This is a list of wars involving the Holy Roman Empire (HRE) (962–1806[1]), since 1512 also known as the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation (German: Heiliges Römisches Reich Deutscher Nation, Latin: Sacrum Imperium Romanum Nationis Germanicæ).[2]
Holy Roman Empire (962–1806)
Conflict and date | Combatant 1 | Combatant 2 | Result | Ruling King/Emperor |
---|---|---|---|---|
Otto I's raid on Poland (963) | Holy Roman Empire | Duchy of Poland | Roman Victory | Otto I |
Franco-German War of 978-980 | Holy Roman Empire | West Francia | French victory | Otto II |
Slavic revolt of 983 | Holy Roman Empire | Wends | Roman defeat | Otto II |
Polish-Saxon Invasion of Veleti (985) | Duchy of Poland Holy Roman Empire |
Veleti | Polish and Saxon Victory | Otto III |
Polish-Bohemian War (990) | Duchy of Bohemia | Roman and Polish Victory | Otto III | |
Polish-German invasion of Veleti (992) | Veleti | Polish and Roman Victory | Otto III | |
Polish-German invasion of Obotrites (995) | Obotrites | Polish and Roman Victory | Otto III | |
German–Polish War (1003–1018) | Holy Roman Empire | Duchy of Poland | Peace of Bautzen
|
Henry II |
Bolesław I's intervention in the Kievan succession crisis (1015–1019) | Duchy of Poland | Kievan Rus' | Temporary victory for Sviatopolk and Boleslaw, Polish sack of Kiev | Henry II |
Polish-German War (1028-1031) | Holy Roman Empire
Bezprym |
Mieszko II Lambert Kingdom of Hungary |
Victory for Bezprym | Conrad II |
Emperor Conrad II's military campaign against Hungary (1030-1031) |
Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary | Roman defeat
|
Conrad II |
German-Hungarian Wars (1042-1043) | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary | Roman Victory | Henry III |
Henry III's military campaign against Hungary (1044) | Holy Roman Empire
Peter Orseolo and his allies |
The army of King Samuel Aba | Roman Victory
|
Henry III |
War between King Peter and Prince Andrew
(1046) |
King Peter's army | Prince Andrew's army | Hungarian Victory | Henry III |
Emperor Henry III's military campaigns against Hungary (1051-1052) | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary | Hungarian Victory | Henry III |
German-Hungarian border War (1056-1058) | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary | Stalemate, treaty of Marchfeld | Henry IV |
Civil War between King Andrew I and his brother, Prince Bela (1060) | King Andrew I's army | Prince Béla's army | Prince Béla's Victory | Henry IV |
German invasion of Hungary (1063) | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary | Roman Victory | Henry IV |
Polish-German War (1109) | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of Poland | Roman defeat | Henry V |
Wars of the Guelphs and Ghibellines
|
Ghibellines | Guelphs | 1st phase:Peace of Constance (1186)
2nd phase:Stalemate (1392)
|
Frederick I |
Polish-German War (1146) | Holy Roman Empire | Mieszko III the Old | Mieszko III the Old's victory/Roman defeat | Conrad III of Germany |
Wendish Crusade (1147) | Holy Roman Empire
|
Obotrite Confederacy
Wendish allies: |
March of Brandenburg reconquers Havelberg, County of Holstein expels its Wends | Conrad III of Germany |
Second Crusade
(1147-1150) |
![]() Other Crusaders |
Emirate of Damascus
other Muslim and Pagan entities in East Central Europe, Iberia and the Near East. |
Victories in East Central Europe and Iberia. Defeat in the Holy Land. | Conrad III of Germany |
Polish-German War (1157) | Holy Roman Empire | Bolesław IV the Curly | Peace of Krzyszkowo | Frederick I Barbarossa |
Third Crusade
(1189-1192) |
![]() Other Crusaders |
Ayyubids | Small Gains for the Crusaders. Jerusalem stays under Ayyubid control. | Frederick I Barbarossa |
Fourth Crusade
(1202-1204) |
Holy Roman Empire | Byzantine Empire | Partition of the Byzantine Empire
|
Otto IV |
Fifth Crusade
(1217-1221) |
Holy Roman Empire
Other Crusaders |
Ayyubids | Eight-Year truce between the Ayyubids and the Crusaders | Frederick II |
Sixth Crusade
(1227-1229) |
![]() including in Personal Union: |
Ayyubids | Kingdom of Jerusalem regains Jerusalem through peaceful negotiations. | Frederick II |
Great Interregnum[1]
1245/50–1273/5 |
![]()
|
![]()
|
Compromise
| |
Hussite Wars
(1419-1434) |
Catholic Church, Crusades and Loyalists: | Bohemian Wars: | Eventual defeat for Radical Hussites, Victory for Moderate Hussites and Catholics | Sigismund |
Italian War of 1494-1498 | League of Venice:
England (1496–98) |
![]() (before 1495) |
Victory for the League of Venice | Maximilian I |
Swabian War
(1499) |
![]() |
![]() |
Swiss Victory
|
Maximilian I |
Italian War of 1521-1526 | Holy Roman Empire
Papal States (1521-1523 and 1525–1526) |
France
Swiss mercenaries Republic of Venice Papal States (1524-1525) Marquisate of Saluzzo |
Habsburg Victory
Capture of Francis I of France at the Battle of Pavia
|
Charles V |
War of the League of Cognac
(1526-1530) |
Holy Roman Empire
Spain Duchy of Ferrara Republic of Genoa (1528-1530) Duchy of Mantua (1528-1530) |
Kingdom of France
Swiss mercenaries Papal States Swiss Guards Republic of Venice Republic of Florence Kingdom of England Republic of Genoa (1526-1528) Kingdom of Navarre Duchy of Milan |
Treaty of Cambrai
Habsburg Victory |
Charles V |
Italian War of 1536-1538 | Holy Roman Empire | Kingdom of France | Truce of Nice | Charles V |
Italian War of 1542-1546 | Holy Roman Empire | France | Inconclusive | Charles V |
Schmalkaldic War
1546–1547 |
Empire of Charles V:
Supported by:Papal States |
Schmalkadic League: | Imperial-Spanish Victory
Schmalkadic League dissolved, Saxon electoral dignity passed to the Albertine House of Wettin |
Charles V |
Second Schmalkaldic War
March–August 1552 |
Imperial–Habsburg forces | Protestant princes | Protestant victory
|
Charles V |
War of the Jülich Succession
(1609-1614) |
1609-1610:
1614: |
1609-1610:
1614: |
Treaty of Xanten | Rudolph II |
Thirty Years' War
1618–1648 |
Imperial alliance prior to 1635[lower-alpha 1]
Post-1635 Peace of Prague |
Anti-Imperial alliance prior to 1635[lower-alpha 2] |
|
Ferdinand III |
Franco-Dutch War
(1672-1678) |
![]() Spain (from 1673) Brandenburg-Prussia (from 1673) Lorraine (from 1673) Denmark-Norway (from 1674) England (1678) |
![]() England (1672-1674) Sweden (from 1674) Munster (1672-1673) Cologne (1672-1673) |
Treaty of Nijmegen | Leopold I |
Nine Years War
(1688-1697) |
Holy Roman Empire
(until 1691) |
France | Treaty of Ryswick | Leopold I |
War of the Spanish Succession
(1701-1714) |
Holy Roman Empire
England (until 1707) Great Britain (from 1707) |
France
Bavaria (until 1704) Cologne (until 1702) Mantua (until 1708) |
Treaties of Utrecht (1713), Rastatt (1714) and Baden (1714)
|
Leopold I |
War of the Polish Succession
(1733-1735) |
Holy Roman Empire | France | Treaty of Vienna
|
Charles VI |
Liège Revolution
(1789-1791) |
Holy Roman Empire | Liège Rebels
Supported by:Prussia |
Foundation of Liège Republic (1789);
reversion to Prince-Bishopric(1791); annexation by France (1795) |
Leopold II |
War of the First Coalition (mostly the Low Countries theatre) 1792–1797 |
First Coalition:![]() ![]()
|
![]() ![]()
|
French Republican victory
|
Francis II |
War of the Second Coalition
1798–1802 |
Second Coalition:
|
French victory
|
Francis II | |
War of the Third Coalition
1803–1806 |
Third Coalition:
|
French victory
|
Francis II |
See also
- Reichskrieg
- Army of the Holy Roman Empire (Reichsarmee)
- Imperial Army (Holy Roman Empire) (Kaiserliche Armee)
- Imperial Military Constitution
- Imperial Register
- Roman Month
- List of wars in the Low Countries until 1560
- List of wars in the southern Low Countries (1560–1829)
- List of wars involving Francia (5th century–987, including West, Middle and East Francia)
- List of wars involving Germany (1806–present)
- Wars and battles involving Prussia (1656–1947)
Notes
- ↑ States that allied at some point between 1618 and 1635
- ↑ States that fought against the Emperor at some point between 1618 and 1635
- ↑ The French First Republic transformed into the First French Empire on 18 May 1804 with the adoption of the Constitution of the Year XII. The Coronation of Napoleon took place on 2 December 1804.
- ↑ Holy Roman Emperor Francis II of Habsburg proclaimed the Austrian Empire on 11 August 1804, elevating the Habsburg monarchy to imperial status by himself. The indirect causes of this move are the French conquest of the Rhineland and further expansion into Germany and the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803, which curbed the meaning and power of the Holy Roman Empire/Emperor. The direct cause of Francis' proclamation was the adoption of the new French Constitution of 18 May 1804, which appointed Napoleon as Emperor of the French (followed by his coronation on 2 December 1804). Instead of an increasingly meaningless and non-hereditary title that was dependent on the cooperation of the Electors and was limited to only the northwestern parts of his Hausmacht, Francis now made all Austrian Habsburg possessions into a unified hereditary empire.
References
- 1 2 3 "Duitsland §6. Geschiedenis". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 2002.
- ↑ Wilson 1999, p. 2.
- ↑ Croxton 2013, pp. 225–226.
- 1 2 Heitz & Rischer 1995, p. 232.
Bibliography
- Croxton, Derek (2013). The Last Christian Peace: The Congress of Westphalia as A Baroque Event. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-33332-2.
- Heitz, Gerhard; Rischer, Henning (1995). Geschichte in Daten. Mecklenburg-Vorpommern; History in data; Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (in German). Koehler&Amelang. ISBN 3-7338-0195-4.
- Wilson, Peter H. (23 July 1999). The Holy Roman Empire 1495-1806. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-349-27649-3.