Birth and heritage Charles of
Habsburg was born on 24 February 1500 in the
Prinsenhof of
Ghent, a
Flemish city of the
Low Countries, to Archduke
Philip of Habsburg and Princess
Joanna of Trastámara. His father Philip, nicknamed Philip the Handsome, was the firstborn son of
Maximilian I of Habsburg,
Archduke of Austria as well as
Holy Roman Emperor, and
Mary the Rich, Burgundian duchess of the
Low Countries. His mother Joanna, known as Joanna the Mad for the mental disorders afflicting her, was a daughter of
Ferdinand II of Aragon and
Isabella I of Castile, the
Catholic Monarchs of Spain from the
House of Trastámara. The political marriage of Philip and Joanna was first conceived in a letter sent by Maximilian to Ferdinand in order to seal an Austro-Spanish alliance, established as part of the
League of Venice directed against the
Kingdom of France during the
Italian Wars. The organization of ambitious political marriages reflected Maximilian's practice to expand the House of Habsburg with dynastic links rather than conquest, as exemplified by his saying "Let others wage war, you, happy Austria, marry". The
marriage contract between Philip and Joanna was signed in 1495, and celebrations were held in 1496. Philip was already titular
duke of Burgundy, given Mary's death in 1482, and also
heir apparent of Austria as honorific
archduke. Joanna, on the other hand, was only third in the Spanish
line of succession, preceded by her older brother
John, Prince of Asturias and older sister
Isabella of Aragon. Although both John and Isabella died in 1498, the Catholic Monarchs desired to keep the Spanish kingdoms in Iberian hands and designated their Portuguese grandson
Miguel da Paz as
heir presumptive of Spain by naming him
prince of Asturias. Only a series of dynastic accidents eventually favored Maximilian's project. Charles was born in a bathroom of the Prinsenhof at 3:00 a.m. not long after Joanna had attended a
ball, despite symptoms of labor pains. His name was chosen by Philip in honour of
Charles I of Burgundy. According to a poet at the court, the people of Ghent
"shouted Austria and Burgundy throughout the whole city for three hours
" to celebrate his birth. (
Flemish Dutch; literally "Princes' court") in
Ghent, where Charles was born. In 1501, Philip and Joanna left Charles to the custody of
Margaret of York and went to Spain. They returned to visit their son very rarely, and thus Charles grew up in the Low Countries practically without his parents. The main goal of their Spanish mission was the recognition of Joanna as
Princess of Asturias, given Prince Miguel's death a year earlier. They succeeded despite facing some opposition from the Castilian
Cortes, reluctant to create the premises for Habsburg succession. In 1504, as Isabella died, Joanna became
Queen of Castile. Philip was recognized king in 1506 but died shortly after, an event that drove the mentally unstable Joanna into complete insanity. She retired in isolation into a tower of
Tordesillas. Ferdinand took control of all the Spanish kingdoms, under the pretext of protecting Charles's rights, which in reality he wanted to elude, but his new marriage with
Germaine de Foix failed to produce a surviving Trastámara heir to the throne. With his father dead and his mother confined, Charles became titular duke of Burgundy and was recognized as
prince of Asturias (heir presumptive of Spain) and honorific
archduke (heir apparent of Austria).
Low Countries The
Burgundian inheritance in the Low Countries, also called "Netherlands", "Flanders", or "Belgica", were Charles's homeland and originally included
Flanders,
Artois,
Brabant,
Limburg,
Luxembourg,
Hainaut,
Holland,
Namur,
Mechelen, and
Zeeland. Charles inherited those territories, as well as the exclaves of
Franche-Comté and
Charolais, when his father Philip died. On 15 October 1506, he was named
Lord of the Netherlands as Duke
Charles II of Burgundy by the
States General of the Netherlands. The remaining provinces of the Low Countries, initially outside of Charles's jurisdiction, were
Guelders,
Friesland,
Utrecht,
Overijssel,
Groningen,
Drenthe, and
Zutphen. Another territory not included in the Burgundian inheritance was
Burgundy proper, annexed by
France in 1477. As a young lord, Charles grew up with two major political goals: recover Burgundy proper and unite the
Seventeen Provinces of the Low Countries under sole Habsburg rule. By the end of his reign, he would have failed in the former objective but succeeded in the latter. The Low Countries held an important place in Europe for their strategic location, and the wealthy Flemish cities were flourishing in trade and experiencing a transition to capitalism. Although located within the
Holy Roman Empire and its borders, those territories were formally divided between fiefs of the
German kingdom and French fiefs (such as Charles's birthplace of Flanders) and thus formed, as
Henri Pirenne put it, "a state made up of the frontier provinces of two kingdoms". Given that Charles ascended to the ducal throne as a minor, Emperor
Maximilian appointed
Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy (Charles's aunt and Maximilian's daughter) as his guardian and regent. Charles viewed and treated Margaret as his mother and grew up in her
Hof van Savoye in Mechelen along with his sisters. Margaret soon found herself in conflict with France over the question of Charles's requirement to pay
homage to the French king in his position as duke of Burgundy and count of Flanders. in
Brussels was the main residence of Charles V in the Low Countries. Charles's entourage, which consisted of hundreds of members, was composed primarily of fellow countrymen such as his chamberlain
William de Croÿ and his tutor
Adrian of Utrecht. Because of this, the young duke grew up speaking exclusively his native languages:
French and
Dutch. Very important to Charles was the Burgundian
Order of the Golden Fleece, a forum of knights and nobles of which he was a member and later the grand master. The basis of Charles's beliefs was formed in this environment, including his Burgundian chivalric culture and the desire of Christian unity to fight the infidel in the tradition of medieval figures born in the Low Countries such as
Charlemagne and
Godfrey of Bouillon, whose biographies he often read. Emperor Maximilian decided to emancipate his grandson in 1515 at the great hall of the
Coudenberg Palace in Brussels, where Charles would abdicate 40 years later. Once emancipated, he undertook his first voyage to tour the Burgundian provinces and made an acclaimed
Joyous Entry in
Bruges and other Flemish cities. Meanwhile, he refused to attend the
coronation ceremony of the new king of France
Francis I of Valois as a French vassal. This event marked the first episode of a long rivalry between the two monarchs.
Spanish kingdoms In 1479, Spain was formed as a
dynastic union of two crowns by virtue of the marriage and joint rule of
Isabella I of Castile and
Ferdinand II of Aragon, the
Trastámara Catholic Monarchs. Upon the death of King Ferdinand II on 23 January 1516, his daughter
Joanna the Mad, formally
queen of Castile since the death of Isabella in 1504 but effectively under her father's protection, became
queen of Aragon as well. Ferdinand's testament recognized Joanna as sole queen of the Spanish kingdoms with Charles as governor-general and Cardinal
Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros as regent. Joanna's condition of insanity persisted and, as suggested by the Flemings and Maximilian, Charles claimed for himself the Spanish kingdoms
jure matris. After the celebration of Ferdinand II's obsequies on 14 March 1516, Charles was crowned king in the
Church of St. Michael and St. Gudula (now Brussels' cathedral) as
Charles I of Spain or
Charles I of Castile and Aragon, controlling both Spanish crowns in
personal union. The Spanish kingdoms varied in their style and traditions. The
Crown of Castile was an increasingly authoritarian state where the monarch's own will easily overrode legislative and justice institutions. Its crown comprised most of Spain, including the Iberian
Navarre conquered in 1512 and the former Islamic
Kingdom of Granada annexed at the end of the
Reconquista in 1492. The
Crown of Aragon itself was a personal union which included the remaining Spanish kingdoms of
Aragon proper,
Valencia and the
Principality of Catalonia, and its monarchy was considered to be, differently from Castile and similarly to Navarre, the product of
a contract with the people. Viceroyalties of the Spanish crowns formed the
Spanish Empire and included the
West Indies and the
Tierra Firme in the Americas, discovered by
Christopher Columbus for Castile in 1492, as well as the Aragonese possessions in southern Italy:
Sicily,
Sardinia, and the recently conquered (1503)
Kingdom of Naples. In August 1516, Charles as king of Spain and Francis I of France made the Treaty of
Noyon, which, along with the Treaty of Brussels between Charles's grandfather Emperor Maximilian I and Francis, ended the first phase of the Franco-Habsburg
Italian Wars, leaving the Imperial
Duchy of Milan in French hands and securing the Kingdom of Naples under Spanish rule. In the same year, the Italian humanist Luigi Marliani coined Charles's personal motto
Plus Oultre (later incorrectly Latinized as
Plus Ultra, which became the Spanish national motto), signifying "further beyond" and associated with the expansion of his inheritance as a reverse of the mythological
Non Plus Ultra written on the
Pillars of Hercules. A year later, Charles I embarked for Spain, where his accession was contested and a succession crisis was unfolding. This was his first voyage outside of the Low Countries; he arrived in his new kingdoms in September 1517. Jiménez de Cisneros accepted the
fait accompli and came to meet him but fell ill along the way, not without suspicion of poison, and died before meeting the King. As regent, Cisneros was replaced by Charles's tutor
Adrian of Utrecht, who was appointed
Bishop of Tortosa and became himself a
cardinal. Charles visited his mother in
Tordesillas, and met for the first time his younger brother
Ferdinand. Ferdinand had been born in Castile and was a popular candidate for king, but Charles ordered him to abandon Spain. Charles then entered into negotiations with the
Cortes of Castile and of Aragon to be proclaimed king of the Spanish crowns jointly with his mother. was the main residence of Charles V in Spain. At his arrival in Spain, Charles was seen as a foreign prince of Flemish-Austrian background and his Burgundian-Habsburg entourage was accused of exploiting the resources and offices of the Spanish kingdoms. For this reason, and due to the irregularities of Charles assuming the royal title while his mother was alive, the negotiations with the Castilian
Cortes in
Valladolid proved difficult. Eventually, the
Cortes accepted Charles as king and paid homage to him in Valladolid in February 1518. Charles proceeded to Aragon, and once again, he overcame the resistance of that
Cortes and was recognized as king. A year later, he was still negotiating with the
Corts Catalanes to be recognized as
Count of Barcelona, and had not attended, despite requests, similar ceremonies in Valencia and Navarre, causing some grievances. Even after recognizing him as king, the
Cortes of Castile and of Aragon sought to impose conditions on Charles. In 1519, he agreed that he would learn to speak
Spanish, would cease to appoint foreigners to the high offices of Spain, was prohibited from taking more than a fifth (
Quinto Real) of the
precious metals coming from the Americas, and would respect the rights of his mother Joanna as queen and co-monarch. In fact, Joanna had little effect on the government, as she was kept imprisoned until her death in 1555.
Austrian lands and Imperial election palace in
Innsbruck was the main residence of Charles V in Austria. When Maximilian died on 12 January 1519, Charles became
archduke of Austria and head of the
House of Habsburg. As
Charles I of Austria, he inherited the
Archduchy of Austria,
Duchy of Styria,
County of Tyrol,
Further Austria,
Duchy of Carinthia,
Duchy of Carniola, and the
Austrian Littoral. As head of the House, he inherited the Imperial ideology exemplified by the dynastic motto
A.E.I.O.U (meaning, according to one interpretation,
Austria Est Imperare Orbi Universo - "Austria is to rule the whole world"). Charles put forward his candidacy to the seven
prince-electors (
Palatinate,
Saxony,
Brandenburg,
Mainz,
Trier,
Cologne, and
Bohemia) in order to succeed his grandfather as
Holy Roman Emperor, a title held by the Habsburg archdukes of Austria since 1440. The
Holy Roman Empire was also known as the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation and its greatest constituent realm was the
Kingdom of Germany, divided into many princedoms, bishoprics, free cities, and other polities. The other large constituent kingdom was
Italy, formed by several regional states to the north of the
Papal States.
Francis I of France, fearing that Charles's election might result in the loss of French-held
Milan and in the
Habsburg Encirclement of his kingdom, attempted to secure the Imperial throne for himself through bribery.
Pope Leo X, uneasy with the accumulation of power in Habsburg or French hands, invited various other princes to enter the electoral race, hoping for the victory of a third candidate. Nonetheless, Leo X also signed secret alliances with both Charles and Francis in case one of them won the
Imperial election, marking the first episode of Papal double-play in the
French-Habsburg rivalry. Charles borrowed large amounts of money from the
Fuggers and the
Welsers, the two major German banking families, and surpassed Francis in the race to pay bigger bribes to the electors. He also signed with the German princes an
electoral capitulation (
Wahlkapitulation) in which he promised to "protect and shield" Germany's liberties and began to learn German, Italian, and Latin. Finally, Charles advised the princes against electing a foreign king and declared himself a "German by blood and stock" on the ground that Austria, the home of his dynasty, and the Low Countries, where he was born, were then considered part of Germany. , the main residence of Charles V in Germany. On 28 June 1519, Charles was
elected Emperor by the prince-electors in
Frankfurt. A Papal dispensation, similar to one granted to Maximilian in 1508, allowed him to use the Imperial title even in absence of
Papal coronation. Informed of the election by
Frederick II of the Palatinate, Charles proclaimed the Imperial title to be "so great and sublime an honour to outshine all other worldly titles" and thus became universally known by the Imperial name of
Charles V. ==Imperial project and Reformation==