AP European History

Barron’s

The Reformation

The Wars of Religion

The War of the Three Henrys (1587-1589)

This was partially a religious war and partially a dynastic war. The weak king, Henry III of France, was counseled to root out the Protestant, Huguenot nobility by Henry of Guise.

The Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648)
The Four Phases of the War

The Peace of Westphalia, 1648

  1. The Peace of Augsburg was reinstated, but Calvinism was added as acceptable for Germany.
  2. The Edict of Restitution was revoked, guaranteeing the possession of former Church states to their Protestant holders.
  3. Switzerland and Holland were made independent states, freed from the Habsburg dominions.
  4. France, Sweden, and Brandenburg (the future Prussia) received various territories.
  5. The German princes were made sovereign rulers, severely limiting the power of the Holy Roman Emperor and the influence of the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs. With over three hundred separate rulers in Germany, national unification was ignored until well into the nineteenth century.

Effects of the Thirty Years’ War

  1. Germanic states were devastated, the population reduced in some parts by well over a third. Once a cultural and political leader in Europe, it stagnated, helping to prevent its establishment as a sovereign, united nation for more than two centuries and complicating its relations with the rest of the world into the twentieth century.
  2. The age of religious wars ended; the modern age of sovereign states began in Europe, and Balance of Power politics prevailed in Europe, whereby nation-states and dynasties went to war to prevent anyone power from dominating the continent.
  3. The Habsburgs were weakened. The Austrian monarchy lost most of its influence over Germany, ending the possibility of a Europe united under the family. Habsburg Spain was left a second-rate power.
  4. The Counter-Reformation was slowed; Protestantism was firmly established in its European strongholds.
  5. The Holy Roman Empire ceased to be a viable political structure and the Germanic states would not be unified again until 1871.
  6. Calvinism gained acceptance throughout Protestant Europe.
  7. Anabaptists were persecuted and disappeared as a religion.