The three brothers followed different paths in their religious development. All three were raised in the
Lutheran faith. George Frederick converted to
Calvinism, while James adopted
Catholicism, and Ernest Frederick remained a Lutheran. In 1582, the conversion of
Gebhard Truchsess von Waldburg, the Archbishop of
Cologne to Lutheranism led to
a war between Gebhard, who refused to give up his Archdiocese and Duke
Ernest of Bavaria, who had been elected as his successor. Gebhard tried to convert the
archdiocese to Lutheranism and allied himself with the beautiful Countess
Agnes von Mansfeld-Eisleben. James fought in this war under the
Spanish general
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma. He later served under the Catholic Duke
Charles III of Lorraine. In 1582, at the age of 22, Margrave James III of Baden married the 16-year-old Countess Elisabeth of Culemborg-Pallandt. She was the sole heiress to a very large fortune. Their marriage was a happy one and produced four children. However, it lasted only six years. In 1588, the couple moved from the
Hochburg to the smaller
Emendingen Castle. On 1 January 1590, James III gave city rights to the market town of
Emmendingen. During this period of deep religious division, the Margrave closely watched the three Christian camps: the Catholics, Lutherans and Calvinists. In 1589 and 1590, he commissioned two
colloquia, the first in
Baden-Baden, the second in Emmendingen, between Lutheran theologicians from Württemberg and Catholics. In Emmendingen, the Lutheran side was led by
Johannes Pappus from Strasbourg, and the Catholic side by James's court chaplain Johannes Zehender. Afterwards, James converted, like his lead councillor
Johann Pistorius had done two years earlier, in the
Cistercian monastery
Tennenbach on 15 July 1590 to the Roman Catholic faith. This caused a huge stir in Germany, as he was the first reigning Protestant prince in
Germany to convert after the 1555
Peace of Augsburg. Under the rule in that treaty, Catholicism was made the state religion of the Margraviate of Baden-Hachberg on 10 August 1590.
Pope Sixtus V had high hopes for the Margrave. == Death ==