Early life and family Matthias was born in the
Austrian capital of
Vienna as the third son of
Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor and of
Maria of Spain. His brothers were
Rudolf (who became Emperor Rudolf II),
Ernest,
Maximilian (from 1585 Grand Master of the
Teutonic Order),
Albert (archbishop of Toledo, later governor of the Netherlands), and
Wenceslaus (Grand Prior of the
Order of Malta in
Castile). He also had six sisters. His sister
Anna was married to King
Philip II of Spain and his sister
Elisabeth to King
Charles IX of France. Almost nothing is known about his upbringing. One of his teachers was the writer and historian
Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq. Upon Maximilian II's death, the family's estates and property were all inherited by Rudolf, the eldest son. The other sons, including Matthias, were compensated with cash pensions and appointments to church or state positions. Matthias married Archduchess
Anna of Austria, daughter of his uncle Archduke
Ferdinand II of Austria and became his heir in
Further Austria in 1595. The marriage did not produce surviving children.
Governor in Netherlands In 1578, Matthias was invited to the
Seventeen Provinces by the
States-General of the rebellious provinces, which offered him the position of Governor-General. Matthias had come into contact with Gautier van der Gracht, the envoy of the Dutch provinces, at the
Regensburg Reichstag in 1576.
Philippe III de Croÿ, Duke of Aarschot, and other representatives of a rather moderate party agreed with Matthias to make him the governor of the Netherlands against the will of his uncle,
Philip II of Spain, the hereditary ruler of the provinces and without the knowledge of Emperor Rudolf II. Matthias accepted the appointment, but the position was not recognised by Philip II. He set down the rules for religious peace within most of the
United Provinces. His work is noted in Article 13 of the 1579
Union of Utrecht, which established
freedom of religion as a locally determined issue. Matthias continued as titular governor for the rebels until their deposing of Philip II and
declaration of full independence in 1581, when he returned home to Austria.
Governor of Austria He returned to Austria in 1583, where he settled in
Linz with a small household. He made several unsuccessful attempts to get elected as bishop of (
Münster,
Liège,
Speyer). In 1586, negotiations for the succession of
Polish King
Stephen Báthory were equally unsuccessful. He also applied for the regency in
Tyrol and
Further Austria. It was only after his brother Ernest was appointed General Governor in the
Netherlands in 1593, where he ruled from 1594, that Matthias secured governance over Austria. He was immediately confronted with the vigorous advocacy of their religious rights among the
Protestant estates. The problems were exacerbated by the high taxes and the troops who were raised as a result of the
Long Turkish War. In 1595 and 1597 the farmers in
Lower and
Upper Austria revolted in the hope of negotiating with the emperor. Matthias forced the insurgents into submission with mercenary troops. After the uprising had been quelled, Matthias's policies on religion changed. If there had been Protestants at his court, he now went on a strict
Counter-Reformation course. His chancellor had been
Melchior Khlesl, bishop and administrator of
Wiener Neustadt from 1599 and a supporter of the Counter-Reformation. Matthias appointed him in 1594 to 1595 and again in 1598 to 1600 as nominal commander in chief in the Turkish War and as his representative to the Hungarian Diet.
Power struggle among Habsburg brothers , 1579 With great concern, the Habsburgs observed the increasing
psychological decline of the ageing emperor. After Ernest's death in 1595, Matthias became the oldest
archduke. From 1599 onward, Matthias in vain urged the childless emperor to arrange his succession, as Matthias was rejected. The crisis carried on in 1604 during the
uprising of
Stephen Bocskai in Hungary. Matthias initially avoided an argument with the emperor, but Bishop Klesl urged him to take command in the
Brothers' Quarrel with Rudolf. In November 1600 at
Schottwien, Archdukes Matthias, Maximilian and
Ferdinand signed an agreement of concerted opposition against the emperor. In 1606, they declared Rudolf insane (document dated 25 April), appointed Matthias as the head of the family and began to oust Rudolf. It was Matthias, not the emperor, who had brokered the
Peace of Zsitvatorok with the
Ottomans and in 1606 had
ended the conflict in Hungary by granting freedom of religion in Hungary and guaranteed the right of
Transylvania to elect its own independent princes in the future. As unrest resurfaced in Hungary and spread into parts of
Moravia and Austria, Matthias attempted to use the opposition in the power struggle against the emperor. He joined the rebellious
Diet of Hungary and the Lower and Upper Austrian estates in
Pressburg in 1608 and in Moravia shortly later. In April 1608, Matthias marched on
Prague and besieged the city. Although he could not fully win over the Bohemian estates, he forced Rudolf to negotiate and to sign a peace treaty in June 1608, which unsurprisingly resulted in the redistribution of power. Rudolf kept Bohemia, Silesia and
Lusatia, and Matthias received Hungary, Austria and Moravia. However, the takeover of power did not proceed according to customary protocol. Matthias, as the new sovereign, had not guaranteed the privileges of the estates before they officially paid homage to him. He tried to reverse the order, which led to the so-called
Homage Dispute. As most of the estates were Protestant in Austria and Moravia, their nobles then formed the powerful
Horner Confederation (Horner Bund) and paid homage only after a guarantee of their religious rights. The Horner Confederation continued to exist until the beginning of the
Thirty Years' War.
Sovereign rule Matthias was crowned King of Bohemia on 23 May 1611 and was, after Rudolf's death on 20 January 1612,
elected Holy Roman Emperor. On 4 December 1611, he married his cousin Archduchess
Anna of Austria, but the union failed to produce children. Matthias allegedly fathered an illegitimate son, Matthias of Austria, by an unknown mother. The court and the administration were gradually moved from Prague to Vienna after 1612. The new emperor was less interested in art than Rudolf II had been, and most court artists soon turned their backs on his court. Matthias maintained, however, a close relationship with the painter
Lucas van Valckenborch. For the private crown of his brother Rudolf II, he had a sceptre and an orb made. The emperor's wife founded the
Capuchin Church and the
Imperial Crypt in Vienna as the future burial site of the Habsburg family. Matthias had allegedly found a spring in the area of today's
Schönbrunn Palace. It is said that it became the eponymous name of the area and the palace from his remark: "Look, what a beautiful spring" (beautiful:
schön, spring:
Brunn[en]). After Matthias's imperial accession, his kingship was dominated by Klesl, who hoped to bring about a compromise between
Catholic and Protestant states within the
Holy Roman Empire to strengthen the empire. 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. Matthias imprisoned Georg
Keglević, the
Commander-in-chief,
General, Vice-
Ban of Croatia,
Slavonia and Dalmatia and since 1602
baron in Transylvania, but soon freed again. The
Principality of Transylvania was a fully-autonomous area of Hungary but under the nominal
suzerainty of the
Ottoman Empire, where it was the time of the
Sultanate of Women. ==Burial==