Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture

Vol. 34, No. 8, August 2010, pp. 26-27

 

REVIEWS

The Path to Modernity

by Srdja Trifkovic

 

The Thirty Years War: Europe’s Tragedy by Peter H. Wilson

Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press 1,040 pp., $35.00

 

The Hobbesian mayhem that struck Europe in the first half of the 17th century 
was not an event, or a series of events, befitting the designation of a war. 
The plural form, as in the Napoleonic Wars, would be more apt. It was a 
pancontinental minus-sum-game involving all major players (save Russia) that 
continued, relentlessly, long after its early instigators and participants were 
dead. The conflict was not a Clausewitzian “continuation of politics by other 
means”; it was a substitution of politics by the torch and the sword.

 

Peter H. Wilson’s detailed narrative shows the Thirty Years War as absurd, not 
only morally but technically. Rational players, he contends, could have wrapped 
it up well before Sweden joined the fray, yet the balance between ends and 
means in the decisionmaking calculus—tenuous to start with—was lost to fear, 
pride, blood lust, va-banque adventurism, fanaticism, and numbing inertia well 
before the war entered its most destructive phase in the 1630’s. These 
sentiments are present in varying degrees in all wars. In Europe between 1618 
and 1648, they were dominant.

 

After a striking opening that covers the Defenestration of Prague, Wilson takes 
the reader through 100 years and 266 pages of events – the Reformation, the 
emergence of confessional power politics, the complex late-16th-century 
European chessboard – that provide the backdrop to the main story. His ensuing 
account of who did what to whom, and why, is dryly authoritative (endnotes take 
70 pages of small font) and likely to remain a definitive history of the war 
for decades to come. The book is not a joy to read, however. That the narrative 
is sometimes hard to follow is partly owing to the complexity of the material. 
When the author errs, it is on the side of excessive detail. The following 
passage illustrates the problem:

 

Two-thirds of La Valette’s army deserted as supply arrangements broke down. As 
it became obvious the Hessians would not cooperate, the cardinal retreated 
precipitously to Metz in September. Gronsfeld crossed with 6,500 Bavarian 
troops to join Gallas in pushing south from Saarbrücken into Lorraine. This 
struck clearly at French interests, but was intended to restore the situation 
there prior to the French invasion of 1632, not to attack France itself. Duke 
Charles had launched his third attempt that year to recover his duchy, striking 
across Alsace from Breisach at the end of June with the help of two Bavarian 
cavalry regiments. His second sister, Henriette of Pfalzburg, accompanied the 
troops in male attire and participated in the fighting.

 

The above is but one half of a single paragraph, and the bit about Henriette is 
neither a footnote nor in parentheses. There are too many names of people and 
places in Wilson’s book, most of them making a single cameo appearance. (In 
history, as in design, less can be more.)

 

In the last two chapters, however, Wilson comes into his own as a world-class 
historian. His final 80 pages provide a bold but not flamboyant revisionist 
finale. Most importantly, he downplays the religious dimension of the conflict. 
Although religious tension contributed to the outbreak of the war, the link was 
far from straightforward:

 

All Christian confessions sprang from common roots, but developed a momentum of 
their own due to vested material interests, social concerns for status and 
prestige, and the psychological need to belong and to define that belonging by 
distancing oneself from those holding different views. 

 

Eastern Central Europeans, on the other hand, realized that confessional 
disputes impaired their ability to fight the Ottomans who represented a threat 
to all Christians. Among the upper crust the common veneration of classical 
forms helped raise the exchange of ideas above sectarianism, and even during 
the war Ferdinand chose Protestants as imperial poets laureate.

 

Confessional rights, claims, and grievances, intertwined with constitutional 
disputes, were significant in the overall mix of motives and justifications for 
action, but they were not nearly significant enough, Wilson contends, to 
validate the old view that the period 1618-48 was an extension of the wars of 
religion of the previous century. During the Thirty Years War, France was an 
ally of Lutheran Sweden and Calvinist Holland against Catolicissima Spain and 
against the Catholic emperor, up to one third of whose soldiers were 
Protestants. Sweden fought her coreligionist Denmark, while Saxony, 
Brandenburg, and others changed sides during the conflict. Protestant Scots 
served in the French, Polish, and Imperial armies; many Scots and Irish 
Catholics fought for Sweden, Denmark, and Holland; and many men converted to 
the faith of their current employer. All of them ignored Pope Urban VIII, a 
cynical Barberini “compromised by his own opportunism” and jealous of the 
Habsburg power in Spain and the empire alike.

 

The Thirty Years War became infamous for its all-pervasive violence and 
unremitting destruction even before it was over. British readers, Wilson 
relates, were informed by such publications as Dr. Vincent’s illustrated 
Lamentations of Germany (1638), showing murder, mutilation, and mayhem in 
graphic detail: “All parties in the subsequent British Civil Wars struggled to 
avoid their conflict descending into the depravity they believed afflicted 
Germany.” A century and a half later, Schiller and other German Romantics, 
obsessed with death, destruction, and the loss of identity, merged the 
collective memory of plunder, mass murder, and plague with a sense of blameless 
German victimhood and of merciless foreign savagery, with the promise of 
eventual redemption through the rise of a new, stronger German nation from the 
ashes. It was a powerful and dangerous mix, with lasting significance for the 
Germans and for the rest of Europe.

 

As Wilson shows, however, the destruction was uneven across time and spaces, 
allowing some regions to recuperate as others were being ravaged. The lasting 
devastation caused by the Swedes along the Elbe, Rhine, and Main valleys, and 
by the Imperialists and their allies in the Protestant areas after Nördlingen, 
was unprecedented but, mercifully, not universal. The demographic and economic 
recovery was vigorous, even if uneven. Wilson concludes that an accurate 
assessment of the war’s human and material cost is impossible, but that a 15-20 
percent population decline in the affected areas is more realistic than the old 
claim of 33 percent or more that had been long accepted as fact. Nonetheless, 
“Even a 15 percent decline would make the Thirty Years War the most destructive 
conflict in European history.” By comparison, the Soviet Union, which suffered 
the heaviest casualties of World War II, lost less than 12 percent of its 
inhabitants, while, in Europe as a whole, 34 million dead accounted for no more 
than 6 percent of its pre-war population.

 

The scale of lethal violence perpetrated by soldiers against civilians is also 
questioned by Wilson. Beatings, plunder, and intimidation were common enough, 
but documented murder and rape were less widespread than has generally been 
believed. The Saxon town of Naumburg lost more than half of its 8,900 
inhabitants between 1618 and 1645, yet only 18 were listed as killed by 
soldiers, despite the place having been sacked and plundered for a week by the 
Swedes in 1635. For soldier and civilian alike, disease combined with poor 
nourishment, displacement, and atrocious hygiene proved more potent than 
muskets, sword, and cannon. In the ranks, Wilson estimates, “three men died of 
disease for every one killed in action, suggesting that up to 1.8 million 
soldiers died during the war.” It is very likely, he contends, that many of the 
people who died in the empire between 1618 and 1648 would have had their lives 
cut short by plague, typhus, and cholera even without the war, but troop 
movements, plunder, and dislocation clearly made things much worse.

 

Wilson’s conclusions regarding the war’s economic, social, political, 
administrative, cultural, and artistic impact are original, often striking. He 
traces the phenomenon of 17th-century inflation and explains that it would have 
hit Europe even without the mayhem. He disposes of the German and Czech 
nationalist myths, mutually hostile yet equally insistent that the conflict 
destroyed vibrant pre-war cultures and led to alien domination. En passant, 
Wilson demolishes the German claim, post-Versailles, that the loss of Pomerania 
to Sweden denied Germany an opportunity to become a colonial power until the 
1880’s and thus contributed to her sense of encirclement, which led to the 
tragedy of 1914.

 

The resilience of the municipal and provincial structures in the 
German-speaking lands was impressive. Though in acute crisis, Wilson says, 
territorial rule did not collapse, and administrators adapted under seemingly 
impossible conditions. The result was a process of managerial secular 
rationalization inherent in state development and the concurrent weakening of 
the power of princely and ecclesiastical elites. The war forced contemporaries 
to confront a question central to early modern life (the relative roles of God 
and people in shaping events), and the answers were detrimental to the 
attempts, after 1648, to reestablish the old order. Wilson is careful to stress 
that mid-17th-century European rulers were not conscious state-builders. 
Nevertheless, by providing a new charter for European relations, the Peace of 
Westphalia paved the way to absolutism, to the centralized monopoly of 
legitimate violence, to the secularization of politics and society, to the 
global system of sovereign states as primary international actors, and, thus, 
to modernization.

 

“Europe’s tragedy,” indeed.

 

Srdja Trifkovic is the author, most recently, of The Krajina Chronicle.

 

 

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