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JOACHIM II

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 419 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOACHIM II  . (1505-1571), surnamed
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Hector, elector of Brandenbuig, the elder son of Joachim I., elector of
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Brandenburg, was born on the 13th of
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January 1505 . Having passed some time at the court of the emperor Maximilian I., he married in 1524 a daughter of George, duke of Saxony . In 1532 he led a contingent of the imperial army on a
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campaign against the
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Turks; and soon afterwards, having lost his first wife, married Hedwig, daughter of Sigismund I., king of Poland . He became elector of Brandenburg on his
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father's
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death in
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July 1535, and undertook the government of the old and
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middle marks, while the new mark passed to his
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brother John . Joachim took a prominent
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part in imperial politics as an advocate of peace, though with a due regard for the interests of the house of Habsburg . He attempted to make peace between the Protestants and the emperor Charles V. at
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Frankfort in 1539, and subsequently at other places; but in 1542 he led the German forces on an unsuccessful campaign against the Turks . When the war broke out between Charles and the '
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league of
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Schmalkalden in 1546 the elector at first remained neutral; but he afterwards sent some troops to serve under the emperor . With Maurice, elector of Saxony, he persuaded Philip, landgrave of Hesse, to surrender to Charles after the imperial victory at
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Muhlberg in
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April 1547, and pledged his word that the landgrave would be pardoned . But, although he felt aggrieved when the emperor declined to be bound by this promise, he refused to join Maurice in his attack on Charles . He supported the
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Interim, which was issued from Augsburg in May 1548, and took part in the negotiations that resulted in the treaty of
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Passau (1552), and the religious peace of Augsburg (1555) . In domestic politics he sought to consolidate and strengthen the power of his house by
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treaties with neighbouring princes, and succeeded in secularizing the bishoprics of Brandenburg,
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Havelberg and Lebus .

Although brought up as a strict adherent of the older

religion, he showed signs of wavering soon after his accession, and in 1539 allowed
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free entrance to the reformed teaching in the electorate . He took the communion himself in both kinds, and established a new ecclesiastical organization in Brandenburg, but retained much of the ceremonial of the Church of Rome . His position was not unlike that of Henry VIII. in England, and may be partly explained by a
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desire to replenish his impoverished
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exchequer with the
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wealth of the Church (see BRANDENBURG) . After the peace of Augsburg the elector mainly confined his attention to Brandenburg, where he showed a keener desire to further the principles of the Reformation . By his luxurious habits and his lavish
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expenditure on public buildings he piled up a
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great accumulation of debt, which was partly discharged by the estates of the
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land in return for important concessions . He cast covetous eyes upon the archbishopric of
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Magdeburg and the bishopric of
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Halberstadt, both of which he secured for his son Frederick in 1551 . When Frederick died in the following
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year, the elector's son Sigismund obtained the two
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sees; and on Sigismund's death in 1566 Magdeburg was secured by his
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nephew, Joachim Frederick, afterwards elector of Brandenburg . Joachim, who was a prince of generous and cultured tastes, died at Kopenick on the 3rd of January 1571, and was succeeded by his son, John George . In 188o a statue was erected to his memory at
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Spandau . See Steinmuller, Einfuhrung der Reformation in die Kurmark Brandenburg durch Joachim II . (1903) ; S . Isaacsohn, " Die Finanzen Joachims II." in the Zeitschrift fur Preussische Geschichte and Landeskunde (1864—1883); J .

G .

Droysen, Geschichte der Preussischen Politik (1855-1886) .

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