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SWABIAN See also: German cities, principally in the territory which had formed the old duchy of See also: Swabia
.
The name, though usually given to the See also: great federation of 1488, is applicable also to several earlier leagues (e.g. those of 1331, 1376)
.
The Swabian cities had attained great prosperity under the See also: protection of the See also: Hohenstaufen emperors, but the extinction of that See also: house in 1268 was followed by disintegration
.
Cities and nobles alike, now owing allegiance to none but the emperor, who was seldom able to defend them, were exposed to the aggression of ambitious princes
.
In 1331, twenty-two Swabian cities, including See also: Ulm, Augsburg, See also: Reutlingen and See also: Heilbronn, formed a See also: league at the instance of the emperor See also: Louis the Bavarian, who in return for their support promised not to
See also: mortgage any of them to a vassal
.
The count of See also: Wurttemberg was induced to join in 1340
.
Under See also: Charles IV. the lesser Swabian nobles began to combine against the cities, and formed the Schlegelerbund (from
See also: Schlegel, a maul)
.
See also: Civil war ensuing in 1367, the emperor, jealous of the growing power of the cities, endeavoured to set up a league under his own control, for the maintenance of public See also: peace (Landfriedensbund, 1370)
.
The defeat of the city league by See also: Eberhard II. of Wurttemberg in 1372, the See also: murder of the captain of the league, and the breach of his obligations by Charles IV., led to the formation of a new league of fourteen Swabian cities led by Ulm in 1376
.
This league triumphed over the count of Wurttemberg at Reutlingen in 1377, and the emperor having removed his See also: ban, it assumed a permanent character, set up an arbitration See also: court, and was rapidly extended over the Rhineland, See also: Bavaria and See also: Franconia
.
In 1382 an See also: alliance was made at Ehingen with the archduke of See also: Austria, and through his See also: mediation with the
three chief knightly associations of Swabia
.
The new See also: king,
See also: Wenceslaus, hoped at first, like his See also: father Charles, to check the federal See also: movement by associating all estates of the See also: realm under his own See also: lead in Landfriedenseinigungen, but such a compact made at See also: Heidelberg in 1384, although renewed at See also: Mergentheim three years later, was a See also: mere makeshift
.
The struggle between burghers and nobles was precipitated by the inclusion of the See also: urban members of the Swiss confederation in the league in 1385 and the overthrow of Archduke Leopold of Austria by the latter at See also: Sempach in the following See also: year
.
A See also: quarrel between the duke of Bavaria and the archbishop of See also: Salzburg gave the See also: signal for a general war in Swabia, in which the cities, weakened by their See also: isolation, mutual jealousies and See also: internal conflicts, were defeated by Count Eberhard II. at Doffingen (Aug
.
24, 1388), and were severally taken and devastated
.
Most of them quietly acquiesced when Wenceslaus proclaimed a Landfriede at Eger in 1389 and prohibited all leagues between cities
.
The professed aims of the cities which had formed this league of 1376 were the maintenance of their imperial status (Reichsunmittelbarkeit), security against sale or mortgage and against excessive See also: taxation, the protection of See also: property, See also: trade and See also: traffic, and the power to suppress disturbances of the peace
.
There is no trace of co-operation with the Hanseatic towns
.
The league necessarily opposed the pretensions of the emperors and the electoral princes, especially as set forth in the See also: Golden Bull, and in accordance with the growing spirit of civil freedom demanded a share in the See also: government, but that there was any widespread conscious See also: desire for a fundamental change in the constitution, for the abolition of aristocratic See also: privilege or for a republic, as certain historians maintain, is improbable (K
.
Klupfel, Der schwabische Bund)
.
For nearly a century there was no great effort at federation among the Swabian cities, See also: attention being diverted to the ecclesiastical controversies of the See also: time, but there were partial and See also: short-lived associations, e.g. the league of twelve Swabian cities in defence of their liberties in 1392, the Marbach league in 1405 against the German king, See also: Rupert, and in 1441 the union of twenty-two cities (in 1446 See also: thirty-one) headed by Ulm and See also: Nuremberg, for the suppression of See also: highway robbery
.
This latter union in 1449 formed a See also: standing army and waged war on a confederation of princes led by See also: Albert See also: Achilles, afterwards elector of See also: Brandenburg (q.v.)
.
The growing anarchy in Swabia, where the cities were violently agitated by the See also: constant infringement of their liberties (e.g. the annexation of See also: Regensburg by Bavaria in 1486), induced See also: Frederick III., who required men and See also: money for the Hungarian War, to conciliate the cities by propounding a scheme of pacification and reform
.
His See also: commissioner, Count Hugo of Werdenberg, met the Swabian estates at See also: Esslingen and laid before them a See also: plan probably See also: drawn up by See also: Bertold, elector of See also: Mainz, and on the 14th of See also: February 1488 the Great Swabian League was constituted
.
There were four constituent parties, the archduke See also: Sigismund of Austria, Count Eberhard V
.
(afterwards duke) of Wurttemberg, who became the first captain of the league, the knightly league of St See also: George, and lastly twenty-two Swabian imperial cities
.
The league received a formal constitution with a federal council consisting of three colleges of nine councillors each, a captain and a federal court with judicial and executive See also: powers
.
The armed force which was to police Swabia consisted of 12,000 See also: foot and ;co 1horse, each party contributing one-See also: fourth
.
The league gained strength by the speedy accession of Augsburg and other Swabian cities, the margraves of Brandenburg-See also: Ansbach, Baireuth and See also: Baden, the four Rhenish electors, &c., and in 1490 of See also: Maximilian, king of the See also: Romans, whom the league had helped to rescue from the hands of the Netherlanders in 1488
.
It did not render him the support he expected in his See also: foreign policy, but it performed its See also: primary See also: work of restoring and maintaining See also: order with energy and efficiency
.
In 1492 it compelled Duke Albert of Bavaria to renounce Regensburg; in 1519 it expelled the turbulent duke, See also: Ulrich of Wurttemberg, who had seized Reutlingen, and it sold his duchy to Charles V.; and in 1523 it defeated the Franconian knights who had takenup arms with See also: Franz von See also: Sickingen
.
In 1525, Truchsess, the league captain, aided by the forces of See also: Trier and the See also: palatinate, overthrew the See also: rebel peasants of Konigshofen on the Tauber and at See also: Ingolstadt
.
The league, which had been several times renewed, expired on the 2nd of February 1534, its dissolution being due to internal dissensions regarding the See also: reformation
.
Futile attempts were made to renew it, in 1535 by the Bavarian chancellor, See also: Eck, and in 1547 by Charles V
.
See E
.
Osann, Zur Geschichte See also: des schwabischen Bundes (See also: Giessen, 1861) ; K
.
Klupfel, " Der schwabische Bund " (in Hist . Taschenbuch, 1883-1884), Urkunden zur Geschichte des schwabischen Bundes ( See also: Stuttgart, 1846-1853)
.
(A
.
B
.
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