 1568 from the plague. He was succeeded by his son, Albrecht Friedrich who was deposed due to severe mental illness. Then the duchy went through a number of regents from the Hohenzollern family until they almost all died out and Prussia became part of the states of the elector of Brandenburg one of whose descendants crowned himself and his wife as king in Prussia in Koenigsberg in 1701. King in Prussia because Prussia was still under Polish overlordship.

We will no doubt spend a lot of time talking about Prussia on this podcast, so we can leave this story here.

But as for the Teutonic order, this was not the end.

When Albrecht unveiled his shock announcement that he was to convert to the Lutheran faith, the other two masters, the Livonian master and the German master were aghast. Both were men in their seventies and deeply loyal to the papacy. Now they saw the man they had regarded as the leader of their order become a secular prince and immediately excommunicated.

The Livland Master, Wolter von Plettenberg saw himself as a bulwark against the expanding orthodox grand duchy of Moscow. But Livonia wasn’t Prussia. In Livonia there had aways been other powers present, the cities of Riga, Dorpat and Narva the bishops and the local aristocracy. The cities as members of the Hanse saw their brethren in Luebeck, Hamburg and Danzig pick up Lutheranism and followed suit. Plettenberg had to allow Protestant preachers into the land and even inside the order the new religion gained support. Under his successors the order kept shifting more and more away from Catholicism. When Muscovy under Ivan the terrible invaded the order sought help from abroad, mostly from protestant Denmark and Sweden. This help did not come for free and the state of the order crumbled quickly. The last Livonian Master, Gotthard Kettler swore allegiance to King Sigismund II of Poland in 1561, dissolved the order in Livonia and became duke of Courland. As in Prussia the lands of the order were distributed amongst the brothers who became part of the already sizeable German-speaking aristocracy that dominated these lands until the Bolshevik revolution.

The German branch of the order did hold out longer. They too had to balance the religious differences. In the interest of keeping the organisation going brothers were allowed to convert to Lutheranism if they so chose. In the 17th century they also admitted Calvinists which turned the order into a multi-confessional community. There was however a major problem. The Lutheran and Calvinist brothers wanted the property they had been administering, or more precisely, enjoying, to pass to their descendants. And in that they often found support from protestant territorial princes, who they served as officers or administrators. As the children of former warrior monks inherited these estates, the property of the order quickly eroded.

Only in Southern Germany was the order able to retain or even expand its territory. The German Master moved his seat to Mergentheim in 1527 where he established one of these statelets the Holy Roman empire had hundreds of. In 1590 the order elected Maximilian of Habsburg as its German and now also grand master. From 1641 onwards all grand masters were members of the Habsburg family as a sinecure for younger sons. And when I say younger, I mean younger. The youngest was just 13 years old when he entered the order and became instantly elected as a successor to Hermann von Salza.

As for the members of the order, an element of the martial tradition remained. Members were required to serve at least three years in the wars against the Ottoman empire as officers.

When Napoleon did away with all these little statelets to create more efficient entities to furnish him with soldiers, the last remaining properties of the Teutonic Knights, including Mergentheim were secularised.

But still the order continued to exist. The Habsburgs kept supporting it, making it a honorary chivalric order. Its activities, sponsored by the honourees reverted back to its roots, hospitals and schools. When the Habsburg monarchy fell in 1918, the order had its final crisis. They had lost their sponsor and as far as the public were concerned they were just a part of the now defunct monarchy. The last Habsburg Grand master resigned and in 1929 the pope gave the order a new rule. Under this new rule only priest and nuns were full members of the order and they should solely focus on religious tasks, in particular caring for the sick and the elderly and in education. The order has its headquarter in Vienna and has about 200 priests and 100 nuns today.

And that brings the story of the Teutonic Knights to its end.

I recognise that this part of history plays a huge role in the national narratives of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and even Russia and Romania. A role much more significant than it played in the German National story, even in the 19th century. That did not mean we did not develop the usual mix of fact and fiction that described the order as a bit tough round the edges but ultimately a bringer of civilisation to a savage land. And the Nazis picked up some of the iconography building Ordensburgen as school buildings for the Nazi elite, whilst suppressing the actual order. And for those Germans who trace their roots to Danzig or East Prussia these stories have certainly great importance.

Given these sensitivities I was even more focused on painting an accurate and balanced picture of events in these episodes than usual. I tried to stick close to primary sources and recent scholarship. Should I have made mistakes, and I almost certainly have made many, I apologise. It was not out of malice but lack of attention. And as we are on the topic a quick shout out to all of you who posted interesting and informative comments on the Facebook posts I put out on these topics. And in particular a big thanks to listener Mariusc G. for his kind message the other day.

So, what will be next? The next series will pick up where we left off nearly a year ago, the death of emperor Frederick II. We will go through the chaos of the so-called interregnum before we alight in the reign of the Luxemburg emperors starting with Henry VII. Forgive me if it will take a me a few weeks to get started. As usual I need to get my bearings before we dive in… I hope you will come along for that adventure.

Bibliography

William Urban: The Teutonic Knights – A Military History

Eric Christiansen: The Nordic Crusades, Penguin Books, 1997

Klaus Militzer: Die Geschichte des deutsche Ordens, 2.Aufl, 2012

Jurgen Sarnowsky: der Deutsche Orden, 2.Aufl, 2012

Adam Zamosyski: Poland – A History

A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331: The Kronike Von Pruzinlant by Nicolaus Von Jeroschin

The LEague of Prussian cities and Nobles Rejects the rule of the Teutonic Knights

The theocratic state of the Teutonic Knights had survived the devastating defeat at Tannenberg with most of its territory intact. But underneath the foundations of the edifice are crumbling. The economy is in tatters, the theological justification for their existence has disappeared and their power as a military force has failed to keep up with the changing times. The order needs a new business model for absence of a suitable term. How well or badly it did in this attempt is what we will be looking at in this episode.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 136 – 13 Years of War

The theocratic state of the Teutonic Knights had survived the devastating defeat at Tannenberg with most of its territory intact. But underneath the foundations of the edifice are crumbling. The economy is in tatters, the theological justification for their existence has disappeared and their power as a military force has failed to keep up with the changing times. The order needs a new business model for absence of a suitable term. How well or badly it did in this attempt is what we will be looking at in this episode.

But before we start the usual plea for support. As you know the History of the Germans and all its offshoots have remained resolutely advertising free despite some rather flattering offers. I do not know how much time you spent following news about the podcasting industry, but if you do, you would notice that something rather unpleasant is afoot. It is not only that some major listening platforms like Stitcher and Google podcasts have or will soon be shut down, but several production firms and with it some well known shows have closed shop. In part these firms were overly optimistic about the economics of the medium, but a big part is this overstuffing of the advertising channel. Shows sold more and more advertising space that compelled listeners to skip the clips so that advertisers reduced pay per views, which in turn forced podcasters to put even more slots into their shows. That puts off listeners and the economics deteriorate even more until the show has to shut down. That is a fate I would very much like to avoid. As someone posted on twitter, there are still 7,000 episodes to go before we reach 1991. And if we want to get there, the show needs patrons who make a contribution either on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support. And thanks a lot to Johann O., Lorie, Alessandro, Gary A. and Verity C. who have already signed up.

Last week we ended on the death of Paul von Rusdorf who had been grand master from 1422 to 1441. During his rule the situation had gone from bad to worse. The order had suffered two major defeats in 1422 and 1435 and was forced to recognize Lithuanian sovereignty over Samogitia and hand over a number of border fortresses. The wars had devastated the land and thereby further reduced the income of the order. In general the economic situation was difficult and became worse as time went by.

One great income stream had completely disappeared by 1413, and that were the Reisen, the adventure trips where members of Europe’s aristocracy could come up to Prussia and play at crusading.

And finally Poland Lithuania had expanded into what is today Ukraine. Then as now these lands were extraordinarily fertile, producing in particular grain that could now be exported more easily down the Vistula to Danzig and from there to the densely populated cities in England and Flanders. This competition pushed down prices for the grain produced on the estates of the order.

When Konrad von Erlichshausen took over as grand master in 1441, he was focused on stabilizing the situation. The first and paramount order of the day was to keep the peace and rebuild financial firepower. In the age of mercenary armies, money was what counted.

Konrad avoided war with Poland throughout his tenure. That was made easier by the fact that royal power in Poland was severely constrained by the Sejm, the council of nobleman and bishops. This forerunner of the Polish parliament had been created as far back as 1180 and had gained strength throughout the time of Polish fragmentation. Under the new king, Casimir IV it had control over taxation and hence was able to curtail the ability of the king to wage war. As it happened the Sejm was not too excited about the idea of war against the Teutonic order, mainly because a victory in Prussia would only strengthen the authority of the king at the expense of the nobles. Hence even though Casimir saw the weakness of the order and his realm had the resources to take Prussia any time, the political situation prevented him from doing anything about that, at least for now.

The other problem Konrad dealt with more successfully were the internal tensions inside the order that had been created by his predecessor’s nepotism.  Paul von Rusfeld had placed relatives and friends from back home into key positions in the order. Many of the Knights brothers had become disaffected and were at the edge of revolt. Konrad von Erlichhausen fired many of the old officers and considered the precarious balance between the various factions in his own appointments. He also tightened discipline in the various convents of the order which had become lax, as it did in all religious orders. The rule of St. Benedict, even in its altered version as it applied to the members of the Teutonic order was very hard to comply with. Waking up every 3 hours for prayer or exercise is not a sustainable way to live, and that is before the vows of obedience, poverty and chastity.

With the issues of Polish hostility and internal division if not resolved but largely mitigated, the other and most complex issue became the focus of the grand master’s politics, the Prussian League.

The Prussian league was founded in 1440. It brought the great trading cities such as Danzig, Elbing and Thorn together with the secular nobility in Prussia. Its purpose was to reign in the power of the order. To understand the reason why they formed the league, we have to take a closer look at its members.

One part of the Prussian League were the local aristocracy. There were broadly three groups. One were Polish knights who had lived in the Culmer Land or in Pomerelia since before the conquest by the Teutonic Knight and had become its vassals. Then there are the former leaders of the Prussian tribes who had been made noblemen as part of the various peace settlements during the conquest. And finally there are German-speaking immigrants who have been successful, either as merchants or as farmers and had amassed enough land and property to fund the knightly lifestyle.

But the financially most significant members were the cities, many of which were members of the Hanse. Like most Hanse cities they were ruled by a patrician class of successful merchants. These men usually spoke low German and had commercial and family ties across the Hanse network. I did a whole series about the Hanseatic League, so I will not repeat all of it here. But the way the Hanse operated was as a network of merchants who facilitated trade based on effectively just trust, trust that their commercial partners would honor their obligations and that they would provide them with reliable information about what was going on in the various markets they operated in. The political system was simply an extension of this commercial network. The most successful merchants were members of the city council and steered city policy in the commercial interest of its merchants. And at the level of the Hanse, the various cities again operated on a basis of mutual trust and a common interest in expanding their trading operations.

Both cities and aristocrats felt that the rule of the Teutonic Knights had become cruel and overbearing. In 1453, the Prussian League wrote up a list of 66 specific complaints against the order and sent it to the emperor Frederick III.

Many of these relate to arbitrary decision making by the order and his officers. They quote cases where members of the orders simply took away property, assumed ownership of land, charged new taxes, devalued coins, took away goods stranded following a disaster at sea, closed the city mills and so forth.

Justice they claim was no longer possible to obtain since the grand master refused to hold an annual public court day where important legal cases could be discussed and adjudicated. Instead decisions were taken behind closed doors and were arbitrary.

Beyond the breaking of the law, they also accused individual members of the order of brutality and even murder. One we already know about, the murder of the Danzig Burgermeisters in 1411, but they also mention violence against common people. A man called Rabensteiner had tortured and robbed a man who had dared criticizing his conduct. There is the Komtur of Thorn, Wilhelm vom Steine who is accused to have drowned some honorable citizens so that he could have his way with their wives

The order’s discipline had broken down, in particular the warrior monks had taken leave of the vow of chastity, it was was split and had lost its way as a spiritual organization.

These are quite common complaints you can find about most late medieval rulers. What gave it its specific flavor were the complaints of the cities against the order’s interference in their affairs. The cases they quote here and many times before and after are the replacement of the city councilors in Thorn and the execution of the Burgomeisters of Danzig, both events having happened way back in 1411. Though they happened long ago, they remained a source of concern. Interference by the city overlord, in particular the replacement of city councilors was a major problem for two reasons.

One was that the position as councilor had direct financial benefits for the incumbent. His standing made him a more sought after partner for other merchants within the Hanse network, effectively bringing business his way. As councillor he also had better information about what was going on in the various markets he was operating in, such as where a king was imposing new taxes, where the pirates are operating etc.  

The second point is that the Hanse cities had to balance their responsibility towards the other Hanse cities with their obligations to the city overlord. That was a difficult tightrope to walk even in the good times before 1410. After 1410 the pressure from the order forced the cities, in particular the city of Danzig to decide between the two. And given the Hanse provided opportunities to get rich whilst the Teutonic Order offered only blood sweat and tears, it wasn’t difficult to figure out where they were leaning to.

What became the bone of contention was the Pfundzoll, an excise duty on the weight carried by every ship entering or leaving the harbor. This specific duty was originally created by the Hanse as a way to fund military actions agreed by the Hansetag diet. When the Grand Master demanded the Pfundzoll for himself, the cities were pushed into a corner. They had to decide where the proceeds were to go, funding the Hanse wars and embargoes or to the wars of the Teutonic Order. What made it even more difficult was that the Pfundzoll was levied not just on Danzig merchants but on anyone going in or out of Danzig harbor, including fellow Hanse merchants from other cities.

All these are good reasons to be upset and whilst Konrad von Erlichshausen had tried to rein in on some of these excesses he could not remedy all complaints. Parts of this conflict was structural.

Before 1410 the Knights could allow the cities and the local nobility to live pretty much as they pleased. The order had enough income streams to cover its operations and thanks to the crusaders, had a huge supply of free military support. Now the revenues are down and, as knights on horseback were replaced by cannon and mercenaries, the cost of warfare had gone up dramatically.

Like most political entities in europe in the 15th century, the Knights were looking for a new way to run things that made their rule sustainable. We have come to the end of the middle ages and the beginning of the early modern period. The political structures are shifting from the old self-funded model of rule built on personal relationships, vows of allegiance and inheritable positions to tax-funded territorial states run by a paid bureaucracy that decides on the basis of written laws rather than personal affiliation.

The Knights Brothers were members of a chivalric order steeped in the logic and traditions of the crusades. It is hard to be more medieval than these guys. So I doubt they had sat down at any point and decided they wanted to transition to an absolutist state. But what they realized was that they were in precipitous decline and something fundamental needed to happen. They needed to be able to raise money from all their subjects, including merchants and noblemen. And for that to happen, all these special privileges the Prussian League insisted upon needed to go.

Konrad von Erlichshausen was not the man to push this to its ultimate conclusion. When he died in 1449 his conciliatory approach left behind a better managed and more financially sound Prussia, but it was still a long way from being sustainable. His successor was his brother Ludwig von Erlichshausen

Ludwig was ready to take the next step and face down the Prussian League. He was not alone in this ambition. Many of the senior officers of the order wanted a resolution. The Prussian League’s demands to remove taxes had become more and more persistent. At some point they even demanded that the lawyers the order retained as advisors would leave the room during negotiations, something even modern negotiators would regard as an outrage.

As the order insisted on taxes and tariffs to be paid and the League claimed freedoms and privileges, the situation gradually developed into a crisis. This crisis even concerned the pope in Rome who was trying to put together a grand coalition of central European powers to fight back the Ottoman Turks. Remember, we are just three years from the fall of Constantinople. He sent a papal legate to mediate but without success.

Erlichshausen tried to solve the issue by legal means. He put a petition to the emperor and the pope demanding they order the dissolution of the Prussian League. He argued that Prussia had been given to the order by the pope and the emperor and his lawyers produce copies of the golden bull of Rimini and the letter from pope Gregory IX in 1234.  Therefore the mere existence of the Prussian League was an affront against the divine order.

The league responded by issuing the list of complaints I have mentioned before. It was a question between formal legality and actual justice. And unsurprisingly, emperor Frederick III came down on the side of formal legality. In 1454 he declared the Prussian League illegal.

For some reason Grand Master Erlichshausen believed that the cities and nobles of Prussia would simply accept an imperial or papal ruling. That was obviously totally naïve. Neither the cities nor the nobles could tolerate unconstrained rule by the Teutonic Order, divinely ordained or not. 

The league had been under no illusion what the outcome of such arbitration would be and had prepared for war as soon as the summons had arrived. Once the imperial order to dissolve was issued, they reacted without hesitation, making a move, unprecedented in pre-modern times. They sent a letter of secession to the grand master, declaring they were no longer his subjects. Instead they informed him that they had taken an oath as vassals of the king of Poland, whose ancient rights to Pomerelia they acknowledged.

I am in no position to check this claim, but I understand that this is the first time in European history that a particular region or group decides they want to leave a political entity and move to another one.

The letter of secession took Erlichshausen by surprise. He was expecting some resistance, but not instantly and not on this scale or in this form. His preparations for war, if there had been any, weren’t far advanced. So he could only look on as the burghers of the cities stormed the castles of the Teutonic Knights in Danzig, Thorn and Elbing and took the buildings down brick by brick, until nothing was left, well except for the Dantzker of Thorn, the toilet tower of this once mighty fortress.

The letter of secession had been sent on March 6, 1454. Throughout the summer the rebels took most of Pomerelia except for the largest fortresses of the order, in particular Marienburg. Shaken out of his shock, the grand master recruited troops all across Bohemia and Germany as fast as he could using whatever money he could get his hands on, including pawning land.

The rebels focused their efforts in two places. One was Marienburg they besieged from late march onwards, the other was Konitz. Konitz lies south of Marienburg and was the point where the mercenaries were most likely to enter Prussia.

King Kasimir of Poland was clearly pleased about this sudden influx of loyal subjects and joined the effort with his own levies in September. He took his troops to that strategically important city of Konitz. The city was defended by another of the von Plauen family that had played such an important role in the immediate aftermath of Tannenberg. He commanded a smallish garrison of about 200 Knight brothers, waiting for the mercenary reinforcements.

Kasimir had brought 12,000 cavalry and 6,000 infantry which should be enough to take the town. The king knew that an army of mercenaries, slightly smaller than the Polish contingent was on its way to Konitz. But he was convinced his army could push them back should they show up.

Well, the Bohemian mercenaries did show up the next day. Casimir ordered his army to immediately attack the enemy who should be exhausted from marching for days. It nevertheless took a long time for the Poles to get into position, enough time for the Bohemian mercenaries to turn their carts into a wagenburg, a technique that they had perfected in the long Hussite wars in Bohemia. King Casimir’s attack finally got under way late in the afternoon and scored some initial successes, capturing the enemy commanders. But they could not break the circle of wagons. And then the garrison in Konitz, just 200 knights with their retinue made an unexpected sortie attacking the back of the Polish army. This and the fading light caused utter confusion in the Polish ranks, the mercenaries counterattacked and the Poles fled in panic. King Kasimir escaped only by a whisker.

The war that then follows is often described in nationalistic terms, a fight between the Poles to regain their ancient territory from the cruel and murderous Germans. That is however not quite what happened. Few of the members of the Prussian league were Poles, namely just the aristocrats from Culm and Pomerellia. As for the kingdom of Poland, after the disaster of Konitz their support for the effort became haphazard. The Sejm remained unwilling to fund large mercenary operations and the levies were often unwilling to heed the king’s call, arrived late, under strength and/or were ineffective. The burden of the war effort fell on the cities, mainly on Danzig, which was ruled by patrician merchants who spoke low German and were fully culturally integrated into the Hanse network.

Konitz may have largely kicked the Poles out of the conflict, but it did not decide it. This was after all a civil war within Prussia. Neither side could give in. For the cities submitting to the Teutonic Knights would mean that city rights and privileges would be rescinded, they would be subjected to taxation and could in the worst case lose full membership in the Hanseatic league. For the Teutonic Knights, ending the war at this point would mean losing the by far richest part of their territory, a truly bitter pill to swallow.

Militarily, the war was at a stalemate. After their initial effort at Konitz the Teutonic Knights were unable to raise a large enough mercenary army to break places like Thorn or Elbing, let alone the huge city of Danzig. Likewise the Prussian League was unable to drive the order out of its great castles, in particular their new headquarters at Koenigsberg.

The war continued without any major battles, decisive or otherwise. Either side would gather the funds to hire some mercenaries who would burn and pillage the opponents lands until such time the defenders had gathered sufficient forces to kick them out. And there is a thing about mercenaries. They are entrepreneurs and they know when to take risks and when to get out of the way. Hence as soon as the enemy forces are gathered, the initial attackers disappear back to where they have come from. The initial defenders now have a mercenary force they have already paid for, so they need to make use of them. Which means this force now invades the other side, rapes and pillages there, until they in turn have reassembled a force. And this game goes back and forth for a dissolute, miserable 13 years. Either side watched helplessly from the ramparts as their lands burned. The councils of the big cities had to levy taxes far higher than any grand master would have ever dared to ask for which brought the lower classes out in revolt. More people died.

Money was the perennial problem, and it was a bigger problem for the order than for the league. Assets outside Prussia like the Neumark were pawned or sold. In 1257 Erlichshausen was so short of cash he gave one of the mercenary troops the great castle of Marienburg as collateral for payment. When he failed to pay them in full, they got the right to sell it to the highest bidder. And that bidder was, guess what, the city of Danzig. Not that it was easy. Danzig had to borrow, beg and steal to raise the funds, but it turned into an investment that was worth every penny. Formally the bid came from king Kasimir, but in exchange for the money Danzig gave him to buy the Marienburg, the city was given a status not dissimilar of that of a free imperial city. They were given the right to choose their city council as they wished, the Pfundzoll was abolished, the king promised that all positions in the lands conquered from the order would be filled with local people, rather than Poles or Lithuanians and that all decisions. Moreover, with the impregnable castle on the Nogat the league now controlled the whole of the Vistula river and the trade that came up to the Baltic.

Grand Master Erlichshausen was again surprised by the resourcefulness of the Prussian League. He had not thought it possible that the money could be found and hence had not left the Marienburg. The mercenaries apprehended him upon receipt of the cash and the Poles imprisoned him at Konitz.

Even though Erlichhausen escaped from prison shortly afterwards, the fortunes of the Teutonic orders kept falling. The bishop of Ermland who had supported the order in this struggle died and his see was given to Silvio Aeneas Piccolomini, the great humanist and future pope Pius II. Piccolomini wanted a lever to force an end to the war so that Poles and the Order could be directed against the Ottoman Turks. Though this strategy ultimately failed, Piccolomini stuck to his neutral position which meant the order still lost the resources of Ermland. They tried to bribe him and were genuinely surprised when the Italian prelate refused, what had the world come to when you can no longer grease the palm of a churchman.

Still the war still kept going. Both side called in Mercenaries but more often than not, they could not pay them. So these armed men raided the land on their own account, spreading even more misery. In many way this foreshadowed the 30-years war.

In 1462 the Teutonic order made a last ditch effort to hire a force they believed large enough to defeat the now also much diminished forces of the League. When the two small armies got together, the league prove to be marginally more effective and won the battle. In 1463 the order’s navy was destroyed.

By 1464 Erlichshausen recognized that he had lost and was ready to negotiate.  The war was over. The order had to accept the status quo. They had to hand over not just Pomerellia but also western Prussia, including giving up claims to Marienburg, Elbling, Christburg and many other places they had founded. The bishop of Ermland became a Polish vassal.  And to top up the humiliation, Erlichhausen had to swear allegiance to the Polish crown. The conditions were so severe the negotiations lasted all the way until 1466 and involved the pope and the Hanseatic League as mediators.

After the war the old Prussian state was divided into the rich part, Royal Prussia with its main center in Danzig and the poor cousin, the order’s Prussia with its capital in the smallish city of Koenigsberg. Erlichshausen survived the peace of Thorn by one year. His successors were left with the smoldering ruins of what was once an incredibly powerful theocratic state. Only radical action could get them to a sustainable position. What this action was we will find out next week. I hope I will see you again.

And until then, please consider supporting the show, either by becoming a patron at patreaon.com/historyofthegermans or by making a one-time contribution at historyofthegermans.com/support.

Bibliography

Werner Paravicini Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels: Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels (perspectivia.net)

William Urban: The Teutonic Knights – A Military History

Eric Christiansen: The Nordic Crusades, Penguin Books, 1997

Klaus Militzer: Die Geschichte des deutsche Ordens, 2.Aufl, 2012

Jurgen Sarnowsky: der Deutsche Orden, 2.Aufl, 2012

A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331: The Kronike Von Pruzinlant by Nicolaus Von Jeroschin

The rule of the Teutonic Knights is fatally weakened

Last week we ended with the famous battle of Tannenberg or as the Poles would call it Grunwald. This battle is not just famous for its outcome but also for the various accounts of what happened. There is a Polish version there is a Lithuanian version and there’s obviously a German version, actually 2 German versions. Though the one German version that blames the defeat on betrayal by Polish vassals is now debunked. With that exception I find it rarely matters who did what during the battle but what the outcome was and what happened afterwards.

The Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen and all his major officers were dead as well as hundreds of Knights brothers and thousands of secular knights, crusaders, squires and mercenaries. What was also lying there prostrate on the battlefield was the notion of the invincibility off the Teutonic Order. As the Polish and Lithuanian troops pursued what remained of the order’s forces, the Prussian cities and castles opened their gates to the winners.

A complete victory? Well as it happened it would take another nearly 60 years before Poland would regain control of Pomerelia and its capital Gdansk. And even that wasn’t the end of the Teutonic Knights. Despite the devastating defeat, the loss of its purpose, and the fundamentally changed political structure inside their state, the Teutonic order soldiered on, how they managed is what we will explore in this episode.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 135 – After Tannenberg

Last week we ended with the famous battle of Tannenberg or as the Poles would call it Grunwald. This battle is not just famous for its outcome but also for the various accounts of what happened. There is a Polish version there is a Lithuanian version and there’s obviously a German version, actually 2 German versions. Though the one German version that blames the defeat on betrayal by Polish vassals is now debunked. With that exception I find it rarely matters who did what during the battle but what the outcome was and what happened afterwards.

The Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen and all his major officers were dead as well as hundreds of Knights brothers and thousands of secular knights, crusaders, squires and mercenaries. What was also lying there prostrate on the battlefield was the notion of the invincibility off the Teutonic Order. As the Polish and Lithuanian troops pursued what remained of the order’s forces, the Prussian cities and castles opened their gates to the winners.

A complete victory? Well as it happened it would take another nearly 60 years before Poland would regain control of Pomerelia and its capital Gdansk. And even that wasn’t the end of the Teutonic Knights. Despite the devastating defeat, the loss of its purpose, and the fundamentally changed political structure inside their state, the Teutonic order soldiered on, how they managed is what we will explore in this episode.

But before we get into this as you all know by now I will have to do my little spiel about my Patreon account at patreon.com/historyofthegermans and the other option to support the  podcast, making a one time contribution at historyofthegermans.com/support. So not much point in going on about the fact that the history of the Germans and all its offshoots are advertising free but what we all should do is thank our generous patrons James A., Jonas B, Caleb R., Technical Tomb King and Matt H. Aka Biff who have kindly signed up already.

And there is some housekeeping to do. As some of you pointed out, the Polish name of the battle is Grunwald, not Grunberg, I also got Lesser and Greater Poland mixed up and finally some of you suggested I use the name Jogaila rather than Jagiello for the first ruler of the Polish Lithuanian commonwealth. First up, thanks a lot for all these comments. It is great to realise you all care a lot about these things and enough about the podcast to comment. And apologies for these errors. They are now corrected in the audio file as well as I the transcript. I did however not change from Jagiello to Jogaila, mainly because Jagiello and the Jagiellonian dynasty is better known in western Europe than the name Jogaila. And as there are already too many names in this podcast, I try to keep it neat where I can. That being said, Jogaila sounds a lot nicer…

And with that we’re going back to the show.

The victory of Jogaila and Vytautas was so clear and comprehensive they did not feel the need to hurry after what was left of the Teutonic Knights’ army. They rested for three days before setting off for Marienburg, the seat of the Grand Master and the administrative heart of Prussia.

 The journey appeared more like a royal progress then a conquering army. Cities all over Prussia sent delegations offering surrender in exchange for confirmation of their privileges. The four bishops albeit members of the order, accepted vassalage to the Polish crown. Where there were still garrisons of Teutonic Knights they either surrendered or fled.

The state of the Teutonic Order was not just defeated but it was collapsing in on itself. Its leadership had perished and the individual commanders weren’t used to taking the initiative. The defeat was a sign from god that he had lost interest in this chivalric order. Many thought there was no point in going on…

But there was one man who disagreed, Heinrich von Plauen. Nothing in von Plauen’s career to date indicated that he was destined to  step up at the most crucial point in the order’s history. A nobleman from the Vogtland he had come to Prussia 40 years earlier as a crusader. But found himself mightily impressed by the warrior-monk’s lifestyle and took the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Given his social rank and solid performance on the battlefield he was given the command of the large garrison of Schwetz between Kulm and Marienburg. Schwetz was an important post that covered Pomerelia against Polish and Brandenburg raids. But he was not seen as significant enough to join the main army at Tannenberg.

When von Plauen hears about the disaster at Tannenberg, he, unlike his remaining peers, takes action. It was obvious that the Poles would head for Marienburg next. And if they were to take the mighty castle the order would be finished. Therefore the defence of Marienburg was paramount. Von Plauen took his entire garrison, 3,000 men in total, to Marienburg and he got there before the enemy.

At this point von Plauen did not know whether any more senior officers had survived the defeat. Most Teutonic Knight’s commanders were so accustomed to the strict discipline and obedience, that they would now have waited for further instructions or a grand chapter of the order to set a new course. But von Plauen realised there was no time for that.

He issues orders to nearby garrisons to abandon their castles and join him in Marienburg. He writes to the Livonian master, a man far more senior to him quote “send troops as quickly as possible”. And as so often in moments of crisis rank does not matter as much as initiative, and soldiers trickle into Marienburg. They stock the castle with food, drink, canons and ammunition for a siege of 8 to 10 weeks. And, to deprive the besiegers of shelter and food, they burn down the city of Marienburg.

Then he writes to quote “all princes, barons, knights and men at arms and all other loyal Christians , whomever this letter reaches. We brother Heinrich von Plauen, castellan of Schwetz, acting in the place of the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order in Prussia notify you that the king of Poland and duke Vytautas with a great force and Saracen infidels have besieged Marienburg. In this siege truly all the Order’s forces and power are being engaged. Therefore we ask you illustrious and noble lords, to allow your subjects who wish to assist and defend us  for the love of Christ and all of Christendom either for salvation or for money , to come to our aid as quickly as possible so that we can drive them away”. End quote. That stirs the order in Germany into action and new forces are gathering in the Neumark.

Meanwhile the Polish-Lithuanian army continues its leisurely progress to Marienburg. Having seen every single castle along the way surrendering without much, if any resistance, Jogaila and Vytautas have no reason to expect anything different from the great brick fortress on the Nogat river. Hence they did not bring the canon and siege equipment they had initially gathered for the campaign. 

When they arrived, and realised that they were facing stiff resistance, they had only limited options. A frontal assault across the wide moat and up the mighty walls of the largest fortress in the region would have been exceedingly costly to men and material. And we should not forget that the Polish Lithuanian army too had suffered severe losses at Tannenberg. That left a prolonged siege as the only option.

The Polish Lithuanian army was large enough to completely surround the castle, but its weakness was supplies. They did raid the countryside around Marienburg, but the garrisons of the surrounding castles had raided their stores before leaving to support von Plauen. The town of Marienburg was no more and we are heading into the cold autumn. Dysentery breaks out in the besiegers camp which convinces the Lithuanians under Vytautas that this is a hopeless enterprise and so they head home. Jogaila keeps going despite the ever more precarious situation and he even rejects initial offers of a truce.

What forces his hand in the end is the approach of relief forces from Livonia and from the empire. The Livonian master and the German princes have heeded the call of Heinrich von Plauen and have come to rescue the Teutonic Order.

Once again a medieval fortress with a small, but determined garrison has proven impossible to take, unless the besieger can sustain a prolonged and hugely expensive siege.

After 8 weeks of siege Jogaila gives the order to strike camp and his army returns to Poland. They place large garrisons in some of the castles they had taken after Tannenberg and even erected a new fortification at Stuhm.

Once Jogaila is gone von Plauen begins the arduous work of recapturing all the cities and castles that had been lost. Again, nobody is too keen to fight and within a month all of Prussia is back in the hands of the Teutonic Knights.

Von Plauen who had meanwhile formally been elected as the new Grand Master,  uses the recently arrived troops to stage a revenge campaign into Poland and Lithuania which, apart from some serious devastation of the land, does not achieve much.

The following year the two sides sign a peace agreement, the first peace of Thorn. The conditions were extremely benign for the Teutonic Knights. They maintain pretty much the status quo from before the war, in particular they retain Pomerelia and Danzig. The order also agrees to pay 100,000 Bohemian Groschen in compensation to the Poles and Lithuanians.

That is an outcome not many would have bet on in the aftermath of the battle of Tannenberg. On the face of it, the Teutonic Order is back to where it was before. The Poles and Lithuianians despite their huge effort have not been able to achieve any of their main objectives, in particular they did not regain Pomerelia.

But still, there were material consequences of the battle of Tannenberg. For one, the Teutonic Knights were no longer the invincible military force they had appeared to be for so long. Sure, there had been setbacks and lost battles before. But like the roman legions, every time such a defeat occurred, the knights had dusted themselves off, rebuilt their forces and regained their prestige.

This time, that is not going to happen. And the reason is, as ever so often in these premodern states, money.

Up until 1411 the Teutonic state wasn’t as much a state but an estate. Large parts of the land was owned directly by the order or was paying rent or dues to the order. The orders’ treasurers were extremely adept in generating large export incomes from shipping their excess agricultural production to Flanders, England, Norway or wherever the highest prices could be achieved.

And on top of that there were the huge incomes from the crusading tourists who made a material contribution to the economy of the land.

These incomes had been enough to fund all the military and secular needs of the Teutonic Order, including the construction and maintenance of its enormous castles. And these riches allowed the order to maintain a special relationship with its main trading cities, in particular Danzig, Elbing and Thorn. The cities were relieved from paying significant taxes, but in exchange did not have as much autonomy as other Hanseatic cities enjoyed.

The other constituency that was kept sweet by not taxing them was the gentry. As I said before, the Teutonic Knights tried to avoid the emergence of a class of aristocratic knights with their own castles. But as time went by, they could not completely prevent the emergence of secular knights. Successful free farmers could over generations build up major landholdings that allowed them to build manors and equip their sons with knightly gear. The same goes for prosperous merchants eying up the social status of noblemen. Then there was the original gentry in the lands the order had taken over from Christian rulers, i.e., in Pomerelia, the Kulmerland, Livonia and the Neumark.

In 1411 the land of Prussia is devastated and so are the estates of the order. The treasure chest is empty as Heinrich von Plauen had to pay all these mercenaries he had asked to come in from Germany and Bohemia to relieve Marienburg. And on top of that there were the 100,000 groschen they had promised Jogaila. Ah, and let us not forget, now that the Lithuanians are no longer pagans and both Jogaila and Vytautas have got in the habit of kneeling before every cross along their routes, the crusading gap years, the Rhysen have comprehensively stopped.

Heinrich von Plauen needs money, and lots of it. So, for the first time, the order institutes general taxes to be paid by everyone. This finds strong resistance in particular in the big cities. When Thorn refuses, the grand master replaces several city councillors. Danzig is even more reluctant. The city relents only after the commander of Danzig castle apprehends two of the Burgermeisters and ultimately kills them.

Having learned from the challenging first attempt to raise taxes, Heinrich von Plauen uses a more cooperative tack the next time, which was already in 1413. He gives the Landrat, the Prussian parliament that had been in existence for a long time already some more teeth. The cities and some of the nobility are invited to discuss the state of affairs and to vote on the next round of taxes. This system has a similar outcome as in 1411, taxes are raised, but with a lot less strife and spilling of blood. And once he has established the Landraete as an institution, the cat is out of the bag. From now on the other forces in Prussia, the cities and the nobility will demand more and more rights. The days when Prussia wasn’t a state that had an army, but an army that had a state were numbered. I know that this quote relates to Prussia under Frederick the great, but I find it fits even better to the theocratic state the Knights brothers had established in Prussia.

The reason that Heinrich von Plauen needed money again in 1413 was that he wanted to go after Poland again. Even though the peace of Thorn had restored the territorial integrity of Teutonic Prussia, the defeat at Tannenberg was still not reversed. If they wanted to really get back to the world pre 1410, they needed a comprehensive victory over Poland -Lithuania.

As it happened, neither the German princes nor his own brothers agreed with this strategy. In October 1413 Heinrich von Plauen was deposed as Grand Master and put in jail in Danzig castle, together with his brother who had killed the burgermeisters. He would remain there for 16 years. He was rehabilitated in 1429 and made bailiff of a small estate where he lived out his remaining years.

The man the brothers chose to pursue a more conciliatory policy vis-a-vs Poland was marshall Michael Kuchmeister. The new grand Master did however not fulfil the expectations his allies had placed in him. Despite his efforts, he could not prevent military confrontations with Poland Lithuania. These were relatively low key events where the neighbours came into Prussia in 1414, 1416 and 1419, mainly just devastating the open countryside whilst being unable to take any of the major cities or larger castles.

These conflicts ended not with peace agreements but with just temporary truces. The emperor Sigismund who was interested in a closer relationship with Poland invited both parties to come to the council of Constance for peace negotiation. The Council of Constance that lasted 1414 to 1418, was one of the great gatherings of the Catholic Church brought together to find ways to end the papal schism that had split the church between Rome and Avignon since 1387.

The emperor hoped that a negotiated solution could be found, but had not counted on a leading Polish scholastic, Paulus Vladimir. Vladimir was a professor at the recently founded university of Krakow and by all accounts the intellectual superior of the Teutonic Knights’ delegation. He hit the brothers on their Achilles heel, their purpose as a chivalric order. Some were well known arguments such as the question what their purpose in Prussia was now that Lithuania had been converted? Would it not be much more in line with their statutes to move to the Balkans and help fending off the oncoming wave of the Ottomans, protecting Constantinople and Belgrade? But he also stated that true conversion required free will. A forced conversion was therefore invalid. Moreover, even pagans he asserted had some natural rights that the brutal acts of the order had violated.

 The Teutonic Knights responded with the usual accusations, that the Lithuanians weren’t true Christians and that hence they were still needed. But that sounded increasingly hollow. The only reason the order could avoid condemnation by the council, after all the highest conceivable church authority, was that the emperor Sigismund and the German princes weren’t yet prepared to drop the order.

Fighting continued at a low level throughout this period which left the country devastated and the order’s coffers depleted. The 15th century sees the end of the knight as the most effective military unit. Cannon are now  commonplace as are professional mercenaries. The system of the condottiere, the armies for hire is gaining traction. And with that the military function of the Teutonic Knights themselves is diminishing rapidly. To fight a war it is no longer sufficient to call up the different Komtureis and gather at a convenient location. Now mercenaries need to be hired, and since the best are coming from the German lands or Bohemia, the grand master will have to pay not just for the time they are actually fighting but also for the journey. And as everyone knows who ever had a plumber come to the house, the call-out charge is almost as much as the cost of the actual work.

The economics of war are reversed. When previously German and Bohemian knights came up to reinforce the order, they did that on their own cost and even paid for all their equipment, accommodation and supplies, now all of that had to be paid for:the Grand Masters account.

That meant demands for money kept going up and up, whilst income from the land kept going down.

Kuchmeister needed to call the Landraete again and again and beg for money, which they granted him, but only in exchange for more independence and rights to participate in the major decisions.

In 1422 Kuchmeister had enough and retired. Hs successor is Paul von Rusdorf. He inherits all the existing conflicts but then adds a few more. Like other grand masters before him he places members of his family and people he knows from back home into crucial positions. This used to be tolerated when the grand Masters presided over a thriving community and state. But that is no longer the case. Those outside the inner circle are increasingly frustrated. Disciplinary issues appear and general discontent with the leadership is rife. Rusdorf therefore limited his circle of advisors to an ever closer group, the inner council, which – guess what – irritated the others even more. These internal conflicts together with the increasingly apparent weakness of the order became serious problem in recruitment. The order was dependent on a regular flow of young men willing to join and accept a pretty harsh lifestyle of poverty, chastity and obedience.  To convince someone to make that move required the order to remain an attractive place to be, and by 1440 it wasn’t that any more.

Politically Rusdorf tried to bring the war with Poland to an end and signed the peace of Melnoose in 1422 in which the order handed back several fortresses on the Lithuanian border and gave up the claims to Samigatia whilst it handed Kujava and Nessau to the Poles.

But that did not last long. Rusdorf got himself sucked into the politics of emperor Sigismund and restarted the war with Lithuania which prompted the Poles to ally with the Hussites in Bohemia who devastated Pomerelia all the way up to Danzig. After that debacle Rusdorf had to sign the peace of Brest which forced the order to return the gains in Lithuania bringing everything back to the level of 1422 only with Prussia even poorer and even more devastated.

For the cities and the civilian population in the countryside, i.e., the major landowners, this was the moment where they could no longer see any point in the Teutonic Knights. Before 1410 the order had guaranteed safety and security as well as low taxation and all it wanted in return was obedience. But now it was no longer safe or secure, taxes were sky high and the grand master still insisted on obedience.

In 1440, the large cities and the gentry of the Kulmer Land formed the Prussian League which was explicitly designed to protect its members against the tyranny of the order. The Prussian League insisted on a constitutional reform that would give the Landraete additional powers, in particular on taxation and foreign policy.

As Rusdorf contemplated giving in on these demands, he found himself in another conflict. The two other main branches of the order, the Livonians and the Germans were increasingly frustrated with their Prussian brethren. The constant demands for money and materials were wearing and clearly did not result in any discernible success. So they chose the subject of the grating of rights to the Landraete as a decision that was incompatible with the statutes of the order.

Rusdorf could not balance these two pressures in any other way than by granting the Livonian Master and the German Master even more autonomy, to the point that these branches could choose their own officers and pursue their own policies almost completely independent from the Grand Master.

Again that happened in 1441, the same year the internal conflict between Rusdorf’s friends and family and the rest of the order was about to turn into outright hostilities.

To avoid a civil war Paul von Rusdorf too resigned, probably already very ill, broken by external and internal conflicts that only grew worse during his 13 years at the helm.

His successor was Konrad von Erlichshausen who will make one more attempt to right the ship. Whether he will be successful is something we will discuss next week. I hope you will join us again.

And if you do, remember that you can support the podcast either by becoming a patron on Patreon.com/historyofthegermans or by making a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support

Bibliography

Werner Paravicini Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels: Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels (perspectivia.net)

William Urban: The Teutonic Knights – A Military History

Eric Christiansen: The Nordic Crusades, Penguin Books, 1997

Klaus Militzer: Die Geschichte des deutsche Ordens, 2.Aufl, 2012

Jurgen Sarnowsky: der Deutsche Orden, 2.Aufl, 2012

A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331: The Kronike Von Pruzinlant by Nicolaus Von Jeroschin

A Battle of many Names

This week we look at the reasons the golden age of the Teutonic knights came to an abrupt end at the beginning of the 15th century. It is a sequence of events that involve some remarkable Polish and Lithuanian princes, the Templars, and  of course – The brothers of the house of St. Mary of the Germans in Jerusalem. Ah, and a very famous battle.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 134 – Tannenberg

This week we look at the reasons the golden age of the Teutonic knights came to an abrupt end at the beginning of the 15th century. It is a sequence of events that involve some remarkable Polish and Lithuanian princes, the Templars, and  of course – The brothers of the house of St. Mary of the Germans in Jerusalem. Ah, and a very famous battle.

But before we start, in the unlikely event you are unaware of it, the History of the Germans Podcast and all its offshoots are advertising free thanks to the generosity of our patrons and one-time contributors. I know these inserts are irritating to some of you, but would you prefer me espousing the advantages of various crypto coins, a mildly dodgy online mental health service or a meal plan? I wouldn’t and so be so kind to thank George O., CM Bo, Fabian G. and Katie who are valiantly protecting us from these impositions by becoming a patron at patreon.com/historyofthegermans.

Back to the show.

Last week we heard about the great chivalric adventure holidays the Teutonic knights staged for their wealthy aristocratic guests. These were nominally crusades against the pagan Lithuanians, but their military benefit paled into insignificance compared to the economic impact these free spending tourists had on the order’s state.

These Lithuanian crusades or Preussenreisen did serve however another important purpose, a purpose that was even more crucial for the survival of the order than the economic or military benefit. And that has to do with something that happened, not in Northern europe, not in the empire, but way over on the other side, in Paris in 1307. That event was the suppression of the Knights Templars.

For those very few of you who may not have heard about that, the story goes roughly as follows. King Philipp IV of France was short of money due to the incessant wars with the English, or more precisely with his main vassal who also happened to be the king of England.  Not only was he short of money, he was also heavily in debt to Knights Templars.

What he lacked in money he made up for in ruthlessness. Some of you may remember Episode 92 – The Papal Epilogue. That was the story of the slap of Agnani when soldiers in the pay of Philipp IV allegedly slapped Pope Boniface VIII in the face, and with that simple act brought down the whole edifice of the imperial papacy. Under French pressure the popes moved to Avignon and came under de facto French control.

Philip IV used the fact that he had a pet pope in Clement V to get him to issue an order to all monarchs in europe to apprehend the Templars. The biggest hammer fell in Paris where the grand master of the order had his headquarter. He and his main officers were arrested and put on trial. They were accused of satanic rituals and various forms of blasphemy including kissing a black cat’s anus. Once duly condemned they were burned at the stake and most importantly all their assets were confiscated by the crown.

As you probably know, pretty much any wacko conspiracy theory sooner or later traces their story back to the Knights Templar, their link to the Holy grail, the Cathars, rose crucians and ultimately the CIA, albino monks and god knows what other nonsense.

No worries, I will not talk about that. Instead we will look at the truly interesting question at the heart of this story. And that is why Philip IV got away with destroying an organization that only 50 years earlier had literally been drowning in donations from extremely powerful men all across europe and had been seen as a crucial component in Christendom’s most important political project, the reconquest of Jerusalem.

Part of it was that the Templars had become filthy rich. At their peak they owned 870 estates and castles across europe. Moreover they had become bankers who were best placed to transfer money across their vast network of commanderies. They also lent money to royalty and famously accepted the crown of France as collateral for one such loan. As so often with bankers their willingness to lend to unreliable borrowers is regarded as avarice, rendering them evil in the eyes of many people.

But that alone is unlikely to be enough. The Knights Hospitallers too were extremely rich, as were the Teutonic Knights. And the Hospitallers in particular lent money too, admittedly on a more modest scale.

So here is the question, why did the persecution of the Templars not lead to a persecution of the other two orders?

The answer lies in their original purpose. The chivalric orders were founded mainly to protect the Holy Land. The crusader state in Palestine had fallen in 1291. But that did not spell the end of all the Latin states in the region. Cyprus was still standing and that is where the Hospitallers went. They then conquered the island of Rhodes which they turned into a massive fortress. They even maintained a foothold on the mainland at Halicarnassus, modern day Bodrum in Turkey. That way they re-created themselves as the bulwark of Christendom against the advances of Islam. That new purpose was enough to protect them from persecution.

Now what about our friends, the Teutonic Knights? They too had left the Holy Land, in fact even earlier than the Templars. But they could at least argue that they were engaged in crusading in the North, bringing pagans into the faith.

But that argument was beginning to sound a bit hollow. Once Prussia and Livonia had been conquered and the pagan rebellion were suppressed, there weren’t that many pagans left, except for the Lithuanians.

And there was another problem. One may sometimes get the impression that the medieval theology was monolithic with the pope at the top determining what was right and what was wrong. But that was not at all the case. Even an overbearing figure like Bernhard of Clairvaux had to face stringent opposition from the scholastics at the university of Paris, from Abaelard, Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas. It was one of them, Roger Bacon, a Franciscan friar and all round fascinating individual who took umbrage of Bernhard’s notion that conversion by fire and sword was doing God’s work. And he singled out the Teutonic Knights saying that quote “pagans like the Prussians [..] would become Christians very gladly if the Church would permit them to retain their liberty and enjoy their possessions in peace. But the Christian princes who labor for their conversion, especially the brothers of the Teutonic Order desire to reduce them to slavery” end quote. In 1274 at the Council of Lyon Humbert of Romans, the former general of the Dominican order made the point that quote “the idolators who still live in the northern parts, the Prussians, and those like them may be converted in the same way as their neighbors, the Poles, Danes, Saxons and Bohemians. [meaning by missionary efforts]. In any case [he goes on] they are not in the habit of attacking us, nor can they do much when they attack, ..and so it is quite enough for Christians to defend themselves manfully when they invade.” end quote.

If these arguments were taking hold amongst the members of the Curia, the entire existence of the Teutonic Knights could be in danger.   

Around the time of the suppression of the Templars, these humane voices got support from Livonia itself. Other than in Prussia, in Livonia the bishops, in particular the archbishop of Riga were  powerful, so were the burghers of the great cities, Riga, Dorpat and Reval. These different parties were almost constantly in conflict which occasionally turned into actual fighting. In this struggle the church authorities in Livonia sought support from the pope, after all the direct superior of the order. They accused the Teutonic Knights of all sorts of crimes, waging war against Christians, even the bishop himself, which was true, unwillingness to fight the pagans, burning their dead, killing the wounded and witchcraft, which wasn’t true. But the most damning accusation was that they were hindering the conversion of the pagans by their “savagery, cruelty and tyranny” as the archbishop of Riga wrote.

The Grand Master was summoned to come to the Curia to defend himself and his order. The situation was certainly precarious. But Pope Benedict XI decided that whatever crime the Teutonic Knights may have committed, it was more important to reconcile the parties in order to defend Livonia. So, he replaced the archbishop of Riga and sent a harsh indictment to the order, demanding they sort themselves out.

In response the grand masters ordered a sharp tightening of discipline, moved to Marienburg to be far away from any monarch keen on seizing and burning them, and began constructing a new narrative for the order’s purpose.

Conversion of the pagans was still a major objective. But alongside it stood a new threat to Christendom. These pagans beyond the frontier weren’t peaceful villagers who may be misguided but otherwise harmless. No, they were a terrifying foe who intended to break into the Latin world forcing their faux religion on not just the recently converted Prussians, Estonians, Letts ,Livs and Courlanders, but were intending push all the way west into Poland, the Empire and ultimately Rome itself. These hordes were the Lithuanians, but also the successor states of the Kyivan Rus with their orthodox heresy and behind them their overlords, the Mongol Khans. It was they, the Teutonic Knights who formed the bulwark of the west against this existential threat.

And to make this story stick they needed to make these adversaries sound terrifying. As it happened, that was not that difficult. The Lithuanians had always been a worthy opponent and there was a good reason why the precious crusading tourists never spent too much time in Lithuania itself.

After Mindaugas had united the various Lithuanian tribes, the entity remained coherent, even though Mindaugas himself was murdered in a coup. The incessant warfare with the Teutonic knights  helped the Lithuanians to become an advanced military. They did however not copy the model of the armored knight. Their cavalry tended to be lightly armed which made them more maneuverable in the challenging terrain they inhabited. They took some inspiration from the Mongol horse archers, though they preferred spears to bows and arrows. Their infantry adopted the crossbow from the Latins but they were mostly free men and held in much higher esteem than infantry in the west which was sometimes times ridden down by their own side.  This military prowess left them in good stead to acquire some of the successor states of the former empire of the Kyivan Rus. In 1321 the Grand Prince Gedimas captured Kyiv itself and as his successors kept pushing on, in 1430 the grand principality of Lithuania extended all the way from the Baltic to the Black Sea.

As this went on, defeating and forcibly converting the Lithuanians became an ever more improbable prospect for the Teutonic Knights. And in a perverse way, that was to their benefit. Had they been successful in converting the Lithuanians, they would have lost their raison d’etre. There would not have been any more pagans to convert or to defend Christendom against. They could have directed their forces against the Principalities of Novgorod and Moscow, though these were less impressive at the time, Christian, if orthodox, and given to the Swedes as their special crusading task.

That event, the conversion of the Lithuanians to Christianity did happen, though not thanks to the efforts of the Teutonic Knights. For that story we have to go back again to the beginning of the 14th century and take a look at the other neighbor of Prussia, Poland.

Before I do that I have to ask my Lithuanian and Polish listeners for forgiveness. I am trying to get all these events right, but as I do not speak either Lithuanian nor Polish, I am reduced to German and English language sources. That means I may not get many of the subtleties and I will end up blanking out quite important events that do not directly affect the story of the Teutonic knights. There are some excellent podcasts that dive a lot deeper into these stories and are done by people much more knowledgeable than myself. I will put links to those in the show notes.

With that caveat, lets take a look at Poland in the 13th and 14th century.

Poland has been founded by the Piast dynasty,  Miesco and Boleslaw the Brave in the 10th century, and in particular under the latter  became a hugely powerful entity that amongst other things defeated the emperor Henry II as we talked about in episode 18. But after that Poland, like so many other medieval kingdoms, went through waves of fragmentation and unification as possessions were split amongst sons who then vied for supremacy. One of the most momentous fragmentations happened after the death of King Bolelsaw Wrymouth in 1138. Wrymouth had five sons, each of whom were given a duchy. These sons in turn split their lands upon their death, creating even more and smaller entities. In principle the dukes of Maropolska (Lesser Poland), based in Krakow were supposed to have some sort of overlordship over the others, though that was rarely of any practical relevance. The fragmentation of Poland left them extremely vulnerable to external threats. Some came from the west, namely from the Margraves of Brandenburg who expanded eastwards and northwards into Pomerania and even took Gdansk in 1271. Another were the Bohemians who targeted Silesia and on occasion took Krakow. Then there were the pagan neighbors, the Prussians and Lithuanians who became increasingly hostile to the point that the duke of Mazovia called in the Teutonic Knights in 1226, a story you are now quite familiar with.

The real shock to the system came when the Mongols invaded in 1241. Though several of the dukes tried to mount some resistance, they were comprehensively defeated at the battle of Legnica/Liegnitz in April 1241. Though the Mongol invasion did not continue into western europe, Poland was not so lucky. They were attacked again in 1259 and 1287, sacking Lublin, Sandomierz, Bytom and even Krakow.

By the end of the 13th century the various Piast dukes realized that their existing structure was not sustainable. None of them was able to fend off any of these invaders on their own. Calling in the Teutonic Knights had resulted in replacing the hostile but ultimately not life threatening Prussians with the well ordered powerful militarized state of the Teutonic Knights. The defeats of the Pomerelian dukes who had supported the Prussian uprisings brought home to them the relative superiority of the Knight brothers.

What then followed was a protracted process of reunification. It was in part driven by simply military success as ambitious dukes managed to eject the rulers of rival duchies. Then there was a lot of luck involved as several of the dynasties died out and the last of their line took the enlightened decision to pass their lands to the most powerful of the dukes at the time. And one has to assume that to a degree the ruling families decided that they would rather submit to one of their own family than to some foreigner. I will not go through all of them, but it is certainly worth to mention some.

Przemysl II had already achieved some consolidation by bringing together Wielkopolska (Greater Poland around Gniezno) and Pomerelia. He was the first ruler in a while who was crowned king of Poland in 1295. His successor Wladislaw the Short from the line of the dukes of Mazovia was off to a difficult start. The king of Bohemia invaded, took Krakow and threw Wladislaw out. When King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia was crowned King of Poland in Gniezno in 1300, the cause of the Piast dukes seemed to be at its lowest point.

In 1306 Wladislaw the short was back in Krakow. He had become a key beneficiary of a grand papal strategy to bring the kingdoms of central europe, Hungary, Bohemia and Poland under new management. In Hungary the dynasty of the Premislids was replaced by the Anjou, the French dynasty that had already taken the kingdom of Sicily from the Hohenstaufen. The plan was to also replace the king Wenceslaus III in Bohemia and in Poland. The Bohemian project did not work, but with Hungarian help Wladislaus the short was able to throw the Bohemians out of Poland. In 1320 he was solemnly crowned king of Poland in Krakow.

His son, Kazimierz the Great (1333 to 1370) took over. Under his long and successful rule, Poland staged a tremendous recovery. He consolidated all these now almost unnumerable Piast duchies with the exception of Silesia, Pomerania and Pomerelia.

Kazimierz was an able administrator and forward thinking politician. To rebuild his depopulated lands he encouraged the immigration of foreigners, in particular of jews who had faced persecution in the wake of the Black Death. He codified the corpus of the existing laws and granted city rights under Magdeburg law. He launched a building program which, along with the cathedrals of Gniesno and Krakow and churches all across the land gave rise to 65 new fortified towns, the fortification of 27 existing ones and 53 new royal castles . He also rerouted the Vistula at Krakow and constructed a canal linking the salt mines at Wieliczka with the capital. He reformed a fiscal system with a central chancellery allowing the kingdom to raise taxes. He introduced new coinage accepted across the kingdom, dramatically facilitating trade. That trade was also supported by the banking skills of the Jewish immigrants who were given a significant degree of fiscal and legal autonomy which was the beginning of the Jewish culture that thrived for so long in the country.

The country was booming. It also benefitted from a dramatic improvement in agricultural production. In the series about the Hanseatic League we did talk about the Hinterland of Danzig as a source of grain that fed western europe all the way to Spain and even at times Italy. Importing vast amounts of grain became necessary for the major cities across western europe because the changing climate during the Little ice Age that began around 1300 had reduced crops to the point that the land surrounding the cities could no longer feed the populations. Some argue that Poland, Prussia and Lithuania had benefitted from a climate quirk that resulted in a warming of this region whilst the rest of Europe became cooler. I find the evidence for that inconclusive. What is however quite likely is that the import of agricultural techniques from the west, the use of horse-driven ploughs, the three field system etc. led to a material growth in productivity alongside the conversion of forest and fallow land into fields.

Kazimierz also pushed for education. The university of Krakow was founded in 1364, after Prague but before Heidelberg and Vienna.

All this prosperity also translated into increased military capability. Kazimierz did wage war against the traditional enemies of the Piasts, namely the Bohemians over Silesia and did score a major victory in 1345. But his main interest lay to his south-east. The disintegration of the Kyivan Rus had left a number of small principalities that looked extremely attractive. These were nominally under overlordship of the Mongols, but they too were on the retreat. Kazimierz took over the duchy of halicz, which is roughly modern day western Ukraine including Lviv and lands south east from there. The kingdom of Poland under Kazimierz therefore ended up looking very different to today. It was a roughly 450km wide and 900km long stretch from Prussia to Moldova.

Kazimierz died in 1370. Though married four times he had no children. So he gave his kingdom to his nephew, King Louis of Hungary. Louis himself came up to Krakow to be crowned but left the country to be run by Elisabeth, his mother, the sister of Kazimierz.

The Hungarian-Polish alliance lasted until the death of Louis who in turn also had no male heir. His two daughters became Europe’s most desirable heiresses. When Louis died his older daughter Maria who had married Sigismund of Luxemburg was to inherit Poland, whilst the younger one, Hedwig was to marry Wilhem of Habsburg who would then become king of Hungary.

The Polish lords did however not agree to this. They did not want to be tied to the Luxemburgers who ruled Bohemia. So they brought her sister, Hedwig or better known by her polish name, Jadwiga to Krakow and in an act of inspired gender bending crowned her king, not queen, of Poland in 1384. The Habsburg prince she was initially betrothed to and who she liked a lot came to claim her, but the Polish lords locked up, first her and then him. After some toing and froing, the dejected Austrian prince gave up and returned home.

At which point the question was, who Jadwiga should marry, if not the Habsburg. The Poles had come up with a most unexpected idea. Jadwiga was to marry Jogaila, the Grand Prince of Lithuania. From a Polish perspective this made a lot of sense. After the South-east expansion of both Poland and Lithuania, the two realms shared a nearly 900 km long border. Having rejected Sigimund and the Bohemians who stood along the other end of that same border meant they were vulnerable to attack with no-one there to help.

The main problem was that Jagielo was still a pagan. The only way this marriage could go ahead was if Jagielo would get baptized.

As it happened Jagielo was prepared to make that transition. Though the Lithuanians had spent the last 200 plus years defending their religion against the incursions of the Teutonic Knights, they had also expanded far and wide into lands that had already become Christian. Their principality included not just pagans but also orthodox Christians, Latin Christians and Jews. As part of an astute policy of playing one enemy against the other, the Lithuanians had often promised conversions or at least allowed missionaries to come in and proselytize. Hence at the time Jogaila was made the offer of the hand of Jadwiga, Lithuania was no longer fully pagan.

And Poland was an incredibly attractive opportunity. Thanks to Kazimierz success as a ruler, Poland was incredibly rich and cultured as well as militarily capable. All he had to do was to get his head wet and build a cathedral, and all of that was his.

No wonder he went for it. On February 12th Jogaila arrived in Krakow. Three days later he was baptized, on the 18th he married Jadwiga and on March 4 he was crowned king of Poland.

This is the beginning of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, at times the largest state in Europe that at its height stretched all the way from the Baltic to the Black Sea and from Krakow almost all the way to Moscow.  

For the Teutonic Knights this was a major calamity. Their territory in Prussia was now surrounded on all sides by one hugely powerful neighbor. And not only that, the Lithuanians were no longer officially pagans bringing down the whole edifice of the Bulwark of Christianity that justified their existence.

And with at least one side, the Lithuanians, the order was already in a state of continued low intensity war.

Relations with Poland weren’t that great either. Initially the Teutonic Knights and the Piast dukes had a good relationship. After all it was the duke of Mazovia who had called them in for help. Many of the crusaders who came to conquer Prussia and suppress the revolts had come from Poland and many Polish settlers had helped cultivating the Prussian lands. Sure there was occasional conflict, in particular with the dukes of Pomerelia, Swentopolk and Mestwin who had played a major role in the Prussian uprisings.

But all in, it was in the Teutonic Knights interest that Poland was supportive as the crusaders had to travel through Polish lands or into Danzig to get to Prussia. At the same time the Polish dukes relied on Teutonic Knight support in keeping their Northern border safe from Lithuanian and Russian attacks.

Things went pear shaped when Mestwin II, the last duke of Pomerelia died in 1294. Mestwin had no heirs and made the king of Poland his heir. That meant the land became part of the conflict between the Bohemian pretenders and Wladislaw the Short. When Wladislaw the short came back from exile in 1306 with Hungarian help he also took Pomerelia with its capital Danzig back under his control. He placed a garrison into Danzig and then moved on to deal with other problems further south. In 1308 the margraves of Brandenburg thought they had an opportunity to take the territory on some of the usual dynastic pretenses. They were successful and occupied almost all of the territory. The Hanse merchants of Danzig opened their gates and the royal presence was now limited to the Danzig castle. The garrison asked Wladislaw the short for help but he could not do much at this point in time. He suggested they ask the Teutonic Knights for help.

In 1308 the grand master Heinrich von Ploetzke took his army to Danzig and drove the Brandenburgers out. He did this in part out of the generally friendly relationship with the king but also in the expectation to get paid 10,000 mark for his services.

The Teutonic Knights in Danzig were waiting for the money to arrive, but somehow the cheque got lost in the post. The citizens of Danzig, most of whom were German speaking traders and artisans did not like their new occupiers very much. They had got used to a much higher level of autonomy than the Knight brothers would allow them. A revolt broke out that was brutally suppressed. How brutal is a big debate, though the claims of 10,000 dead made by later Polish rulers is highly improbable.

The suppression of the revolt did not resolve the problem. King Wladislaw the Short was still not prepared to pay. It wasn’t just the lack of payment that irritated the knights, it was the assumption on the side of the king that he could call upon the Teutonic knights whenever he wanted, as if they were his vassals.

So to make clear what was what the Teutonic Knights decided to stay. They bought the rights to Pomerelia from the margraves of Brandenburg and formed an alliance. With that they now had a direct land bridge into the empire via the duchy of Pomerania and Brandenburg making them less dependent upon the Poles.  

This as it turn out was not just a crime, it was worse, it was a mistake. The disagreement over Pomeralia and the city of Danzig poisoned the relationship between the Poles and the Teutonic Knight that when reading the comments on my Facebook page continues to this day.

It also added to the pressure on the order in Rome and their general reputation. In 1320 and in 1339 the Poles accused the order of unlawfully waging war against Christians. And quite frankly, the facts of the matter were quite clear. Taking a Christian land was not what a chivalric order was meant to do. The order lost both cases and was required to hand back Pomerelia. The grand master refused and was excommunicated. But as it happened pretty much all of the empire was at the time under interdict and the moral suasion of the Avignon popes had nowhere near the weight of an Innocent IV, so nothing much came of it.

Strategically Pomerelia and Danzig in particular were extremely important to Poland. It was their access to the Baltic Sea. Danzig stands at the mouth of the great Polish river, the Vistula where grain wood, salt and metals were shipped to the markets of Flanders, England and Norway.

The loss of Pomerelia pushed the Polish rulers into a closer relationship with the Lithuanians. Poles and Lithuanians realised they had common enemies, the Mongols and the Teutonic Knights. The very beginnings of that alliance lay here in 1326 when Wladislaw’s successor, Kazimierz the great married Aldena a famously beautiful Lithuanian princess.

In response the Teutonic Knights began a PR campaign against king Wladislaw the Short, encouraging both external and internal enemies to topple him. One of them was king John of Bohemia, the famous blind knight whose ostrich feathers and motto still grace the Prince of Wales arms.

War broke out in 1328 when Wladislaw the short attacked Kulm whilst the Teutonic Orders were distracted by a large operation against the Lithuanians. In 1329 the order struck back supported by forces of the king John of Bohemia. Wladislaw the short now allied with the Hungarians and Lithuanians which led to the battle of Plowce in 1331. That battle everyone agreed was unusually fierce even for a period that was used to violence. Technically Wladislaw did win the battle and had 65 knight brothers executed. But when Teutonic Knight reinforcements arrived on the battlefield  the Poles fled back home. Wladislaw died shortly after in 1333 opening the room for negotiations. It took until 1343 before all parties involved, the Knights, the kings of Poland, Hungary and Bohemia and the grand Prince of Lithuania could come to a solution. That solution was a complex structure that maintained the notion that Pomerelia was still part of the Polish Kingdom but that the Teutonic Knights were in charge.

After that things calmed down until the marriage of Jadwiga and Jogaila in 1386. That was a double blow. A catholic Lithuania meant no more crusades and hence no more tourists and even worse no purpose to the organisation. A combined Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth meant it was only a matter of time before they would came for the Teutonic Knights militarily.

The Knights pursued a twofold strategy to counter this threat. One was to claim that the Lithuanian conversion was a scam. Jogaila they said continued to worship his pagan gods and had not suppressed the pagan temples, which is probably true. The other part of the strategy was to exploit internal conflict in Lithuania. Jogaila had a rival for the role of Grand Prince, Vytautas, the son of the previous grand prince who had been murdered by Jogaila. Vytautas had strong following in Lithuania with the order’s support threw out many of Jogaila’s vassals. Jogaila was reduced to his capital Vilnius and surrounding lands. In 1390 the Teutonic Knights supported by Vytautas attacked Vilnius. That was one of the few Rhyse that were actual proper military undertakings. It was also the fight that henry Bolingbroke the future king Henry IV of England took part in. Vilnius held out for five weeks and after  the weather turned the crusaders returned. There were further major operations in the three years that followed but it took until 1398 that both sides were making peace. By this time it was Vytautas, not Jogaila who was in control of Lithuania. Jogaila was king of Poland together with his wife and resided there. When Jadwiga died in 1399 he became the sole ruler of Poland. Jogaila and Vytautas reconciled but given their backstory were believed to mistrust each other profoundly.

The success of the Lithuanian campaign and the split between Vytautas and Jogaila gave the Grand master of the Teutonic Knights, Ulrich von Jungingen the impression that he was in a very strong position. Yes, the crusades as such were over and support from travelling knights could no longer be relied upon, but all in the Knight brothers were a superior force, easily able to take on the Poles and Lithuanians.

This is when we go from mistake to catastrophic mistake.

What ended the 10 years of relative calm was an uprising in Samogitia that the Teutonic Knights blamed on Vytautas. Ulrich von Jungingen demanded that Vytautas and Jogaila immediately ceased any further support to the Samogitians. That demand was seen as deeply insulting by both Poles and Lithuanians. In particular the Poles had come to trust Jogaila over the past 10 years and – contrary to expectations in Prussia – were willing to go to war for him.

Things weren’t improved when the matter was brought before king Wenceslaus of Bohemia who was asked to act as arbiter. Wenceslaus sided fully with the order, adding more fuel to the flames. One -on- one meetings between Jogaila and Jungingen also failed to resolve issues.

War was coming again.

Jogaila gathered his army at Plock, south of Kulm. One estimate said he gathered 18,000 Polish fighters and Vytautas brought him 11,000 men.  These included not just Poles and Lithuanians, but also Bohemian and Moravian mercenaries, tartars, Rus’ians and Moldovans.

Ulrich von Jungingen relied on only about 10,000 cavalry from the order plus some support from the king of Bohemia and the last contingent of crusaders, roughly 15,000 in total.

These numbers are as always inexact. What most estimates have in common though was that the Poles and Lithuanians outnumbered the order’s forces 2 to one. That being said, the order operated as a close unit of men who had trained and fought together for a long time, whilst Jogaila’s forces were a wild mixture who had little coherence, not even in weapons, training, tactics or even language.

This was not a slam dunk.

On July 2, 1410 Jogaila’s forces crossed the Vistula river and began an invasion of Prussia. His army followed along the Drewenz river, burning and plundering as was the habit of medieval armies.

Ulrich von Jungingen who had split his forces across the length of the frontier now brought his men together in pursuit. When they came to the burning ruins of the town of Gilgenberg the grand master lost his cool. The destruction he had witnessed along the way and he feared would be inflicted on his lands if he did not bring this to an end quickly urged him to double the pace and catch up with the Polish-Lithuanian forces.

At a place the Germans call Tannenberg, the Poles Grunwald and the Lithuanians Zalgiris the two armies came together. As you would expect from a confrontation that has mythical status in Polish, Lithuanian and in the past, German consciousness, quite a lot of it is disputed.

What seems to have happened is that the Teutonic Knights went for an all out attack on the position where they assumed Jogaila was standing. This may have been triggered by a feigned retreat or some other misunderstanding. What we know is that the Teutonic Knights, led by the grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen charged at the Polish centre driving a wedge into the Polish-Lithuanian forces. This charge came as far as the royal bodyguard but was held off. Meanwhile forces commanded by Vytautas attacked the knights’ flank. The result was a massacre. The grand master and his chief officers lay dead. His army fled along the narrow paths through the forest and were killed one by one. 8,000 soldiers died that day on either side, which suggests almost half the entire force of the Teutonic Knights had perished. Those who survived sought shelter in whichever castle they could find.

News of the defeat spread through europe and left people aghast. The mighty Teutonic Knights who many of the Europe’s aristocrats had met on their gap year and admired for their military skills had been all but wiped out. How was that possible? And what is going to happen next? Will the order collapse?

That is a story for another time, next week to be precise. I hope you will join us again.

Ah, and by the way, just in case you cannot remember, my Patreon account is at patreon.com/historyofthegermans and for one-time donations, go to historyofthegermans.com/support

Bibliography

Werner Paravicini Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels: Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels (perspectivia.net)

William Urban: The Teutonic Knights – A Military History

Eric Christiansen: The Nordic Crusades, Penguin Books, 1997

Klaus Militzer: Die Geschichte des deutsche Ordens, 2.Aufl, 2012

Jurgen Sarnowsky: der Deutsche Orden, 2.Aufl, 2012

A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331: The Kronike Von Pruzinlant by Nicolaus Von Jeroschin

The Organisational structure of the Teutonic Knights

In the century that followed the last of the Prussian and Livonian uprisings the states of the Teutonic Order in the Baltic experienced a period of economic growth and internal and external stability that is almost unique in the chaotic 14th century. Whilst Europe was in the grip of the Hundred-Years War, an incessant merry go round of internecine feuds, the Black Death, Papal Schisms and a deteriorating climate, this theocracy on the Northern Baltic shore became a beacon of prosperity and peace.

How was it possible that a religious order became an astute manager of its estates, a de-facto member, if not by its own claim head of the Hanseatic League and the organizer of the greatest chivalric adventure holidays for Europe’s aristocracy? That is what we try to find out in this episode.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 133 – The Order of the Order

In the century that followed the last of the Prussian and Livonian uprisings the states of the Teutonic Order in the Baltic experienced a period of economic growth and internal and external stability that is almost unique in the chaotic 14th century. Whilst Europe was in the grip of the Hundred-Years War, an incessant merry go round of internecine feuds, the Black Death, Papal Schisms and a deteriorating climate, this theocracy on the Northern Baltic shore became a beacon of prosperity and peace.

How was it possible that a religious order became an astute manager of its estates, a de-facto member, if not by its own claim head of the Hanseatic League and the organizer of the greatest chivalric adventure holidays for Europe’s aristocracy? That is what we try to find out in this episode..

But, as you know, there will now be 20 seconds of me blabbing on about the Patreon account and how eternally grateful I am for all your support. If you want to skip it, you should hit the 15 second button…now! Great, now that we are amongst friends, let me tell you what these skipper dippers miss. The chance to feel good about themselves. As it says in the Acts of the Apostles: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ So here I am, ready to receive either on my Patreon account at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on my website at historyofthegermans.com/support so that you all can enjoy the act of supporting the show. Just ask Adam M., MSG, Andreas and John A. who are already indulging in the delights of giving.

Now back to the show

When the embers of the last burned down Prussian village had cooled off in 1283 a new society was emerging in Prussia. By the end of the next century the population of Prussia, according to Juergen Sarnowski was comprised of about 140,000 old Prussians, 100,000 Germans and  26,000 Poles. For reference, in his calculation this would have been an increase in the population by about 60% versus the time before the conquest. Note that he estimated the original population at 170,000, quite a bit lower than the estimate of 200-300,000 I used in episode 130. As we are in the Middle Ages, these estimates all have a huge range of error embedded in them.

What is however quite clear is that the late medieval Prussian society was split between Germans and non-Germans. This distinction was however not necessary ethnic but linguistic and most significantly legal.

There were effectively two sets of legal frameworks people lived in Prussia.

The Germans had come as part of a large scale economic development program. These initial settlers came from Brandenburg, Pomerania and Silesia and were themselves descendants of the 12th century first wave of settlers we discussed in season 5. As the Teutonic Knights moved further east and expanded cultivation deeper and deeper into the forests, settlers were recruited not just from the empire, but more and more from the population of the territories that had already been settled. And that included Prussians, Lithuanians and Poles who were granted the status of “German” settlers.

These “German” settlers -in inverted commas- were typically given a plot of land, usually about 33 hectares. Their leader, the Locator who had organized the convoy and had negotiated the deal with the brothers would get twice that, as would the local church. The Locator would then become the Schulze, the village mayor with the right to administer the so-called lower justice, petty crime and civil disputes. The mayor would often also get the fishing and game rights. In exchange the Mayor was obliged to fight for the order in light armor on top of the annual  rent he had to pay like all the other free peasants. Once the village was established, the villagers had the right to choose their mayor.

These were the so-called “German villages”. As for the old Prussian villages life was quite a bit harder. A Prussian peasant would usually have about 20 hectares, i.e., 2/3rds of the German peasant. They had to provide not rent but services and a percentage of their crop to the Knights. They did have a foreman, a “Starost” who represented them but who was supervised by a separate administrative structure supported by the Witingers, a sort of Prussian minor nobility.

Effectively the Prussian and German villages lived completely separate lives and there are regular mentions of priests or brothers needing translators to communicate with the leaders of the Prussian villages next door.

The administrative entity above the village was Vogt or Pfleger, usually a knight brother based in a smaller castle or estate.  The Vogts then reported to the Komtur. In Prussia a Komtur was usually a whole convent of Teutonic Knights. Based on the arithmetic of the New Testament, each Komtur was supposed to contain at least 12 brothers who lived in a large fortified convent. The Komtur would collect the rents paid by the villagers as well as their share of the crops of the unfree peasants. That was first used by the brothers in the Komtur for their needs, such as food and military equipment. Any surplus was then sent up to the Prussian Master.

The Prussian Master, alongside the Livonian master and the German Master was  one of the central roles within the Teutonic Knights. These institutions had become necessary when the order expanded geographically to a point where the grand master could not be present in all important centers. And that was fairly early on. Hermann von Salza never went to Prussia which meant that he appointed Hermann Balk as his representative on the Baltic, making him the first Prussian Master. And since Livonia was separated from Prussia by Lithuania and they still had the Sword Brother tradition, there was the need for a Livonian Master. The office of the German master, in charge of many of the order’s possessions in the empire and hence in charge of recruitment and supply to the fighting outposts was another necessary management function. When the grand Masters moved to Prussia the office of the Prussian master was abolished and its functions integrated with the grand Master.

And finally, at the top of the pyramid stood the Grand Master. But he did not stand there on his own. He had a number of senior officer in charge of different aspects of the order. There was the Grand Komtur, who was the grand Master’s deputy and in charge of operations during peace time. The Grand Marshall was in charge of the military capabilities of the order, he made sure there were enough horses, armor and siege engines available and led the forces in war, unless the grand master did that himself. The Spitaller was in charge of the hospitals. We should not forget that the Teutonic order was initially set up to run a hospital in Acre and they did maintain several hospitals throughout their existence, one of which was in Elbing in Prussia. Then we have the Trappier, in charge of clothing, though he quickly became an important figure in the brother’s trading operations. And finally the Tressler, the treasurer who looked after the order’s finances.

All of these senior officers were with very few exceptions recruited from the knight brothers of the order. However, the order consisted not just of knight brothers. There were the priest brothers whose role it was to conduct the religious ceremonies. They were the only members of the order who were ordained priests. Each Komtur would almost always have at least one priest brother so that the members could observe their religious duties as monks, namely to pray every three hours.

As the order became more and more exclusive, blocking out commoners, those who wanted to join were admitted as Sarjents or grey cloaks. They would wear not the white cloak with black cross of the full brothers, but a grey one still with a black cross. Their jobs varied from administration and commerce to fighting alongside the knights. Below them were the half brothers, men who had not made the sacred vows but still dedicated themselves to the order. These could be just servants or farmhands Sometimes these could be donors who use the Teutonic Knight’s convent as a retirement home to live there sometimes even with their wives. Even more surprising there were even half-sisters and even sisters in the Teutonic order. These were very few and concentrated in specific houses in Alsace and Switzerland, effectively not connected to the main order.

All this sounds a bit as if it was a strictly hierarchical organization with a grand master at the top sending orders down the chain of command. But that wasn’t really the case.

All major decisions had to be taken by the grand chapter of the order, not the grand master. The grand master could not even get his hands on the order’s treasury. It was kept in a strongbox that had three keys, one for the Grand Master, one for the Grand Komtur and one for the Tressler.   

And when the grand master policies did not meet with approval of the Knights, he could be deposed and often was. After the fall of Acre the order was divided on the question whether to hold out in Venice in the hope of another crusade into Palestine or a permanent move to Prussia. Most of the Grand Masters between 1297 and 1330 were deposed or at least partially denied their power and one of them, Werner von Orselen was even murdered by one of the brothers.

The Grand Master election also reflected the significance of the various senior members of the order. The tradition was that the dying grand master would hand the seal of the order to his deputy who would then organize the election. Knights from all over Europe would come to the election that often took place in Marburg and after 1309 in Marienburg in Prussia. It kicked off with a solemn mass. Then the deputy would propose an election officer to the knights present. Once an election officer was approved the officer in turn would propose 13 electors, 8 knights brothers, one priest brother and 4 Grey Cloaks. These had to be chosen carefully to reflect the different large administrative entities, like Livonia, Prussia, Germany and originally Palestine as well as the different branches and ranks. The electors would then debate in private and choose a new Grand Master.

As for the various offices, it was the grand master who appointed them and in principle every one of the major offices was re-appointed every year at the annual grand chapter. This became a little bit cumbersome given distances and the like, so that it became an event happening every 6 years. But even outside the grand chapter the grand master could at any time recall or redeploy brothers from one post to the next. And he very often did. We also hear that brothers would retire from senior positions as they reached an age where they were no longer able to discharge their duties.

The Teutonic Knights operated much closer to the way a modern bureaucracy works than a medieval kingdom. Though there was surely some nepotism in the appointments at times, but positions weren’t inherited as knights had no legitimate children, there is little evidence of corruption and the transfer of order property to the family of grand masters or other officers is rarely mentioned.

And there was something even more unusual about Prussia, there was no local nobility, except for the leadership class of the old Prussians. Despite the fact that the Teutonic order were almost all aristocrats, they did not establish the kind of feudal system they had grown up in. Actually where they had acquired territory with an existing local nobility, they tried to buy them out and get rid of them.

Though they sure must have had their problems with discipline, by and large the knight brothers stuck to their vows of chastity, poverty and obedience. And that removed some of the main scourges of medieval life – the endless feuds.

We are in the 14th century and this is a time where the four horsemen of the apocalypse, pestilence, war, famine and death are roaming Europe. It is not just the 100 years war that spreads misery in France, but within the empire there is incessant fighting. Take the Margraves of Meissen, the house of Wettin where one war between brothers is followed by the next as they fight over the succession. On top of that you have the Black Death killing sometimes half or more of a town’s population.

But Prussia was spared quite a bit of this pain. In the absence of a local nobility, there weren’t any feuds. The Teutonic Knights had their internal differences but they never spilled out into open warfare. When the Grand Master Werner von Orselen was murdered, the brothers insisted that it was the act of just one disaffected individual.

As for the plague, it did reach Elbing in 1349 and devastated the trading cities. But given the still fairly sparse population, it might be that the countryside got away with less severe losses. And similar to wat happened in the Hanse in general, the lure of the commercial opportunities in the cities was strong enough to compel peasants to leave their land and try their luck quickly refilling the depopulated cities of Elbing, Thorn, Braunsberg or Danzig.

Whilst there was no proper nobility in Prussia, there were cities, cities that were members of the Hanse. Whilst their city’s rights were much constrained compared to the other members of the league, they did have some independence. And the Teutonic knights recognized that. The cities were invited to regular consultations with the grand master. Some have called this a Staendetag, a sort of early parliament. But at least before 1410 the order having essentially all the revenues from the land did not have to raise taxes to cover its expenses, which left the cities with limited bargaining power.

Talking about finances, this gets us to the other interesting way the order organized its Prussian state. As the order kept expanding the area of cultivated land in Prussia, it began to produce a huge agricultural surplus, in particular in grain. This grain was then exported from Elbing and after 1310 from Danzig, which the order had acquired in a war that we will discuss next week.

Now if you have followed the series about the Hanseatic League, you will remember how significant the grain exports from Danzig were in feeding Norway, England and most importantly Flanders. The Teutonic Knights became a major commercial force in Northern Europe and participated in the various embargoes against Flanders and Norway. And they combined that with their military capability. They did get involved in a number of the confrontations, including the wars with Denmark and England where their weight counted for a lot.

They also continued the export of amber that had already been Prussia’s main business for more  thousand years.

Their biggest money-spinner however was tourism, chivalric adventure tourism to be precise.

After the fall of Acre in 1291, crusading in the Holy Land more or less stopped. There were still crusade south attacking the North African coast and others aimed at fighting heretics all across western europe. But the real spark had left the movement. That being said, the great knights and princes of europe were still looking for a way to use their considerable skills in killing and maiming for a good cause. Wars were numerous but there was ever so often a dry stretch where no campaign was fought that one could join.

That is where Teutonic Knights tours came in. they organized something they called a Rhyse, still the German word for journey.

The rhyse was technically a rolling crusade. It happened twice a year almost every year from 1304 onwards. Noble crusaders from France, England, Scotland, the Empire, Poland, Denmark, Sweden would come up to Prussia for a season of fighting the heathens. It was particularly popular with the English nobility. When Henry Bolingbroke, future king Henry IV arrived in 1390, he followed a long list of travelers to the Baltic. His father in law had been, his Grandfather and his ally in the future civil war, Henry Hotspur Percy. When Chaucer described the Knight in his tale he mentioned that he had traveled to Prussia, Lithuania and Russia and had “sat at the table of honor above all nations”.

It was a rite of passage, a sort of medieval grand tour that all young men of wealth and breeding would undertake.

The Teutonic Order offered two trips, a summer and a winter trip. The summer trip which started traditionally on August 15 was less popular as the crusaders would arrive when the ground was boggy and hard to pass on horses weighed down by armor. The summer period was usually known as the Bauzeit, the time to build new fortresses or reinforce already existing ones. The more glamorous season was in the winter when the bogs were frozen and the knights could attack on the surfaces of the rivers and lakes. And not only that. Because war in western europe was usually limited to the summer season, intrepid knights who wanted to engage in their favorite sport in winter had limited options. Lithuania was close and it had a winter season.

The crusaders would either arrive by ship from Bruges via Lubeck into Elbing, Danzig or Koenigsberg or on the land route again first to Luebeck and then along the coastal road through Pomerania and to Danzig. Alternatively there was the High Road through Silesia and Poland to Thorn in Prussia.

Some travelers combined the Prussian Rhyse with a sort of world tour that took in Venice and the Holy Land from there Spain where they would join the Reconquista before returning home to Blighty or La Douce France. That is where the adventure trip becomes a fully-fledged medieval gap year.

There was however a big difference to the gap year. These noble tourists did not journey with just a backpack containing three changes of underwear and a collection of achingly cool t-shirts. They journeyed in style. Henry Bolingbroke, admittedly the son of the richest man in England brought about 200 retainers who traveled on three ships. His supplies included not just the latest and best in military gear but also his horses, dogs, falcons, tapestries, gold and silver plates and cutlery. He was accompanied by his chaplain, doctor, cook, heralds, minstrels, pipers. The three or four heavy wagons that followed his progress contained his provisions, including the finest foodstuff, spices, herbs, wines from Bordeaux and the Rhine, clothes for feasts, equipment for tournaments and so on and so. When one of these fighting pilgrim stopped in a town or city he would expect a banquet to be held in his honor, where the local girls were asked to dance with the guests. In turn the traveling prince would make generous donations to the local churches and monasteries. He would also buy souvenirs along the way. Altarpieces, jewelry, furs and sometimes more exotic things like the ostrich Henry Bolingbroke acquired in Vienna.

Occasionally that ostentatious display of wealth planted unholy desires into the local aristocracy’s mind. We hear of multiple occasions where the crusaders are held for ransom or at least relieved from the heavy load they were dragging across the muddy roads of central europe.

Assuming you have managed to get to Prussia and were still in possession of most of your limbs, weapons and provisions, the next place to go to was the castle of Marienburg, modern day Marbrog in Poland, the seat of the grand master of the Teutonic Knights. This, the largest brick castle in the world never failed to impress the visitors. It covers a surface area of 18 hectares and has 145,000 square metres of floor space, roughly double of Buckingham palace and comparable to the Louvre, both of which were built much later.

Marienburg is not just large. It is breathtaking in its beauty and coherence. At the heart is the square structure of the High Castle, built on the standard floorplan of the Teutonic castles that combined elements of monastic convents with its defensive nature.  One side is taken up by the palace chapel, a structure that can compare with the greatest of them all, the Sainte Chapelle in Paris. There is the grand masters palace where the shape of the interior spaces, the manner of vaulting, and the illumination from the many enormous windows have no parallels in the residential architecture of  medieval Europeas the Unesco world heritage experts describe it The great refectory, the dining hall of the knights is “another structure of exceptional value, even on a global scale. This is due to the superb systems of proportions and the innovatory artistic form of the vaulting, supported on slender columns. It is one of the most magnificent and elegant secular interiors that European Gothic architecture produced.”  My favorite structure is the Dansker, something you find in most Teutonic Knight’s castles. These are large latrine tower that emptied into a stream or river and is connected to the main castle by a covered walkway. These were needed because the order’s castles were permanently garrisoned by a much large number of men than “normal” European castles – just another indication of how different the Teutonic Knight’s state was.

The noble guests were usually given an audience with the Grand Master and invited to a  banquet in that fabulous dining hall which by the way had an underfloor heating system that could raise the temperature in the 800 sqm room from 6 to 22 degrees in just 20 minutes. The dinner was almost certainly splendid though in keeping with the order’s strict rules, no women were allowed. Vistors keep pointing out that amidst the splendor the knights remained austere, eating the same modest meal and wearing the same unadorned clothes. They had no personal property  and in war they had the same weapons and armor, all provided for by the order.

The guests, honored as they were, were not invited to stay inside the enormous castle. They were expected to find their own accommodation for themselves and their retinue. Not even food or drink was provided for free.

From Marienburg the crusaders set off for Konigsberg the jumping off point for the actual Rhyse.

So what was the that crusade actually. The chronicler Peter von Duisburg described it as follows: “In the year 1283, when 53 years had already passed since the beginning of the war against the Prussian people and all the tribes in the aforementioned land had been conquered and exterminated, so that not one remained who did not humbly bow his neck to the yoke of the holy Roman Church, the brothers of the German House began the war against that powerful and extremely stubborn and warlike people who live next to the Prussian land on the other side of the Memel in the land of Lithuania”

As we have heard before, the Lithuanians prove much harder to beat than the Prussians and Livonians. And, spoiler alert, they never were conquered. They did have two things in their favor, for one they were able to unify in the face of the oncoming attacks and secondly, Lithuania prove even more geographically impenetrable than Prussia, Latvia and Estonia.

The Teutonic Knights maintained a string of border fortresses that stretched from Memel, modern day Kalipeda along the Neman river to Ragnit. Across from there was the Wilderness, a 30 to 50km wide stretch of no-man’s land that could be crossed only under most favorable weather conditions, namely in the winter when the swampy ground was frozen hard.

The difficulty of the terrain meant that any campaign, the actual Rhyse needed a lot of advance planning. The guests were asked to gather food and equipment ahead of departure. The Knights would bring their own gear and supplies, but none for the other crusaders

The purpose of the attacks on Lithuania were the same as in all the Northern Crusades, to convert the locals to Christianity by force. But as time went by, this objective became less and less realistic. The Rhysen started in 1304 and lasted about 100 years but shifted the borders only marginally.

In fact it seems the main purpose of these campaigns wasn’t to convert the Lithuanians. Of the 307 campaigns the historian Werner Paravicini analyzed in his 700 page work on the Prussian Rysen, he categorized 127 as pure devastation campaigns, 35 were set up as sieges, 38 as campaigns to build or rebuild fortifications and only 10 that involved an actual battle against the Lithuanians, and of these 10, only three were planned to result in a battle whilst the other seven were the consequence of an unexpected Lithuanian counterattack.

These military campaigns were also very short, usually about 2 to 3 weeks, of which a chunk must have been taken up just by cutting a way through the wilderness.

All that is why I call them adventure holidays. Sure, the guests are given the opportunity to do some actual fighting, but in 95% of cases only against unarmed peasants. And by the time the powerful Lithuanian cavalry forces come to relive the pressure on the villages, the brave Christian knights are back in the woods, carrying their plunder and the occasional prisoner back to Konigsberg. It was a very controlled risk that made sure the honorable guests could come back again.

Once the expedition returned to Koenigsberg, it was tea and medals. The order set up a table of honor with 12 seats, some reimagining of the round table of king Arthur. Only the most valiant knights were given the great honor to sit at that table. That is what Chaucer’s knight refers to when he boasts that he had sat “at the table of honor above all nations”. And those amongst the crusaders who had not been knighted yet could be daubed by the master’s sword. It was great way for young men to be introduced into the chivalric world without too much risk that the precious heir to the duchy or county would come to serious harm.

So if this was just a little bit of fun with little to no military significance, why did the Teutonic Knights organize these trips? Well, let’s take a look at the bills Henry Bolingbroke, the son of John of Gaunt and one of the richest men in England racked up on his 8 month jaunt to Prussia: he spent £564 on wages for his retinue, £400 on gifts for various potentates and the leaders of the order, £75 on silver kitchenware made in Prussia, he hired boats, horses, wagons to carry his stuff, he had to hire accommodation everywhere he went as the order would not cater for that and he had to feed all these men. And not to forget the gambling and other entertainment. The total bill came to £4,360 pounds, more that the Teutonic order spent in that same period on acquiring the whole island of Gotland.

There you have it, these guests were a huge boon to the Prussian economy and as we will see, when they stopped coming, the finances of the order are hit hard. The end of the Rhysen and with it the end of the golden age of the Teutonic Knights came at the very end of the 14th century. And why it came is what we are going to discuss next week. I hope you will join us again.

I have put a link to the truly astounding work by Werner Paravicini about the Rhysen into the show notes. Even though I have gone far beyond the time I initially allocate to this story, I have barely scratched the surface of his analysis. If you want to know more about this unique phenomena, take a look. It is full of great little vignettes of life in the Middle Ages.  It is unfortunately in German. If you look for an English text,  you can find more detail in Eric Christiansen’s The Nordic Crusades.

Bibliography

Werner Paravicini Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels: Die Preußenreisen des europäischen Adels (perspectivia.net)

Eric Christiansen: The Nordic Crusades, Penguin Books, 1997

Klaus Militzer: Die Geschichte des deutsche Ordens, 2.Aufl, 2012

Jurgen Sarnowsky: der Deutsche Orden, 2.Aufl, 2012

A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331: The Kronike Von Pruzinlant by Nicolaus Von Jeroschin