1689 Between 1672 and 1688, the emperor employed advocates' mandates against
Louis XIV of France. When in 1688 Louis
invaded the Palatinate, the whole empire mobilized against him. Then, on 11 February 1689, the Imperial Diet approved a declaration of war against France. On 3 April 1689, Leopold I issued advocates' mandates putting the declaration into effect. This had the effect of converting the
Kreistruppen into a true
Reichsarmee, although the actual process by which this was done was highly decentralised and required the issuance of old-fashioned advocates' mandates. Despite this, the Empire did not join the
Grand Alliance in May 1689, although the emperor did on his own behalf as ruler of
Austria and Hungary. The declaration of war of 1689 was revolutionary. The precedent of 1544 had not been forgotten, and the war with the Ottomans was raging in the east. The declaration of war on France sought to build morale and rally support by equating the Christian French to the Muslims Turks.
1702 On 30 September 1702, the Imperial Diet voted a triple quota (
triplum or 120,000 men) for defence against France. In November, it formally declared war on France. Two of the electors—
Joseph Clemens of Cologne and
Maximilian Emanuel of Bavaria—sided openly with France and were thus in breach of imperial law. Already in November, the
Reichshofrat heard the case against them and recommended that the other electors be consulted about outlawing the rebels. In 1705, the Emperor
Joseph I pressured the diet to extend the
Reichskrieg to include the wars ongoing in Italy and Hungary, but the diet refused. In November 1705, the electors minus Cologne and Bavaria voted to outlaw those two and the emperor transmitted the declaration of the
imperial ban to the diet.
1734 During the
War of the Polish Succession, which began in 1733, most of the empire supported the claim of the Saxon elector,
Augustus III, to the Polish throne, against the claims of
Stanisław Leszczyński, who was supported by the French. War between France and Austria broke out in the Rhineland and in Italy. On 9 November 1733, the
Frankfurt Association, an association of Imperial Circles, authorised the mobilization of a triple quota for the Austrian war effort. Finally, on 9 April 1734, the Imperial Diet declared war against France. Ultimately, while 36,338 troops were raised for the
Reichsarmee by September 1735, various states provided 54,302 troops to the
Austrian army through simple bilateral agreements alone. In 1735,
Russia intervened on the side of the empire. A preliminary peace was signed in Vienna on 3 October that year, but the
final peace treaty was not signed until 1738.
1793 After the outbreak of the
French Revolutionary War, Emperor
Francis II petitioned the Imperial Diet for 100
Roman months on 1 September 1792. In November, the Imperial Diet agreed to a triple quota and thirty Roman months (that is, four million
florins) to be paid into the
Imperial Operations Fund. Finally, on 23 March 1793, the Imperial Diet declared an imperial war against revolutionary France. Under Austrian and Prussian pressure, the stated goal of this
Reichskrieg was to secure from France compensation for those imperial estates, such as Austria and Prussia, that had been fighting since April 1792. The implication was that such compensation would come in the form of territorial cessions. The
Reichskrieg of 1793, unlike all those before, was thus an offensive war, although the diet itself refused to recognised this, preferring to see it as a war forced upon it by France. Throughout 1793, as Prussia's commitment to the war weakened, the increasingly defensive
Reichskrieg rose in popularity. In January 1794, with the war going badly for the Empire, discussions were held behind the scenes to try to strengthen the emperor's war-making powers, but no agreement could be reached and in the end no proposal was tabled in the Imperial Diet.
1799 In late February 1799, Austria having failed to satisfy a French ultimatum, France resumed the war with the Empire by invading the Rhineland while the
Congress of Rastatt was still sitting and before a peace treaty had been signed. The emperor decreed that the
Reichskrieg was resumed. On 16 September, the Diet voted 100 Roman months and a quintuple quota (
quintuplum), the largest military outlay in the history of the empire. This was little more than a paper decision, since many states had declared neutrality and voted against the resumption of the
Reichskrieg. Since no peace treaty had been signed, it had also been unnecessary to vote on a formal declaration of war, the emperor's declaration on resuming hostilities was sufficient. ==
Reichsexekutionskriege==