Previous Page Next Page

Home Page Index Page

1634: The Bavarian Crisis: Chapter Twelve

       Last updated: Friday, March 4, 2005 11:39 EST

 


 

Ingolstadt

    [NOTE TO ERIC: I’M LEAVING THIS UNTIL I GET INPUT FROM YOU. I HAVE THE MAPS THAT YOU SENT WITH THE BOOKS BUT DON’T KNOW YET WHAT YOU ARE PLANNING ON DOING WITH THE SIEGE.]

    Ingolstadt in 163x had a population of about 6,000 people and an important Jesuit college.

    Woodcut of Ingolstadt about 1632:

    http://www.intv.de/frankenstein/Stadt/stadt.htm

    Map of Ingolstadt, 1572:

    http://historic-cities.huji.ac.il/germany/ingolstadt/maps/braun_hogenberg_I_40_2.html

    Ingolstadt city museum site:

    http://www.ingolstadt.de/stadtmuseum/frameset.cfm?url=http://www.ingolstadt.de/stadtmuseum/documents/urkundenarchiv_mu.cfm?mode=documentlist&letter=k

    Web site dealing with the Jesuits in Ingolstadt at the time of the Thirty Years War:

    http://www.bingo-ev.de/~ks451/ingolsta/17jh-02.htm

    Ingolstadt university library in the early modern period:

    http://www.ub.uni-muenchen.de/UBgeschichte/Ingolstadt%202.htm

    Johann Oswald von Zimmern (1604-1680)

    http://www.ingolstadt.de/stadtmuseum/frameset.cfm?url=http://www.ingolstadt.de/stadtmuseum/documents/urkundenarchiv_mu.cfm?mode=documentlist&letter=k

    The Danube, running south of the city, was broken into multiple channels with low-lying islands; it didn’t look a thing like the post-1900s river, which has been forced into a single channel to improve shipping.

    Major web site, with illustrations (German language):

    http://www.bingo-ev.de/~ks451/ingolsta/17jh-01.htm

    It contains a sketch of the channels and a diagram of the fortifications, showing that OTL the Swedish camp was on the south. There’s really no way that this can be the case in the 163x-verse, since GA hasn’t invaded Bavaria and isn’t occupying the south bank. Banér will have to be slanging at it from the north side of the river.

    This is where we should have Ernst bombarding Ingolstadt with crates of improving pamphlets, launched by catapult, with Banér considering this with some bemusement.

    Somewhere, probably here, we need to put in a few words about GA’s response to Banér’s more or less unilateral decision to besiege Ingolstadt at this point.

    It certainly wasn’t unusual in the general context of the period, although GA had tighter control over his commanders than most. However, a fair number of the Barflies seem to think that the arrival of Grantville will have introduced a total version of modern Command and Control into the USE within three years. This strikes me as extraordinarily improbable.

    Depending on how you want to handle the Ingolstadt thread, GA could either be glad that there’s a distraction in the south that will focus the interest of Maximilian and Ferdinand II there, or be infuriated that Banér is handling the war in the Upper Palatinate as the free enterprise zone.

    That’s your call; either way, it really won’t affect the other threads in the book.

    Or you could, if you want, have him undertake it on GA’s instructions. All that would really require is a rewrite of the Miles Bellicosus chapter. Add any other action that you want in this regard.

    [NOTE TO ERIC: I’LL NEED THE FOLLOWING TWO UP-TIME CHARACTERS LATER IN THE NARRATIVE AND WOULD APPRECIATE IT IF YOU COULD WORK THE FOLLOWING INTO THIS CHAPTER.]

    Dane Kitt and Mark Ellis understood one another very well. They had started kindergarten together and graduated from high school together. Both solid students, but not brilliant. Both from the kind of family in which reasonably good behavior and reasonably good grades were not regarded as negotiable. Both of them had decided to live at home and commute to Fairmont State to save money, Dane in mechanical engineering and Mark in civil engineering. They were both third year students when the Ring of Fire hit. They had even talked, sometimes, of starting their own firm some day-one that would specialize in projects for rural area and small towns, the kind of things that the big boys turned up their noses at.

    Neither of them wanted to be here, attached to Banér. No high-flying heroics for them, thank you; no dramatic romances with down-time women. Dane had married Jailyn Wyatt, one of the WVU girls who had been at Rita Stearns’ wedding, last year; Mark was engaged to Stephanie Elias, the younger daughter of Grantville’s second dentist. What they really, really, wanted was for Gustavus Adolphus to win this stupid war, so they could go back home and live a normal life.

    For which reason they were throwing themselves heart and soul into the winning of it. Mark just had more trouble getting the military types to pay attention to him. He realized that. Terry Johnson, his mother, had been ingesting all sorts of things that she shouldn’t while she was producing him and his twin sister Mackenzie out of wedlock. He didn’t know if that was the reason, but in spite of everything that his Aunt Amanda and her husband Price Ellis had done after they adopted them, the twins had ended up being pretty unimpressive physically.

    Dane, on the other hand. His folks had chosen his name because he looked like a Viking when he was born. He still looked like a Viking-a sort of thin and weedy one, not a Hagar the Horrible type. Dane had played basketball. But other people around the camp paid more attention to him than they did to Mark. Even if General Banér had once remarked, “Why did they have to name you fucking Dane? Why not Swede?”

    Dane unwound himself from where he was sitting-a gray metal folding chair with thin yellow vinyl cushions on the seat and back and a matching card table with a yellow vinyl top. He had liberated both from his late Grandma Sadie’s bridge club supplies, packed them into his baggage when he was sent to Amberg, brought them along to Ingolstadt, and insisted that he couldn’t possibly fight this war without them.

    Given the kind of fighting that he did most of the time, he might have been right. Back home in Grantville, his parents were working frantically on aviation and associated things, sort of but not exactly parallel to what Jesse Wood and Hal Smith were doing. He was supposed to figure out whether anything they had developed so far might give Banér just that little edge that he needed to bring this siege off successfully.

    [NOTE TO ERIC: I SUGGEST ASKING MIKE SPEHAR FOR SOME IDEAS IN REGARD TO UP-TIME WEAPONS TO BE BROUGHT INTO PLAY AT INGOLSTADT. HIS VIEW WAS THAT IF HE HAD THE OPTION, HE WOULD BOMB INGOLSTADT FLAT, BUT I THINK THAT’S PROBABLY OVERKILL.]

    [NOTE TO ERIC: IN REGARD TO CHARACTERS AND INTERACTION ON THE BAVARIAN SIDE, INSIDE AND OUTSIDE THE WALLS, I’VE TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH AND SENT YOU BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION ON FARENSBACH AND CRATZ VON SCHARFFENSTEIN, THE TWO TRAITORS WHO ATTEMPTED OTL TO BETRAY INGOLSTADT TO THE SWEDES IN 1633, AS WELL AS FRANZ VON MERCY, THE LORRAINE COMMANDER WHO WENT INTO MAXIMILIAN’S SERVICE, AND JOHANN VON WERTH, THE “UP FROM THE RANKS” BAVARIAN CAVALRY COMMANDER.]

INTERLUDE

    March-April, 1634

    Rosa Mystica

    Rome

    Easter would be on April 16 in this year of 1634. The penitential routines of Lent were already upon them. The Golden Rose, the Rose of Virtue, would be blessed and dedicated, as always, on Laetare, the fourth Sunday in Lent, that would be March 23.

    Laetare. If you looked at it another way, it was the third Sunday before Easter: the Sunday during Lent when the penitential purple was replaced by rose-colored vestments, signaling hope and joy. The Sunday during Lent when the Mass opened with the command, “Rejoice.” Laetare: rejoice that there is love after hate, joy after sorrow, and fullness after famine.

    The jeweler to the curia had just delivered this year’s rose. Cardinal Antonio Barberini the younger was looking at it. Phrases from Isaiah floated through his mind. "There shall come forth a rod out of the root of Jesse.” “A flower shall rise up out of his root."

    “Lo! How a rose e’er blooming.” The hymn of Marian devotion had been sung in the Germanies for well over a century, at least. Some of the printed versions had more than twenty verses. In Antonio’s view, Michael Praetorius’s modern arrangement from his 1609 Musae Sionae was the most magnificent setting of the tune:

    Das Roeslein, das ich meine,

    Davon Jesias sagt,

    Ist Maria, die reine,

    Die uns das Bluemlein bracht;

    Aus Gottes ew’gem Rat

    Hat sie ein Kind geboren

    Und blieb ein’ reine Magd.

    The rose that I am thinking of,

    Of which Isaiah speaks.

    Is Mary, the pure,

    Who bore the little flower.

    By God’s eternal counsel,

    She bore a child

    And yet remained a virgin.

    The rose was truly golden – an ornament of the purest gold that could be made to hold the shape the artisans gave it – a thorny branch with leaves and several flowers. The largest rose sprang from the top of the stem; the others clustered around it. There was also a ruby at the center of the rose, its color reminding the observer of Christ’s blood. Depending upon the state of the Curia’s exchequer, the rose blessed in any given year might be larger or smaller, more or less bejeweled with diamonds, but always beautifully made. If no one was deemed worthy to receive it, it was kept in Rome. The blessing ceremony occurred every year, but the same rose was re-used until it was given away. Then a new one was made.

    Originally, the rose had been given to men and women, cities and monasteries, persons and institutions, without distinction. Since the beginning of the century, the rose had been sent only to queens and princesses. A militant church had started to bestow blessed swords on kings and princes. The duty of carrying the rose and giving it to recipients who were not in Rome at the time of the ceremony fell to cardinal legates, to nuncios, and to other high church officials.

    “Who’s getting it this year?” Cardinal Francesco asked.

    “The Austrian archduchess,” Antonio the younger answered. “Uncle Maffeo recognizes quite clearly that marrying Maximilian of Bavaria represents a service to the church that is far beyond the ordinary call of duty.”

    Everybody else in the room stared at him.

 



 

Vienna

    There had been a great spate of diplomatic activity, Maria Anna knew. Requests for the issuance of ecclesiastical dispensations for multiple lines of consanguineal and affinal relationships between the prospective bride and room had gone from Vienna to Rome by the fastest post possible, accompanied by letters from the nuncio. Undoubtedly, similar requests and letters had been sent from Munich. After some very brief vacillation on the part of the pope-or, possibly on the part of the cardinals and other curial officials, which had scarcely been surprising, since Cousin Philip’s ambassador would almost certainly have been pressuring for a delay-, they had received word. The pope would do all that was necessary and would do it as quickly as possible.

    Thus, today’s audience, for Papa to announce a wedding date: July 15.

    Thus, today’s mass, to give due thanks to God.

    Not a triumphal mass. Ash Wednesday, this year, had been on February 26. The court was well into the rituals of the penitential season of Lent.

    Papa upon his throne in the Hofburg was far more impressive than Papa at the breakfast table with crumbs in his beard. The principal public audience chamber, which went under the name of the Ratstube, which made it sound rather like a cozy little room, was really quite large. The throne was at one end, with a canopy or pavilion above it. This had curtains, which were withdrawn to reveal Papa’s presence. The court marshal, holding the sword of state, stood on his right. The chamberlain stood to his left, reading out the items on the agenda. He carried the symbols and introduced foreign representatives; it was his right to determine the sequence of the audiences. The right to determine the order in which those present would be heard gave him great power.

    Also on Papa’s right, but on the side wall, was a smaller throne with a smaller canopy. The heir to the throne sat there when he was present, but Ferdinand was not present. He was inspecting fortifications against the Turks. There was a chair for Cardinal Dietrichstein. He was old, he was not well, and once the protocol people were persuaded to think of it the right way, being a Prince of the Church, he was a prince. So he got to sit.

    Everyone else in the room stood, the men bare-headed in deference to the emperor. They also all wore heavy cloaks over their formal court dress. March or not, the high-ceilinged room was as cold as a w. . . . Oh, no. We don’t think those words.

    If Papa looked impressive, the palace at Vienna was truly not very grand. Herr Merian, in his description of the Germanies, had said that it was “not particularly splendidly constructed, and rather small for such a mighty and supreme potentate.” Long ago, Maximilian I, the founder of Habsburg greatness, had preferred to reside at Innsbruck and even at Augsburg. Of course, so long ago, the Vorlande, the scattered Habsburg possessions in southwestern Germany, had been comparatively more important. That was before Hungary and Bohemia had come to the family. More recently, Rudolf II had preferred Prague. Vienna was, really, a provincial capital that Papa had pressed into service as an imperial seat of government-not that he still did not travel, to Linz and to Graz, to Pressburg and to Prague, taking the court and its major officials with him. Sometimes he took all of the court-with family, officials, councillors, chaplains, choristers, and pages, about 500 people to move from one residence to another. The high steward supervised the people, but the master of the horse controlled the horses, wagons, and carriages, which sometimes made travel an interesting experience.

    Maria Anna waited. The family members were to accompany Papa on a procession from the audience chamber to church. The Hofburg was not like the Spanish Escorial, with the great church as the center of the palace. In Vienna, unless using a small, private, chapel, the imperial family walked to church in public, just like anyone else.

    In Munich, things would be much more grand. Uncle Max was only a duke, not an emperor, but he kept a court almost twice as large as that of Vienna; the Residenz in Munich was far more modern and elegant.

    It is too bad that Uncle Max could not come to Vienna for the wedding, she thought. The more of her time that had been taken up with wedding preparations-for, truly, they had more or less known that the dispensations would be issued; just not, exactly, when-the less opportunity she had for study. It had become more and more difficult for her to obtain information. If it hadn’t been for Dona Mencia, she would have had miserably little.

    Dona Mencia, however, somehow, was obtaining copies of material from the up-time encyclopedias. Things were not the same; truly they were not. In some ways, it was the small things, rather than the great ones, that made this most real. In that other world, true, she had married Uncle Max. But in that world, Tante Elisabeth Renata had lived for one more year. In that world, the Cardinal Infante had not gone to the Netherlands and defeated the heretic house of Orange there. In that other world, he had brought an army from Spain, via Italy, and had joined with the Austrian army led by her brother Ferdinand. Outside of the imperial city of Nördlingen, they had won a great victory over the Swedes. Papa had been so proud of Ferdinand that he had cried tears of joy.

    Here, of course, no one had defeated the Swedes, yet. Their king, who led the armies of the heretics to achieve impossibilities, was not dead. Ferdinand had not achieved a great victory; Papa was not angry with him, but not especially proud of him, either-no more so than usual. The Catholic cause was not ascendant and secure.

    Therefore, Uncle Max would not come to Vienna for the wedding. He must, the Bavarians had said, remain at home, ensuring the security of the Danube frontier against the Swedes’ regent and general who were occupying the Upper Palatinate and actively besieging his jewel fortress at Ingolstadt. The Bavarians had said that the duke had decided that he should not go so far from his army; he must remain available if needed to defend the cause of the Catholic League.

    So Maria Anna would be married in Munich, not Vienna. If all was well at Ingolstadt, the duke would meet her at Passau and escort her from there to the Bavarian capital. Somehow, she mused, it would have been a little easier to be married at home. Turning her head slightly, she smiled at Dona Mencia, who was standing just behind her.

    Dona Mencia had also, as it chanced, been thinking of the differences between the was and the is. Thank God for the dispatches from Brussels. She had quite deliberately been focusing the archduchess’ attention on the interesting discrepancies between the broader history narrated in the encyclopedias and what had happened since the spring of 1631. She hoped that no one else had filled Maria Anna’s ears full of the disturbing reports from Munich. The ones about Duke Maximilian’s indifference to the marriage, and his plain statement to his privy council that if they wanted him to marry the girl, they could bring her here, because he saw no reason to take the trouble to go there. The ones which said that Duke Maximilian was not concentrating his attention on the threats from Duke Ernst and Banér; the ones which said that he left his chambers only to go to the chapel, and the chapel only to go to his chambers.

    Another man moved forward to present his petition. Mentally, Maria Anna called up the wreath of blessings upon which she was still focusing her morning devotions. She hadn’t added any new roses to it for quite some time. She thought hard about blessings.

 



 

Dux Christianus
Munich, Bavaria

    Although Duke Maximilian showed no interest in the arrangements for his forthcoming marriage, numerous other people were quite determined that Bavaria should not be disgraced by a shabby welcome for its new duchess. Many of the interests coalesced-the Duchess Mechthilde, the city council, the Jesuit collegium. Among the various other items offered to celebrate her arrival in the city, there would be a play.

    A play in Munich was not a modest undertaking. Long since, they had spilled out of the confining space of the courtyard of the Jesuit college and took place in the huge Schrannenplatz in front of the cathedral. It was not uncommon for a play to have one hundred fifty or two hundred actors with speaking parts; the costumed extras for crowd scenes could range from a thousand to more than fifteen hundred. They had huge painted sets; multiple special effects with waves and shipwrecks, guardian angels descending from heaven, music, and fireworks. They were in Latin, of course. For more than fifty years, however, it had been the custom to print German-language programs for the spectators that summarized the plot development of each act, pointed out the moral of the story, and sometimes even translated crucial passages of the major speeches. It was Father Matthaeus Rader, still teaching at the collegium, who had had that idea. The first such program had been printed in 1597 for the dedication of St. Michael’s church in Munich. Although for the past fifteen or more years he had been concentrating on a three-volume collection of the lives of Bavaria’s saints, he agreed to accept responsibility for the overall supervision of one more event.

    There wouldn’t be time to commission an entirely new play for the wedding and have new music composed and rehearsed. Why, the wedding celebration this year between the son of the king of Denmark and the daughter of the elector of Saxony (heretics all) had required two years of preparation. Three months was quite hopeless for that. They would need to revive an existing play.

    Of all the well-known Jesuit playwrights, one had taught for a time in Munich before being called to Rome to serve as a papal censor-Jakob Bidermann. Bidermann, like Father Drexel, the court preacher, was one of Rader’s former students. Rader suggested one of his works with, perhaps, a new and topical poetic introduction and epilogue.

    The whole committee agreed that this would work. But which play? The most famous was the Cenodoxus. It was powerful, undoubtedly. When it was first performed, the actor who portrayed the protagonist had been moved to join the Jesuit order and more than a dozen Bavarian court officials had taken leave from their ordinary duties in order to make a retreat and perform St. Ignatius Loyola’s Exercises.

    Mary Ward, who had been drawn into the committee on the presumption that her school would supply the many flower-petal-scattering girl children who constituted part of any celebration, remarked that this was not, perhaps, precisely the effect that one wished to achieve during a wedding celebration.

    Josephus? Not quite right. Philemon the Martyr? Umm, no, not this time. Jacob the Ursurer? Off-topic.

    Patiently, Duchess Mechthilde let the discussion proceed along its inconclusive way until everyone was getting tired and would welcome a decisive intervention. They should make the play a compliment to Duke Maximilian, she suggested. A compliment to his generalship of the troops of the Catholic League. Of all of Bidermann’s plays, the best for this purpose would be . . . Of course! Why hadn’t they thought of it in the first place. Some time during the week before the wedding, Munich would put on a spectacular performance of Belisarius, Christian General.

    However, Father Rader had insisted, there should be a new poetical prologue and epilogue that specifically referenced the wedding. That could certainly be achieved within the allotted time. Who? Well, young Balde would be the best choice.

    “But,” one of the city councilmen sputtered, “he’s in Amberg. In the Upper Palatinate. Imprisoned by the heretics.”

    “He isn’t imprisoned,” Rader answered. “And the mails are going through. By somewhat roundabout routes, at times, but going through. The house of Thurn and Taxis is most ingenious. It shall be Balde.”

    Once this had been decided, all of the committee members took up their tasks with little additional discussion; most of them had taken part in the staging of a dozen or more plays of this type. There are many advantages to fielding a veteran team.

    Duchess Mechthilde saw no reason to remind them of the play’s full title. Not that her brother-in-law deserved to experience derision or misery. As far as Mechthilde could find out, based on the information she received from servants and various other informants she had placed judiciously here and there among the court personnel, Maximilian truly did wish to retire to a monastery; he clearly deserved all the assistance that she could give him in attaining his desire. The misfortune was that there were others who were hindering his pursuit of that laudable and praiseworthy goal. Those others-yes, they did deserve whatever adverse fate could be brought to bear upon them. Munich would be performing A Tragi-Comedy of the Rise and Fall of Belisarius, Christian General, who Fell from the Highest Happiness of Fame into the Extreme Mockery of Misfortune under Emperor Justinian, about the Year of Christ 530 .

   

Brussels, the Spanish Netherlands

   

    [NOTE TO ERIC: FOR DON FERNANDO WE NEED A COUPLE OF PAGES ON THE “CHRISTIAN GENERAL” THEME THAT WILL MAKE A COUNTERPOINT TO THE MUNICH EPISODE. I HESITATE TO PUT ANYTHING HERE UNTIL I KNOW HOW THE BALTIC WAR WILL BE PLAYING OUT THT MONTH. PREFERABLY, SOMETHING THAT HE’S PERFORMING IN THE WAY OF CHRISTIAN GENERALSHIP THAT MAKES IT PLAIN THAT HIS DEFINITION OF IT IS QUITE DIFFERENT FORM THE ONE THAT HAD MARKED MAXIMILIAN’S CAREER. IT DOESN’T MATTER MUCH WHAT - HE COULD REFUSE TO REQUIRE A MASS EXILE OF RELIGIOUS DISSIDENTS. JUST SOMETHING.]

   


Home Page Index Page

 


 

 



Previous Page Next Page

Page Counter Image