| Battle of Morgarten | |||||||
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| Part of thegrowth of the Old Swiss Confederacy | |||||||
Illustration from theTschachtlanchronik, 1470 | |||||||
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TheBattle of Morgarten took place on 15 November 1315, when troops ofSchwyz, supported by their allies ofUri andUnterwalden, ambushed anAustrian army under the command ofLeopold I, Duke of Austria on the shores ofLake Ägeri, in the territory of Schwyz.
After a brief close-quarters battle, the Austrian army was routed, with numerous slain or drowned.[1][2] The Swiss victory consolidated theLeague of the Three Forest Cantons, which formed the core of theOld Swiss Confederacy.
Toward the end of the 13th century theHouse of Habsburg coveted the area around theGotthard Pass, as it offered the shortest passage to Italy. However, the Confederates ofUri,Schwyz andUnterwalden, which hadformalized the Swiss Confederacy in 1291, heldimperial freedom letters from former Habsburg emperors granting them localautonomy within the empire.[2] In 1314 tensions between the Habsburgs and Confederates heightened when Duke Louis IV of Bavaria (who would becomeLouis IV, Holy Roman Emperor) andFrederick the Handsome, aHabsburg prince, each claimed the crown of theHoly Roman Emperor.[citation needed]
TheConfederates supported Louis IV because they feared the Habsburgs would annex their lands (which they had tried to do in the late 13th century). War broke out after the Confederates of Schwyz raided the Habsburg-protectedEinsiedeln Abbey.The conflict with Einsiedeln had begun when settlers moved from Schwyz into unused parts of the territories claimed by Einsiedeln. The settlers cleared the primal forest and established farms or pastures. The abbot of Einsiedeln carried his complaint to the bishop of Constance, who moved toexcommunicate Schwyz.As revenge, men of Schwyz under the leadership ofWerner Stauffacher raided Einsiedeln abbey on the night of 6 January 1314. They plundered the monastery, desecrated the church, and took several monks as hostages. The abbot managed to escape toPfäffikon, from where he alerted the bishop. The bishop reacted by including Uri and Unterwalden in the excommunication.[2]
Frederick's brother, Habsburg dukeLeopold of Austria, led a large army to crush the rebellious Confederates.Johannes von Winterthur's chronicle of the battle puts the Habsburg forces at 20,000, although that number is likely an exaggeration.[3]A 19th century account by Rudolf Hanhart states that there were 9,000 men in the Habsburg army.[4]HistorianHans Delbrück estimated in 1907 that the Habsburg army consisted of only 2,000–3,000 men, but that these were mainly well-trained and -equipped knights.[5] Delbrück's view is shared byKelly DeVries.[6]
The Confederates of Schwyz were supported by the Confederates of Uri and Unterwalden. The size of the Confederate force is unknown, with estimates ranging from 1,500 to around 3,000-4,000.[5] Regardless of numerical considerations, the main contrast between the two forces was that a well-equipped and trained medieval army was meeting an improvised militia of farmers and herdsmen.[citation needed]
According to the 15th-centurySwiss chronicles, Leopold upon reachingÄgeri debated with his nobles how to best invade Schwyz, with several possible routes under consideration. After the decision was taken to take the direct approach, marching to Sattel from the north, Leopold is said to have asked hiscourt jester, one Cuoni von Stocken, for his opinion. The fool expressed misgivings, quipping that "you have all deliberated on how to reach that land, but none of you deliberated how you will get out again".[citation needed]
In order to hide his intentions to attack from the north, Leopold sent a number of smaller detachments in order to create diversions. One such attack was sent toArth, attacking from the northwest, one fromEntlebuch attacking Unterwalden from the north, one from Lucerne attacking Schwyz from the west acrossLake Lucerne, and one under the command of count Otto von Strassberg was sent acrossBrünig Pass to Obwalden. When news of the Habsburg defeat at Morgarten reached von Strassberg, he decided to turn back. He was reportedly injured on the retreat and died from his wounds soon after.[citation needed]
According toKonrad Justinger's chronicle, written c. 1430, the people of Schwyz were warned by their neighbours, the lords ofHünenberg.The warning is said to have been delivered by the means of arrows fletched with parchment, with the message written on the fletching, "beware near Morgarten" (hütend üch am morgarten), thus indicating the route chosen by Leopold for entering Schwyz.[citation needed]
Upon receiving this warning, the men of Schwyz, with the support of 600 men of Uri and Unterwalden, hurried to Sattel to intercept the enemy. Between Lake Ägerisee and Sattel, where a narrow path led between a steep slope and a swamp, they prepared an ambush.The marching army would have been stretched out in a column of some 2 km along the path when the vanguard encountered a roadblock near Schafstetten.The Confederates attacked the column, frightening the horses by throwing rocks from above and engaging the mounted knights withhalberds.[citation needed]
About 1,500 men were said to have been killed in the attack; according toJohannes von Winterthur (writing ca. 1340), this number does not include those drowned in the lake.[7]According to Karl von Elgger, the Confederates, unfamiliar with the customs of battles between knights, brutally butchered retreating troops and everyone unable to flee. He records that some infantry preferred to drown themselves in the lake rather than face the brutality of the Swiss.[7]
The earliest mentions of the battle, in chronicles of the 14th century, identify it as having taken place in the land of Schwyz, or Schwyz and Uri (Peter of Zittau hasSweicz et Uherach).The name ofMorgarten is recorded byKonrad Justinger in the context of the written warning attached to arrows. The toponymMorgarten originally refers to analpine pasture near47°06′30″N8°39′29″E / 47.1083°N 8.6581°E /47.1083; 8.6581 (nowChli Morgarten). The name translates to "pig corral", "enclosure for swine".[8]The entire passage between Lake Ägeri and Sattel is now known as Morgarten, but this is in reference to the battle.[citation needed]
Matthias of Neuenburg writing in Latin around 1350 uses the termjesa to describe a type of polearm used by the Confederates; this has been interpreted as referencing an early form of thehalberd.Konrad Justinger, writing in German in c. 1430, cites the use of halberds explicitly: "the Swiss held in their hands certain most terrible murder weapons, known in the vernacular ashelnbarten, by means of which even the best armed opponents were cut apart as with a razor blade, and hacked to pieces: this was no 'battle', but, for the reasons mentioned, so to speak a mere butchering of the men of duke Leopold by those mountain dwellers, as with a herd led to slaughter".[9]
In the assessment of John Guilmartin, writing forEncyclopædia Britannica (2015, s.v. "Military technology", section "The infantry revolution, c. 1200–1500"):
[An] important and enduring discovery was made by the Swiss [at this battle. They] learned that an unarmoured man with a seven-foot (200-cm) halberd could dispatch an armouredman-at-arms. Displaying striking adaptability, they replaced some of their halberds with the pike, an 18-foot [5.5-meter] spear with a small piercing head. No longer outreached by the knight's lance, and displaying far greater cohesion than any knightly army, the Swiss soon showed that they could defeat armoured men-at-arms, mounted or dismounted, given anything like even numbers. With the creation of thepike square tactical formation, the Swiss provided the model for the modern infantry regiment.[10]

Within a month of the battle, in December 1315, the Confederates renewed the oath of alliance made in 1291, initiating a period ofgrowth within the Confederacy.[2] In March 1316 Emperor Louis IV confirmed the rights and privileges of theForest Cantons. However, Leopold prepared another attack against the Confederacy. In response, Schwyz attacked some of the Habsburg lands and Unterwalden marched into theBernese Oberland. Neither side was able to prevail against the other, and in 1318 the isolated Forest Cantons negotiated a ten-month truce with the Habsburgs, which was extended several times. By 1323 the Forest Cantons had made alliances withBern, and Schwyz had signed an alliance withGlarus for protection from the Habsburgs.[2] Within 40 years cities includingLucerne,Zug andZürich had also joined the Confederacy. The Confederate victory gave them virtual autonomy and, for a time, a peace with the Habsburgs that lasted until theBattle of Sempach in 1386.[11]
As the first military success of the Confederacy, Morgarten became an important staple of Swiss patriotism in the early modern period.Records of formal commemorations of the battle go back to the 14th century; Johannes von Winterthur in the 1340s records the decision of Schwyz to hold a yearly commemoration. The existence of a chapel at the site of the battle is recorded in 1501.Writing in 1530, Joachim Vadian suggests that the first such chapel may have been built immediately after the battle, with the proceeds from the spoils. The modern chapel dates to 1604.In 1891, in the context of the 600-years anniversary of the Confederacy, plans were made to erect a new memorial at the site of battle.There was some dispute as to the appropriate location (not least because the "battle" was an attack on a marching column stretched out for some 2 kilometres), with both the cantons of Schwyz and of Zug claiming the site of the battle.A monument was eventually inaugurated in 1908 at the southern shore of Lake Ägeri, in the village ofHauptsee, in the canton of Zug. On this occasion, the village was renamed to "Morgarten" (part ofOberägeri municipality). The authorities of Schwyz refused to acknowledge a site of the battle outside of their territory and did not send any official representation to the monument's inauguration ceremony.[12]
Since 1912, a yearly target shooting event has been held on the day of the battle in the vicinity of the monument, theMorgartenschiessen. The competition is over the distance of 300m.[13] In addition, a pistol competition over a distance of 50m was introduced in 1957, taking place in the territory of Schwyz, near the battle chapel.[citation needed]
A large celebration for the 600-year anniversary of the battle was organised in 1915, held in two locations at the chapel and the monument.In the context of the 650-year anniversary in 1965, efforts were made to preserve the site of the battle. Money was raised for the canton of Schwyz to buy up private land in the area.[citation needed]
Felicia Hemans's poemSong of The Battle of Morgarten was published in The Edinburgh Magazine in 1822.[citation needed]