Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2009
Of all the great questions of Habsburg history, perhaps the greatest is this: What would have been the consequence if Charles V had decided to prioritize differently his dealings with France, the Ottoman Empire, and Christian reformers? It is certain that the House of Habsburg would have proceeded along a different path, but such a truism hardly advances a better understanding of events in the empire, or in Europe more widely, in the sixteenth century. Charles V, as pater ecclesiae and as head of a monarchia universalis, stands astride the traditional and the modern. To him is attributed the last opportunity for Habsburg universal empire, with the long hand of the casa de Austria imprinting Habsburg ambitions on the world.
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23 Amelang, Honored Citizens of Barcelona, 15, 73–84, 221–22. For more on de la Penya's support for Charles and his justification for the restoration and maintenance of privileges in the Catalan principality, see Xavier Baró i Queralt, “Els privilegis originaris de Catalunya segons Narcís Feliu de la Penya i d'altres Historiadors de l'èpocha,” Pedralbes 22 (2002): 111–32.
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28 León Sanz, Entre Austrias y Bourbones, 193.
29 “Auch bericht euch (welches ihr auch der Kayserin sagen kont) dass ich ein condolenzbrif von Duc d'Anjou eigenhandig mit der Vberschrift au Roy de boheme Monsieur mon cousin e frere bekomen hab welchen nicht aufgebrochen sondern nach dem ich zuvor den alijrten ministren communicirt hab, widter zurukgeschikt hab.” Charles to Count Wratislaw, Barcelona, 27 May 1711. AfK, 163.
30 León Sanz, Entre Austrias y Bourbones, 209.
31 Count Wratislaw to Charles, Vienna, 16 December 1706. AfK, 32; “… glaub nie dass sie spanien vndt Indien in des feinds handten lassen wurdten wegen Ihres selbsteigenen interesse, …” Charles to Count Wratislaw, Barcelona, 25 April 1711. AfK, 152.
32 Count Wratislaw to Charles, Vienna, 5 August 1711. AfK, 209.
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