| Burgundian Wars | |||||||||
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Thebattle of Morat, fromDiebold Schilling'sBerne Chronicle | |||||||||
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Upper Alsace[1] | |||||||||
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TheBurgundian Wars (1474–1477) were a conflict between theBurgundian State and theOld Swiss Confederacy and its allies. Open war broke out in 1474, and theDuke of Burgundy,Charles the Bold, was defeated three times on the battlefield in the following years and was killed at theBattle of Nancy in 1477. TheDuchy of Burgundy and several other Burgundian lands then became part of France, and theBurgundian Netherlands andFranche-Comté were inherited by Charles's daughter,Mary of Burgundy, and eventually passed to theHouse of Habsburg upon her death because of her marriage toMaximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor.

Thedukes of Burgundy had succeeded, over a period of about 100 years, in establishing their rule as a strong force between theHoly Roman Empire and France. The consolidation of regional principalities with varying wealth into the Burgundian State brought great economic opportunity and wealth to the new power. A deciding factor for many elites in consolidating their lands was the relatively safe guarantee of making a profit under the economically stable Duchy of Burgundy.[2] Their possessions included, besides their original territories of theFranche-Comté and theDuchy of Burgundy, the economically-strong regions ofFlanders andBrabant as well asLuxembourg.
The dukes of Burgundy generally pursued aggressive expansionist politics, especially inAlsace andLorraine, seeking to unite their northern and southern possessions geographically.[3] Having already been in conflict with the French king, Burgundy had sided with the English in theHundred Years' War but then theYorkists in theWars of the Roses, whenHenry VI sided with France. The conflict had left the regional powers of France and England in a weakened state and allowed for the rise of the Burgundian power, alongside its fierce French rivals.[4] The repercussions of theBlack Death also continued to affect Europe and assisted in maintaining a diminished society. According to some historians, the extremely profitable region of the Low Countries supplied the Duchy of Burgundy with sufficient funds to support their ambitions internally but especially externally.[5] In this period of expansion, treaties of trade and peace were signed with Swiss cantons, and would benefit the security of each power against Habsburg and French ambitions.[6] Charles's advances along the Rhine brought him into conflict with the Habsburgs, especially EmperorFrederick III.
According to a Cambridge publication on Swiss history, both the Swiss and the Burgundians had made aggression a significant impact on the region's foreign affairs. In the effort of consolidating the Swiss Confederacy and for independence from Habsburg rule, Swiss forces gained control of the Habsburg town of Thurgau in an effort to expand its borders and influence.[7] The Bernese people were more frequently being attacked by Charles the Bold's Lombard mercenaries. That raised concern to the Bernese as they began to call on their Swiss allies for assistance in the conflict with Burgundy. The aggressive actions of Charles the Bold would eventually culminate in the Swiss giving him the nickname, "the Turk in the West", and make Burgundy as fierce a rival as the Ottomans in the East.

Initially in 1469, DukeSigismund of Habsburg of Austria pawned his possessions in theAlsace in theTreaty of Saint-Omer as a fiefdom to theDuke of Burgundy for a loan or sum of 50,000 florins, as well as an alliance withCharles the Bold, to have them better protected from the expansion of theEidgenossen (theOld Swiss Confederacy).[8] Charles's involvement west of the Rhine gave him no reason to attack the confederates, as Sigismund had wanted, but his embargo politics against the cities ofBasel,Strasbourg andMulhouse, directed by hisreevePeter von Hagenbach, prompted them to turn toBern for help. Charles's expansionist strategy suffered a first setback in his politics when his attack on theArchbishopric of Cologne failed after the unsuccessfulSiege of Neuss (1474–75).
In the conflict's second phase, Sigismund sought to achieve a peace agreement with the Swiss confederates, which eventually was concluded inKonstanz in 1474 (later called theEwige Richtung orPerpetual Accord). He wanted to buy back his Alsace possessions from Charles, who refused. Shortly afterwards,von Hagenbach was captured and executed by decapitation in Alsace, and the Swiss, united with the Alsace cities and Sigismund of Habsburg in an anti-Burgundian league, conquered part of the Burgundian Jura (Franche-Comté) by winning theBattle ofHéricourt in November 1474. KingLouis XI of France joined the coalition by theTreaty of Andernach in December.[9] The next year, Bernese forces conquered and ravagedVaud, which belonged to theDuchy of Savoy, which was allied with Charles the Bold. Bern had called out to its Swiss allies for expansion into the Vaud region of Savoy to prevent future aggression by Charles near Bernese lands that were geographically closer to Burgundy than those of the rest of the Swiss Confederation. However, the other Swiss cities had become displeased at the ever-growing expansionist and aggressive Bernese foreign policy and so initially did not support Bern. The Confederacy was a collective defense agreement between the Swiss members and ensured that if one city were attacked, the others would come to its aid. Because the military actions by Bern in Savoy were an invasion, the other Confederacy allies had no legal obligation to come to the aid of the Bernese.
In theValais, the independent republics of theSieben Zenden, with the help of Bernese and other confederate forces, drove the Savoyards out of the lowerValais after a victory in theBattle on the Planta in November 1475. In 1476, Charles retaliated and marched toGrandson, which belonged toPierre de Romont of Savoy but had recently been taken by the Swiss. There, he had the capitulated garrison hanged or drowned in the lake.[8] When the confederate forces arrived a few days later, Charles was defeated in theBattle of Grandson and was forced to flee the battlefield, leaving behind his artillery and many provisions and valuables. Having rallied his army, he was dealt a devastating blow by the confederates at theBattle of Morat. As Burgundian losses continued, Charles the Bold lost the support of his lords, who were losing men and profit, and a rebellion soon began, led byRené II, Duke of Lorraine. As the revolt continued, René used his land's strategic location between northern and southern Burgundy to cut off communication and to disrupt war capabilities.[10] The internal conflict only made the war with the Swiss more difficult and pulled Charles's attention away from the Confederacy to deal with the more pressing matter of René's revolt. Charles the Bold raised a new army but fell during theBattle of Nancy in 1477 in which the Swiss fought alongside an army of René. The military failures of Charles the Bold are summarized by a common contemporary Swiss quote: "Charles the Bold lost his goods at Grandson, his bravery at Morat and his blood at Nancy."

Near the end of 1476, the Swiss Confederacy began receiving orders fromPope Sixtus IV, who called for an end of the war and the signing of peace between the Swiss and Charles.[11] Although that seemed to be a peaceful resolution to the war, the Pope's aspirations for Charles to divert his attention away from the Swiss and onto the Muslims in a crusade began to show. The papal pressure was eventually ignored by the Swiss, who refused to end the war unless Charles left the Duchy of Lorraine, whose lands were controlled by René II. It is evident through contemporary writings that espionage and censorship played an influential role in both Swiss and Burgundian actions throughout the war. Professional spies were hired by both sides to recover information of enemy movements and weak points. However, this profession proved to be extremely lethal, as some Swiss cities suffered heavy losses, and obtaining information of the opposing side continued to be a difficult task throughout the war.[12]
The Burgundian Wars also assisted in the shift of military strategy across Europe after the Swiss victories over the numerically-superior Burgundians. TheGewalthaufen proved to be an effective Swiss military strategy against the superior Burgundian forces. Until that point, battles had been dominated by cavalry, which could easily overpower infantry troops on the battlefield. However, theGewalthaufen tactic used long spears to counter cavalry with remarkable success. That marked a key shift in military history and tipped the balance in favour of infantry troops over mounted soldiers.[6]

The results of the conflict would prove to have significant repercussions for the future of the Duchy of Burgundy and for the regional stability of Western Europe. With the death of Charles the Bold, the Valois dynasty of thedukes of Burgundy died out, and widespread revolts engulfed the Duchy, which soon collapsed under those pressures. Thenorthern territories of the dukes of Burgundy became a possession of the Habsburgs whenArchduke Maximilian of Austria, who would later becomeHoly Roman Emperor, married Charles's only daughter,Mary of Burgundy. The duchy proper reverted to the crown of France under KingLouis XI.
On 24 January 1478, the Peace of Zürich was signed between Maximilian of Habsburg (as heir of Charles the Bold), Duke René of Lorraine, Archduke Sigmund of Austria, the Swiss Confederacy, and the rest of the Lower Union. The contracting parties pledged mutual neutrality, and the Swiss Confederation returned the Free County of Burgundy (Franche-Comté) to Maximilian for 150,000 guilders. In the meantime, in early 1477, theFranche-Comté had become occupied by French soldiers instead. Later, it was ceded to Maximilian's sonPhilip in 1493 byCharles VIII at theTreaty of Senlis in an attempt to bribe the emperor to remain neutral during Charles's planned invasion of Italy.
The victories of theEidgenossen (Swiss Confederation) over what was one of the most powerful military forces in Europe gained it a reputation of being nearly invincible, and the Burgundian Wars marked the beginning of the rise ofSwiss mercenaries on the battlefields of Europe.[6] Although Bern and other Swiss cities invaded and controlled large swathes of Savoyard territories, the Confederacy maintained only Grandson, Morat and Echallens as notable cities. Inside the Confederacy itself, however, the outcome of the war led to internal conflict since the city cantons insisted on having most of the proceeds as they had supplied the most troops. The country cantons resented that, and theDreizehn Orte disputes almost led to war. They were settled by theStanser Verkommnis of 1481.