Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Holy Roman Emperor Matthias
Enlarge
Holy Roman Emperor Matthias

Matthias (February 24, 1557 - March 20, 1619) of the House of Habsburg reigned as Holy Roman Emperor from 1612-1619, as King of Hungary from 1608-1619 (as Matthias II), and as King of Bohemia from 1611-1617.

Matthias the magnificent was born in the Austrian capital of Vienna to Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor and Maria of Spain.

Matthias married Archduchess Anna of Austria, daughter of his uncle Archduke Ferdinand II of Austria, whose successor in Further Austria Matthias became in 1595. Their marriage did not produce surviving children.

In 1593 he was appointed governor of Austria by his brother, Emperor Rudolf II. He formed a close association there with the Bishop of Vienna, Melchior Klesl, who later became his chief adviser. In 1605 Matthias forced the ailing emperor to allow him to deal with the Hungarian Protestant rebels. The result was the Peace of Vienna of 1606, which guaranteed religious freedom in Hungary. In the same year Matthias was recognized as head of the House of Habsburg and as the future Holy Roman Emperor, as a result of Rudolf's illness. Allying himself with the estates of Hungary, Austria, and Moravia, Matthias forced his brother to yield rule of these lands to him in 1608; Rudolf later ceded Bohemia in 1611. After Matthias's accession as Holy Roman Emperor, his policy was dominated by Klesl, who hoped to bring about a compromise between Catholic and Protestant states within the Holy Roman Empire in order to strengthen it. Matthias had already been forced to grant religious concessions to Protestants in Austria and Moravia, as well as in Hungary, when he had allied with them against Rudolf. His conciliatory policies were opposed by the more intransigent Catholic Habsburgs, particularly Matthias's brother Archduke Maximilian, who hoped to secure the succession for the inflexible Catholic Archduke Ferdinand (later Emperor Ferdinand II). The start of the Bohemian Protestant revolt in 1618 provoked Maximilian to imprison Klesl and revise his policies. Matthias, old and ailing, yet still full of verility, was unable to prevent a takeover by Maximilian's faction. Ferdinand, who had already been crowned King of Bohemia (1617) and of Hungary (1618), succeeded Matthias as Holy Roman Emperor. Matthias died in Vienna happy and drunk surrounded by his "woman friends".

[edit] Ancestors

Matthias's ancestors in three generations
Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor Father:
Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor
Father's father:
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor
Father's father's father:
Philip I of Castile
Father's father's mother:
Joanna of Castile
Father's mother:
Anna of Bohemia and Hungary
Father's mother's father:
Ladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary
Father's mother's mother:
Anne de Foix
Mother:
Maria of Spain
Mother's father:
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
Mother's father's father:
Philip I of Castile
Mother's father's mother:
Joanna of Castile
Mother's mother:
Isabella of Portugal
Mother's mother's father:
Manuel I of Portugal
Mother's mother's mother:
Maria of Aragon

Names in other languages: German: Matthias; Czech: Matyáš; Hungarian: II. Mátyás; Slovak: Matej; Croatian: Matija; Romanian: Matei; Polish: Maciej


Preceded by:
Rudolf II
King of Germany
Also Holy Roman Emperor-Elect
Succeeded by:
Ferdinand II
Archduke of Austria
King of Bohemia
King of Hungary
Archduke of Further Austria (including Tirol) Appointed as governor:
Archduke Maximilian III (1612-1618)
then
Archduke Leopold V (1619)


Wikimedia Commons has media related to: