- Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria
Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand (1609/16101 in
Escorial nearMadrid ,Spain -9 November 1641 inBrussels ) (also known as Don Fernando de Austria and as Ferdinand von Österreich) was Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church,Infante ofSpain ,Archduke ofAustria ,Archbishop of Toledo (1619-41), and military commander during theThirty Years' War .Biography
Youth
Born at the
Escorial nearMadrid ,Spain in 16091, he was the son of theKing of Spain , Philip III and Margaret of Austria, sister of Emperor Ferdinand II. His older siblings were King Philip IV andAnne of Austria , Queen Consort of France.His father wishing that he make an ecclesistical career, in 1619 he was elevated to the Primacy of Spain, becoming
Archbishop of Toledo . Shortly afterwards he was created Cardinal. The style Cardinal-Infante was a combination of his dignity as Cardinal and his station as a royal Prince ("Infante " in Spanish) of Spain. Ferdinand was never actually ordained aPriest , not unusual for royalty and members of the aristocracy, who nevertheless received clerical benefices carrying huge incomes along with them.House of Habsburg since Philip IIEvents leading to the Battle of Nördlingen
In 1630 the Cardinal Infante's aunt Isabella Clara Eugenia planned to make him her successor as governor of the
Spanish Netherlands . To move to the Netherlands in a style befitting to a governor, a strong army had to accompany him. Travel by ship from Spain was not an option, due to heavy risk of battle with the Dutch navy, regarded as unacceptable to bear up by a royal person. Therefore he went toGenoa in 1633, so quitting his Governorship ofCatalonia where he was duly trained, to meet with an army from Milan for a planned march through the famous Spanish Way acrossLombardy ,Tyrol , andSwabia , and then following theRhine to the Netherlands. Ferdinand also planned to secure this supply route with a string of garrisons, and to support the army of King Ferdinand of Hungary, his brother-in-law the emperor's son and heir, who was leading the Imperial army facing the Swedes in the Thirty Years' War. Since disease delayed his travels, he sent half of his army ahead under the command of theDuke of Feria . However, this army was severely depleted during fighting with the Swedish army ofBernhard of Saxe-Weimar andGustaf Horn . The Spanish requested 4000 cavalry from the Imperial generalAlbrecht von Wallenstein , but since Wallenstein declined the request the Spanish had to fund the troops on their own. The Cardinal-Infante was able to continue his travels in 1634, collecting inBavaria the remains of the army of Gómez Suárez, who had died in January 1634.Battle of Nördlingen
("Main article: Battle of Nördlingen")
Meanwhile, Ferdinand of Hungary was able to defeat the Swedish army at
Regensburg in July 1634. This Ferdinand and his cousin the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand then raced to merge their armies. The Swedish forces of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar and Gustaf Horn desperately tried to prevent this merger, but were unable to catch up with Ferdinand of Hungary. The Cardinal-Infante crossed theDanube in August 1634. In September both armies were able to merge, and camped south ofNördlingen inSwabia . At that time Nördlingen was protected by a small Swedish garrison. Shortly thereafter, the armies of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar and Gustaf Horn also reached Nördlingen, preparing the events for the decisive Battle of Nördlingen. Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand and his nephew Ferdinand then prepared for battle, ignoring the advice of the more experienced generals, such as the Imperial generalMatthias Gallas . Bernhard and Horn also prepared for battle, but they were by now rivals and in disagreement with each other. They also underestimated the numerically superior enemy forces, due to incorrect reports that did not realize the Spanish Army of the late Duke of Feria had joined the Cardinal-Infante and believed that the enemy forces numbered only 7,000, not 21,000 infantry, compared to 16,000 Swedish infantry. During the battle, almost anything that could go wrong went wrong for the Swedish forces, due to the strong defensive efforts of the Spanish Infantry (the most feared "Tercios Viejos", mainly those commanded by Fuenclara, Idiáquez and Toralto) after pushing back fifteen Swedish assaults against Blue and Yellow Horn regiments on the hill of Albuch they protected, so the two Ferdinands achieved an outstanding military victory. Gustaf Horn was captured, the Swedish army was destroyed, and the remainder that fled toHeilbronn was only a shadow of the former glorious army. As a whole this battle proved that the deployment improvements deviced by Maurice of Orange and the late Swedish King did not match yet the old Tercio when Spanish troops were engaged in the fighting.The Spanish Netherlands
The King of Hungary tried to convince his cousin to stay and to strengthen their hold on
Germany , but the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand moved his troops almost immediately after the battle to continue toBrussels . At the end of 1634 he entered Brussels with all the glory befitting a Governor-General. Due to the unpopularity of the clergy in Brussels, he downplayed his religious status and instead emphasized his worldly ranks. Ferdinand was a skilled politician and diplomat, and quickly reformed the government and the military. He especially managed to win the support of theFlemings againstFrance .However, his powers were secretly limited, and the leader of his army was instructed to follow Spanish orders instead of Ferdinand's orders if necessary. In 1635 the French attacked Namur, planning to merge with the Dutch near
Maastricht . However, the Dutch hesitated, and the French retreated. Ferdinand subsequently was able to captureDiest ,Goch ,Gennep ,Limbourg , andSchenk .In 1636 Ferdinand disempowered the last Protestant priests in the Spanish Netherlands, and continued his military expansion by capturingHirsen , Châtelet, andChapelle , and securingLuxembourg using the usual mixed nationalities of a Modern Age Army that included thenCroatia n troops, and reaching as far a stronghold in France as La Corbie, near ParisFall from Grace
On
October 10 1637 , however, Breda was recaptured again after a 10 month siege by the Prince of Orange after being under Spanish control for 12 years. Despite repeated attempts the Cardinal-Infante was unable to recapture this critical fortress, strengthening not only the Dutch but also his enemies at the Spanish court in Madrid. Ferdinand also lostChapelles ,Landrey , andDamvilliers to the French, and was not only unable to captureMaubeuge but also lost significant ground to the French in the process. While Ferdinand was able to captureAntwerp ,Chastillon , andGeldern in subsequent years, he lost the important town ofArras in 1640. More dangerous than his military enemies were, however, his enemies at the Spanish court. Numerous rumors and lies floated about, and it was claimed that Ferdinand was planning to become an independent ruler of the Spanish Netherlands with the help of the French King, an enemy of Spain. This rumor was enhanced by another rumor that the French court was planning to marry Ferdinand toAnne Marie of Montpensier , the (eldest) daughter ofGaston, Duke of Orleans , the French king's brother. Both claims were totally without merit and only designed to hurt his reputation.At the same time, the Spanish empire was in a bad state both military and financially. The Cardinal-Infante was even giving conflicting orders to send troops to Spain to aid against a Portuguese uprising.
Ferdinand fell ill during battles in 1641, and died on
9 November 1641 inBrussels at age 32. It is believed that the death was caused by exhaustion combined with ill health. Reports talk about a stomachulcer , but rumors also claimed that he waspoison ed. Before his death he had anillegitimate daughter, Marie Anne de la Croix, born in Brussels in 1641 and died anun in Madrid in 1715.His body was brought to Spain in 1643, and 12,000
requiem s were performed in accordance with his last wishes.Disputes about his successor as the Governor-General of the Spanish Netherlands destroyed the alliance between the Emperor in
Vienna and the Spanish in Madrid. The Emperor (by now the Cardinal-Infante's old comrade in arms, Ferdinand III) favored his brotherArchduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria , a militarily unfortunate but otherwise capable leader. Madrid favoredJohn of Austria the Younger , the twelve year old illegitimate son of Philip IV and the actressMaría Calderón . Theinauguration of the unpopular bastard was delayed, and Spain lost control of much of the Spanish Netherlands in the following years due to the incompetent rule of the interim governorFrancisco de Mello, Marquis of Terceira .Ancestors
Fictional Appearances
Ferdinand appears as a significant character in many of the "1632" series of alternate history stories, particularly in "1634: The Bavarian Crisis".
Notes
# Conflicting sources of his birth. Dates given are
16 May 1609 and24 May 1610 .External links
* [http://genealogy.euweb.cz/habsburg/habsburg4.html Genealogy]
* [http://www.koni.onlinehome.de/ausfuehrliche-biographien/ferdi-spanien-frames.HTM WER war WER - im Dreißigjährigen Krieg]Persondata
NAME=Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Fernando; Ferdinand von Österreich
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, Cardinal Infante, Archbishop of Toledo
DATE OF BIRTH=16 May 1609 or24 May 1610 .
PLACE OF BIRTH=Escorial nearMadrid ,Spain
DATE OF DEATH=9 November 1641
PLACE OF DEATH=Brussels
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