Karl
VI
Holy Roman Emperor
(1685-1740)
Other Titles
Karl III, King of Hungary[J92]
King of Bohemia[F86A]
Karl III, Archduke of Austria, 1711-40†[J92]
Carlos III, titular King of Spain, 1703-11 ren.[J92]
Titular King of Jerusalem, 1703-40†[F86A]
Biographical
When the Spanish branch of the house of Habsburg became extinct in 1700,
Charles VI was put forward as the lawful heir in opposition to Philip
V, the Bourbon to whom the Spanish dominions had been left by the will
of Charles II of Spain. He was proclaimed at Vienna on the 19th of September
1703, and made his way to Spain by the Low Countries, England and Lisbon,
remaining in Spain till 1711, mostly in Catalonia, where the Habsburg
party was strong.[J9E]
Although he had a certain tenacity of purpose, which he showed in later
life, he displayed none of the qualities required in a prince who had
to gain his throne by the sword. He was so afraid of appearing to be ruled
by a favourite that he would not take good advice, but was easily earwigged
by flatterers who played on his weakness for appearing independent.[J9E]
On the death of his elder brother Joseph I on the 17th of April 1711,
Charles inherited the hereditary possessions of the house of Habsburg,
and their claims on the Empire. The death of Joseph without male issue
had been foreseen, and Charles had at one time been prepared to give up
Spain and the Indies on condition that he was allowed to retain Naples,
Sicily and the Milanese. But when the case arose, his natural obstinacy
led him to declare that he would not think of surrendering any of the
rights of his family. It was with great difficulty that he was persuaded
to leave Spain, months after the death of his brother (on the 27th of
September 1711). Only the emphatic refusal of the European powers to tolerate
the reconstruction of the empire of Charles V forced him to give a sullen
submission to necessity.[J9E]
He abandoned Spain and was crowned emperor in December 1711, but for a
long time he would not recognize Philip V. It is to his honour that he
was very reluctant to desert the Catalans who had fought for his cause.
Some of their chiefs followed him to Vienna, and their advice had an unfortunate
influence on his mind. They almost succeeded in arousing his suspicions
of the loyalty of Prince Eugene at the very moment when the prince’s splendid
victories over the Turks had led to the peace of Passarowitz on the 28th
of July 1718, and a great extension of the Austrian dominions eastward.[J9E]
Charles showed an enlightened, though not always successful, interest
in the commercial prosperity of his subjects, but from the date of his
return to Germany till his death his ruling passion was to secure his
inheritance against dismemberment. As early as 1713 he had begun to prepare
the 'Pragmatic Sanction' which was to regulate the succession. An only
son, born on the 13th of April 1716, died in infancy, and it became the
object of his policy to obtain the recognition of his daughter Maria Theresa
as his heiress. He made great concessions to obtain his aim, and embarked
on complicated diplomatic negotiations.[J9E]
He relinquished his claim to Naples in 1735, but retained his claim to
the crown of Jerusalem.[F86A]
His last days were embittered by a disastrous war with Turkey, in which
he lost almost all he had gained by the peace of Passarowitz. He died
at Vienna on the 20th of October 1740, and with him expired the male line
of his house. Charles VI was an admirable representative of the tenacious
ambition of the Habsburgs, and of their belief in their own 'august greatness'
and boundless rights.[J9E]
Place of birth: Vienna[J9E]
Place of marriage: Barcelona[J9E]
Place of death: Vienna[J9E] |
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