Golden Bull of 1356
Golden Bull of 1356 | |
---|---|
Created |
|
Location |
|
Author(s) | Delegates of the Imperial Diet held in Nuremberg and Metz |
Signatories | Charles IV |
Purpose | Franchise of the seven Prince-electors voting for the King of the Romans |
The Golden Bull of 1356 (
In June 2013 the Golden Bull was included in the UNESCO's Memory of the World Register.[2]
Background
According to the written text of the Golden Bull of 1356:
We have promulgated, decreed and recommended for ratification the subjoined laws for the purpose of cherishing unity among the Electors, and of bringing about a unanimous election, and of closing all approach to the aforesaid detestable discord and to the various dangers which arise from it.[3]
Though the election of the
Prince-electors
Firstly, the Bull explicitly named the seven Prince-electors (Kurfürsten) who were to choose the King and also defined the Reichserzämter, their (largely ceremonial) offices at court:[5]
Class | Prince-elector | Court office | Sequence of voting |
---|---|---|---|
Ecclesiastical princes | Archbishop of Mainz | Archchancellor of Germany | 7th |
Archbishop of Cologne | Archchancellor of Italy | 2nd | |
Archbishop of Trier | Archchancellor of Burgundy
|
1st | |
Secular princes | King of Bohemia | Arch- Cupbearer
|
3rd |
Count Palatine of the Rhine | Arch-Steward | 4th | |
Duke of Saxony-Wittenberg | Arch-Marshal | 5th | |
Margrave of Brandenburg | Arch-Chamberlain | 6th |
Secondly, the principle of majority voting was explicitly stated for the first time in the Empire. The Bull prescribed that four (out of seven) votes would always suffice to elect a new King; as a result, three Electors could no longer block the election. Thirdly, the Electoral principalities were declared indivisible, and succession to them was regulated to ensure that the votes would never be divided. Finally, the Bull cemented a number of privileges for the Electors, confirming their elevated role in the Empire. It is therefore also a milestone in the establishment of largely independent states in the Empire, a process to be concluded only centuries later, notably with the Peace of Westphalia of 1648.
This codification of prince-electors, though largely based on precedence, was not uncontroversial, especially in regard to the two chief rivals of the ruling House of Luxembourg:
- The House of Wittelsbach ruled the Duchy of Bavaria as well as the County Palatinate. Dynastic divisions had caused the two territories to devolve upon distinct branches of the house. The Treaty of Pavia, which in 1329 restored the Palatinate branch, stipulated that Bavaria and the Palatinate would alternate in future elections, but the Golden Bull fixed the electoral vote upon the Palatinate and not upon Bavaria, partly because Charles's predecessor and rival Louis IV was of that branch. Louis IV's sons, Louis V and Stephen II of Bavaria, protested this omission, feeling that Bavaria, one of the original duchies of the realm and their family's chief territory for over 170 years, deserved primacy over the Palatinate. The omission of Bavaria from the list of prince-electors also allowed Bavaria, which had only recently been reunited, to fall into dynastic fragmentation again. Brandenburg was in the hands of the Bavarian Wittelsbachs (though held by a junior member of the house) in 1356; they eventually lost the territory to the Luxemburgs in 1373, leaving the Bavarian branch without representation in the electoral college until 1623.
- The Frederick Barbarossa. The document gave Austria – elevated to the position of an Archduchy – special privileges, including primogeniture. While ignored by the Emperor and other princes at the time, the document was eventually ratified when Frederick of Austriahimself became Emperor in the 15th century. Still, the Habsburgs remained without an electoral vote until they succeeded to the Kingdom of Bohemia in 1526.
Procedures
The bull regulated the whole election process in great detail, listing explicitly where, when, and under which circumstances what should be done by whom, not only for the
Quod si facere distulerint infra triginta dies, a die prestiti juramenti prefati continuo numerandos, extunc transactis eisdem triginta diebus amodo panem manducent et aquam et nullatenus civitatem exeant antedictam, nisi prius per ipsos vel majorem partem ipsorum rector seu temporale caput fidelium electum fuerit, ut prefertur.[7]
[Translation:] But if they shall fail to do this within thirty days, counting continuously from the day when they took the aforesaid oath: when those thirty days are over, from that time on they shall live on bread and water, and by no means leave the aforesaid city [Frankfurt] unless first through them, or the majority of them, a ruler or temporal head of the faithful shall have been elected, as was said before.[8]
— Chapter 2, §3.
Besides regulating the election process, the chapters of the Golden Bull contained many minor decrees. For instance, it also defined the order of marching when the emperor was present, both with and without his insignia. A relatively major decision was made in chapter 15, where Charles IV outlawed any conjurationes, confederationes, and conspirationes, meaning in particular the city alliances (
The pope's involvement with the Golden Bull of 1356 was basically nonexistent, which was significant in the history of relations between the popes and the emperors. When Charles IV laid down procedure for electing a King of the Romans, he mentioned nothing about receiving papal confirmation of the election. However, Pope Innocent VI did not protest this because he needed Charles’s support against the Visconti.[9] Pope Innocent continued to have good relations with Charles IV after the Golden Bull of 1356 until the former's death in 1362.[10]
References
- ISBN 9781987027402.
- ^ Memory of the World - The “Golden Bull” – All seven originals and the “King Wenceslaus’ luxury manuscript copy” of the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek , www.unesco.org
- ^ Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356. translated into English, Yale
- ^ Friedrich Heer, trans. Janet Sondheimer, The Holy Roman Empire (New York: Federick A. Praeger Publishers, 1968), p. 117
- ^ a b Bryce, James (1978). The Holy Roman Empire (new ed.). London: Macmillan. p. 243.
- ^ Friedrich Heer, The Holy Roman Empire, trans. Janet Sondheimer, (New York: Federick A. Praeger Publishers, 1968), 117.
- ^ "Goldene Bulle Karls IV. Capitulum II". www.phil.uni-erlangen.de. Archived from the original on 2006-05-20.
- ^ "The Avalon Project: The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A.D."
- ^ Yves Renouard, The Avignon Papacy 1305–1403 (Connecticut: Archon Books, 1970), 127.
- ^ D. S. Chambers, Popes, Cardinals and War (London: I.B. Tauris, 2006), 28.
Further reading
- Boehm, Barbara Drake; et al. (2005). Prague: The Crown of Bohemia, 1347-1437. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 1588391612.
External links
- The complete Golden Bull of 1356, translated into English.
- Selections from the Golden Bull from the Internet Mediaeval Sourcebook at the Fordham University Centre for Mediaeval Studies.
- The integral Golden Bull in Latin, comparative listing of all five initial copies.
- Bernd-Ulrich Hergemöller, Golden Bull, 1356, published 8 March 2010, english version published 27 February 2020 ; in: Historisches Lexikon Bayerns
- online-Versions as in Latin as in Medieval High-German Dialects
Literature
- Bryce, James, The Holy Roman Empire (London: The Macmillan Company, A New Edition, 1978), 243.
- Chambers. D.S., Popes, Cardinals and War (London: I.B. Tauris, 2006), 28.
- Renouard, Yves, The Avignon Papacy 1305–1403 (Connecticut : Archon Books, 1970), 127.
- Heer, Friedrich, trans. Janet Sondheimer, The Holy Roman Empire (New York: Federick A. Praeger Publishers, 1968), 117.