Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor |
Charles (February 24, 1500 - September 21, 1558)
was Holy Roman Emperor (as Charles V) from
1519-1558; he was also King of Spain from 1516-1556, officially as Charles I of Spain, although often
referred to as Charles V ("Carlos Quinto" or "Carlos V") in Spain and Latin America. He was the son of Philip I and Joanna of Castile and
grandson of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile and of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor.
It is hard to say what nationality Charles was. He was a Habsburg on his
father's side, but he was not German: he famously said "I speak Spanish to God, Italian to women, French to men and German to my horse." His first language was French, but he was a lifelong enemy of France. His mother was Spanish, and Spain was the core of his kingdom, but he was not Spanish: however he
probably felt more at home in Spain than anywhere else in his vast multilingual empire.
Charles was born in Ghent and brought up in the Netherlands until 1517, where he was tutored by Adrian of
Utrecht, later Pope Adrian VI. In 1506, on the death of his father, Charles inherited the Netherlands and Franche-Comté. After the death of his grandfather Ferdinand in 1516, Charles became joint-king of Castile with his mother (who was insane), and also inherited Aragon, Navarre, Granada,
Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, and Spanish America. Upon arriving to
Castile, he had to fight the Castilian War of the Communities against the cities and petty nobles who disliked his
appointment of Flemings for Castilian offices. He eventually won and from then on Castilian Cortes were keen on conceding him the vast resources needed for the numerous wars he waged in Europe. After the
death of his other grandfather, Maximilian, in 1519, he inherited Hapsburg
lands in Austria and was elected Holy Roman Emperor.
He married infanta Isabella, sister of John III of
Portugal, who had shortly before married Catherine, Charles's sister.
Charles V initiated many wars with France during his reign, first fighting against
them in Northern Italy in 1521. Later in the Italian Wars, in 1527, his troops sacked Rome, causing Charles some embarrassment but enabling him to keep the Pope from annulling the marriage
of Henry VIII of England and
Catherine of Aragon, who was his aunt.
As Holy Roman Emperor, he called Martin Luther to the Diet of Worms in 1521, promising him safe conduct if he would appear. He outlawed
Luther and his followers in that same year but was tied up with other concerns and unable to try to stamp out Protestantism.
In a war supported by Henry VIII of England, in 1525
Charles captured François I of France and made him sign the
Treaty of Madrid (1526), in which France renounced her claims on
Northern Italy. When he was released, however, François reneged on the treaty. The
1529 Treaty of Cambrai (signed with France) and the Peace of Barcelona (with the
Pope) confirmed Charles as Holy Roman Emperor and also allowed him to keep the lands he had acquired in Italy.
1524 to 1526 saw the Peasants' Revolt in Germany and the formation of the Lutheran Schmalkaldic League, and Charles delegated increasing responsibility
for Germany to his brother Ferdinand while he concentrated on problems abroad.
He had been fighting with the Ottoman Empire and its sultan,
Suleiman the Magnificent, for a number of years.
The expeditions of the Ottoman force along the Mediterranean coast posed a threat to Hapsburg lands and the peace of Western
Europe. In 1535 Charles won an important victory at Tunis, but in 1536 Francis I of France allied himself with Suleiman against
Charles. While Francis was persuaded to sign a peace treaty in 1538, he again allied
himself with the Ottomans in 1542. In 1543 Charles
allied himself with Henry VIII and forced Francis to sign the Truce of
Crepy-en-Laonnois. Charles later signed a humiliating treaty with the Ottomans, to gain him some respite from the huge
expenses of their war.
In 1545 the opening of the Council of Trent began the Counter-Reformation, and Charles won to the Catholic cause some of the princes of the Holy Roman
Empire. He also attacked the Schmalkaldic League in 1546 and defeated John Frederick I of Saxony and imprisoned Philip
of Hesse in 1547. At the Augsburg Interim in 1548 he created a doctrinal
compromise that he felt Catholics and Protestants alike might share. A more permanent settlement followed with the 1555 Peace of Augsburg.
In 1548 he made the Seventeen Provinces of the Netherlands an entity separate from both the Empire and from France (the
"Pragmatic Sanction of 1548").
Plus Oultre on a gable of a Flemish house in Ghent, Charles V's birthplace
In 1556 Charles abdicated his various positions, giving his personal empire to his son,
Philip II of Spain, and the Holy Roman Empire to his brother,
Ferdinand. Charles retired to the
monastery of Yuste (Extremadura, Spain) and is thought to have had a nervous breakdown.
He died in 1558. In the last two decades of his life he suffered from gout.
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