During the final phase of this conflict, there was a Franco-Dutch-Swedish diplomatic activity from 1627 until 1635, envoys
Louis Deshayes,
Cornelius Haga,
Antoni Monier,
Johan Müller,
Paul Strassburg and
Jacques Roussel) in an effort to form an
Anti-Catholic coalition in the west with the
Eastern Orthodox Church and
Muslims by inviting the
Russia, the
Zaporozhian Cossacks,
Crimean Khanate,
Transylvania,
Moldavia,
Wallachia and the
Ottoman Empire as allies. The recipients of this dpilomatic missions were the
Patriarch Filaret of Moscow,
Cyril Lucaris, the Tsar
Michael of Russia, the Prince
Alexis of Russia,
Abaza Mehmed Pasha of Bosnia and the
Ottoman Caliph Murad IV), with the double objectives of giving more support to the German Protestants, and to gain allies in case the
Polish-Swedish War restarted, as there was a serious possibility that Poland would enter on the German main conflict. The impact of the fighting on the
Baltic trade meant various parties had been trying to mediate a diplomatic solution since 1627, chiefly the
Dutch Republic.
France became involved when the May 1629
Treaty of Lübeck ended
Danish involvement in the Thirty Years War. As part of a
general policy of undermining Emperor Ferdinand wherever possible, French chief minister
Cardinal Richelieu previously funded the Danes, and now wanted to facilitate a Swedish invasion of the
Holy Roman Empire. This required peace with Poland, and after negotiations led by French envoy Hercule Charnacé, the
Truce of Altmark was signed on 6 September, valid for six years. Generally favourable to Sweden, under its terms Gustavus evacuated Courland in return for Sigismund accepting the occupation of what later became
Swedish Livonia. The Swedes also retained a number of Prussian ports, whose possession provided substantial toll revenues. in 1629 By 1635, the political situation was very different. Gustavus died at
Lützen in 1632, while defeat at
Nördlingen in 1634 brought the Swedish position in Germany close to collapse, and Oxenstierna was anxious to avoid opening a new
front. At the same time, Sigismund's successor
Władysław IV Vasa had restored Commonwealth prestige in wars with the
Ottomans and
Russia, and persuaded the Sejem to approve re-opening hostilities when the truce expired. However, much of the Polish nobility and merchant class wanted peace, which enabled Richelieu to broker an extension for 26 years and six months. On 12 September 1635, the two sides agreed the
Treaty of Stuhmsdorf, with significant concessions from Oxenstierna. Along with minor territorial adjustments in Livonia, Sweden stopped levying taxes on Polish grain and withdrew from Prussia, ending the blockade which had severely damaged Gdansk's trade. Swedish historians often present the
Prussian campaign as part of the wider
Polish–Swedish War (1600–1629), whose end result was a significant increase in Swedish power. From this perspective, the 1626 to 1629 conflict is one element in an overall story of success, but the picture becomes more complex if viewed as a distinct event. Despite millions of
riksdaler and over 30,000 deaths, the vast majority from disease, Gustavus failed to take Gdansk, and Sweden withdrew from Prussia in 1635. One recent Swedish commentator has described it as a "catastrophe". ==Footnotes==