Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire)#Locations of Imperial Diets

{{Short description|Holy Roman Empire's General Assembly}}

{{Infobox legislature

|name=Imperial Diet

|native_name= Dieta Imperii (Latin)
Reichstag (German)

|legislature= Deliberative body of the Holy Roman Empire

|logo= 100px

|foundation= 803

|disbanded= 1806

|succeeded_by= Diet of the Confederation

(Confederation of the Rhine)}}

File:Kurien des reichstages des Heiligen Römischen Reiches.jpg in the Regensburg Town Hall from a 1675 engraving: Emperor and prince-electors at the head, secular princes to the left, ecclesiastical to the right, deputies of imperial cities in the foreground.]]

The Imperial Diet ({{langx|la|Dieta Imperii {{noitalic|or}} Comitium Imperiale}}; {{langx|de|Reichstag}}) was the deliberative body of the Holy Roman Empire. It was not a legislative body in the contemporary sense; its members envisioned it more like a central forum where it was more important to negotiate than to decide.Klaus Malettke, Les relations entre la France et le Saint-Empire au XVIIe siècle, Honoré Champion, Paris, 2001, p. 22.

Its members were the Imperial Estates, divided into three colleges. The diet as a permanent, regularized institution evolved from the Hoftage (court assemblies) of the Middle Ages. From 1663 until the end of the empire in 1806, it was in permanent session at Regensburg.

All Imperial Estates enjoyed immediacy and, therefore, they had no authority above them besides the Holy Roman Emperor himself. While all the estates were entitled to a seat and vote, only the higher temporal and spiritual princes of the College of Princes enjoyed an individual vote (Virilstimme), while lesser estates such as imperial counts and imperial abbots, were merely entitled to a collective vote (Kuriatstimme) within their particular bench (Curia), as did the free imperial cities belonging to the College of Towns.{{Cite book |last=Gagliardo |first=John G. |title=Reich and Nation. The Holy Roman Empire as Idea and Reality, 1763–1806 |date=1980 |publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=978-0-2531-6773-6 |pages=22–23 |ol=4401178M}}

The right to vote rested essentially on a territorial entitlement, with the result that when a given prince acquired new territories through inheritance or otherwise, he also acquired their voting rights in the diet.{{Sfn|Gagliardo|1980|pp=22–23}} In general, members did not attend the permanent diet at Regensburg, but sent representatives instead. The late imperial diet was in effect a permanent meeting of ambassadors between the estates.

History

The role and function of the Imperial Diet evolved over the centuries, like the Empire itself, with the estates and separate territories increasing control of their own affairs at the expense of imperial power. Initially, there was neither a fixed time nor location for the Diet. It began as a convention of the dukes of the old Germanic tribes that formed the Frankish kingdom when important decisions had to be made, probably based on the old Germanic law whereby each leader relied on the support of his leading men. In the early and high Middle Ages these assemblies were not yet institutionalized, but were held as needed at the decision of the king or emperor. They weren't called Diet yet, but Hoftag (court day). They were usually held in the imperial palaces (Kaiserpfalz).

For example, already under Charlemagne during the Saxon Wars, a Hoftag, according to the Royal Frankish Annals, met at Paderborn in 777 and determined laws over the subdued Saxons and other tribes. In 803 Charlemagne, by then crowned as emperor of the Franks, issued the final version of the Lex Saxonum.

At the Diet of 919 in Fritzlar the dukes elected the first King of the Germans, who was a Saxon, Henry the Fowler, thus overcoming the longstanding rivalry between Franks and Saxons and laying the foundation for the German realm. After the conquest of Italy, the 1158 Diet of Roncaglia finalized four laws that would significantly alter the (never formally written) constitution of the Empire, marking the beginning of the steady decline of the central power in favour of the local dukes. The Golden Bull of 1356 cemented the concept of "territorial rule" (Landesherrschaft), the largely independent rule of the dukes over their respective territories, and also limited the number of electors to seven. The Pope, contrary to modern myth, was never involved in the electoral process but only in the process of ratification and coronation of whomever the Prince-Electors chose.

File:Summons for Luther to appear at the Diet of Worms.jpg

File:Luther (Wislicenus).jpg at the Diet of Worms, 1521
19th-century painting by Hermann Wislicenus]]

Until the late 15th century the Diet was not formalized as an institution. Instead, the dukes and other princes would irregularly convene at the court of the Emperor. These assemblies were usually referred to as Hoftage (from German Hof "court"). Only beginning in 1489 was the Diet called the Reichstag, and it was formally divided into collegia ("colleges").

Initially, the two colleges were of the prince-electors and of the remaining dukes and princes. Later, the imperial cities with Imperial immediacy became oligarchic republics independent of a local ruler, subject only to the Emperor himself, and managed to be accepted as third parties. Motions passed if two of the colleges approved. Generally, the princely and electoral colleges would agree with each other, rather than rely on the cities to make a decision, but the cities still had influence.{{Cite journal |last=Osiander |first=Andreas |date=2001 |title=Sovereignty, International Relations, and the Westphalian Myth |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3078632 |journal=International Organization |volume=55 |issue=2 |pages=251–287 |issn=0020-8183}}

Several attempts to reform the Empire and end its slow disintegration, starting with the Diet of 1495, did not have much effect. In contrast, this process was hastened with the Peace of Westphalia of 1648, which formally bound the Emperor to accept all decisions made by the Diet, in effect depriving him of his few remaining powers. Nonetheless, the Emperor still had substantial influence in the Diet. The Habsburg Emperors possessed a large number of votes, and even held command over the Reichsarmee (Imperial Army) if the Diet decided to raise it.

File:Regensburg Braun-Hogenberg.jpg, c. 1600]]

Probably the most famous Diets were those held in Worms in 1495, where the Imperial Reform was enacted, and 1521, where Martin Luther was banned (see Edict of Worms), the Diets of Speyer 1526 and 1529 (see Protestation at Speyer), and several in Nuremberg (Diet of Nuremberg). Only with the introduction of the Perpetual Diet of Regensburg in 1663 did the Diet permanently convene at a fixed location.

The Imperial Diet of Constance opened on 27 April 1507;History of the Reformation in Germany, page 70, by Leopold von Ranke. it recognized the unity of the Holy Roman Empire and founded the Imperial Chamber, the empire's supreme court.

Participants

{{see|List of Imperial Diet participants (1792)}}

From 1489, the Diet comprised three colleges:

= Electors =

File:Wapen 1545 Kaiserwappen des Heiligen Römischen Reichs Polychromie.jpg (1545).]]

The Electoral College (Kurfürstenrat) was led by the Prince-Archbishop of Mainz in his capacity as Archchancellor of Germany. The seven Prince-electors were designated by the Golden Bull of 1356:

The number increased to eight, when in 1623 the Duke of Bavaria took over the electoral dignity of the Count Palatine, who himself received a separate vote in the electoral college according to the 1648 Peace of Westphalia (Causa Palatina), including the high office of an Archtreasurer. In 1692 the Elector of Hanover (formally Brunswick-Lüneburg) became the ninth Prince-elector as Archbannerbearer during the Nine Years' War.

In the War of the Bavarian Succession, the electoral dignities of the Palatinate and Bavaria were merged, approved by the 1779 Treaty of Teschen. The German Mediatisation of 1803 entailed the dissolution of the Cologne and Trier Prince-archbishoprics. At the same time, the Prince-Archbishop of Mainz and German Archchancellor received—as compensation for his lost territory occupied by Revolutionary France—the newly established Principality of Regensburg. In turn, four secular princes were elevated to prince-electors:

These changes however had little effect, as with the abdication of Francis II as Holy Roman Emperor the Empire was dissolved only three years later.

= Princes =

File:Rijksdag van Augsburg, 1530 Ware ende eygenlycke afbeeldinghe van de hooch aensienlycke vergaderinge gehouden int jaer 1530 den 25 juny op den bisschoplycken sael binnen de stadt Augsborch (titel op object), RP-P-OB-46.329.jpg receives the Augsburg Confession at the Diet of Augsburg on 25 June 1530]]

The college of Imperial Princes (Reichsfürstenrat or Fürstenbank) incorporated the Imperial Counts as well as immediate lords, Prince-Bishops and Imperial abbots. Strong in members, though often discordant, the second college tried to preserve its interests against the dominance of the Prince-electors.

The House of Princes was again subdivided into an ecclesiastical and a secular bench. Remarkably, the ecclesiastical bench was headed by the—secular—Archduke of Austria and the Burgundian duke of the Habsburg Netherlands (held by Habsburg Spain from 1556). As the Austrian House of Habsburg had failed to assume the leadership of the secular bench, they received the guidance over the ecclesiastical princes. The first ecclesiastical prince was the Archbishop of Salzburg as Primas Germaniae; the Prince-Archbishop of Besançon, though officially a member until the 1678 Treaty of Nijmegen, did not attend the Diet's meetings.

The ecclesiastical bench also comprised the Grand Master and Deutschmeister of the Teutonic Knights, as well as the Grand Prior of the Monastic State of the Knights Hospitaller at Heitersheim. The Prince-Bishopric of Lübeck remained an ecclesiastical member even after it had turned Protestant, ruled by diocesan administrators from the House of Holstein-Gottorp from 1586. The Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück, according to the 1648 Peace of Westphalia was under alternating rule of a Catholic bishop and a Lutheran bishop from the House of Hanover.

Each member of the Princes' College held either a single vote (Virilstimme) or a collective vote (Kuriatstimme). Due to the Princes, their single vote from 1582 strictly depended on their immediate fiefs; this principle led to an accumulation of votes, when one ruler held several territories in personal union. Counts and Lords only were entitled to collective votes, they therefore formed separate colleges like the Wetterau Association of Imperial Counts and mergers within the Swabian, the Franconian and the Lower Rhenish–Westphalian Circles. Likewise, on the ecclesiastical bench, the Imperial abbots joined a Swabian or Rhenish college.

In the German Mediatisation of 1803, numerous ecclesiastical territories were annexed by secular estates. However, a reform of the Princes' college was not carried out until the Empire's dissolution in 1806.

= Cities =

File:Free Imperial Cities 1792.png

The college of Imperial Cities (Reichsstädtekollegium) evolved from 1489 onwards. It contributed greatly to the development of the Imperial Diets as a political institution. Nevertheless, the collective vote of the cities was of inferior importance until a 1582 Recess of the Augsburg Diet. The college was led by the city council of the actual venue until the Perpetual Diet in 1663, when the chair passed to Regensburg.

The Imperial cities also divided into a Swabian and Rhenish bench. The Swabian cities were led by Nuremberg, Augsburg and Regensburg, the Rhenish cities by Cologne, Aachen and Frankfurt.

For a complete list of members of the Imperial Diet from 1792, near the end of the Empire, see List of Reichstag participants (1792).

Religious bodies

{{main|Itio in partes}}

After the Peace of Westphalia, religious matters could no longer be decided by a majority vote of the colleges. Instead, the Reichstag would separate into Catholic and Protestant bodies, which would discuss the matter separately and then negotiate an agreement with each other, a procedure called the itio in partes.{{cite web|title=Peace Treaties of Westphalia (October 14/24, 1648)|url=http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/pdf/eng/87.%20PeaceWestphalia_en.pdf|website=German History in Documents and Images|quote=In religious and all other affairs in which the estates cannot be considered as one body, and when the Catholic estates and those of the Augsburg Confession are divided into two parties, the dispute is to be decided by amicable agreement alone, and neither side is to be bound by a majority vote.}} The Catholic body, or corpus catholicorum, was headed by the Archbishop-Elector of Mainz.{{cite book|last=Kalipke|first=Andreas|chapter=The Corpus Evangelicorum|title=The Holy Roman Empire, Reconsidered|year=2010|publisher=Berghahn|pages=228–247|editor1=Coy |editor2=Marschke |editor3=Sabean}}

The Protestant body, or corpus evangelicorum, was headed by the Elector of Saxony. At meetings of the Protestant body, Saxony would introduce each topic of discussion, after which Brandenburg-Prussia and Hanover would speak, followed by the remaining states in order of size. When all the states had spoken, Saxony would weigh the votes and announce a consensus.

Frederick Augustus II, Elector of Saxony converted to Catholicism in 1697 in order to become King of Poland, but the Electorate itself remained officially Protestant and retained the directorship of the Protestant body. When the Elector's son also converted to Catholicism, Prussia and Hanover attempted to take over the directorship in 1717–1720, but without success. The Electors of Saxony would head the Protestant body until the end of the Holy Roman Empire.

Collection of records

After the formation of the new German Empire in 1871, the Historical Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences started to collect imperial records (Reichsakten) and imperial diet records (Reichstagsakten). In 1893 the commission published the first volume. At present the years 1524–1527 and years up to 1544 are being collected and researched. A volume dealing with the 1532 Diet of Regensburg, including the peace negotiations with the Protestants in Schweinfurt and Nuremberg, by Rosemarie Aulinger of Vienna was published in 1992.

Locations

{{Incomplete list|date=February 2021}}

class="wikitable"

! bgcolor="#F8F8FF" |Year

! bgcolor="#F8F8FF" |Place

! bgcolor="#F8F8FF" |President

! bgcolor="#F8F8FF" |Theme

754

|Quierzy-sur-Oise

|Pepin the Short

|Donation of Pepin to Pope Stephen II

777

|Paderborn

|Charlemagne

|First Diet on Saxon soil, Duke Widukind refused to appear

782

|Lippspringe

|Charlemagne

|Division of Saxony into Gaue under Frankish Grafen (counts)

788

|Ingelheim am Rhein

|Charlemagne

|Deposition of Duke Tassilo III of Bavaria

799

|Paderborn

|Charlemagne

|Charlemagne clears with Pope Leo III his installation as Emperor

806

|Diedenhofen

|Charlemagne

|Division of the Carolingian Empire among Pepin of Italy, Charles the Younger and Louis the Pious

817

|Aachen

826

|Unknown

|Invitation of the Sorbs

829

|Worms

831

|Aachen

835

|Diedenhofen

|Louis the Pious

838

|Speyer

|Louis the Pious

872

|Forchheim

|Louis the German

874

|Forchheim

|Louis the German

|Discussion and regulation of inheritance

887

|Tribur

889

|Forchheim

|Arnulf of Carinthia

892

|Forchheim

|Arnulf of Carinthia

|Preparing a War against the Slavs

896

|Forchheim

|Arnulf of Carinthia

903

|Forchheim

|Louis the Child

|Execution of the Babenberg Rebel Adalhard

907

|Forchheim

|Louis the Child

|Council about the Magyar attacks

911

|Forchheim

|Election of Conrad of Franconia King

914

|Forchheim

|Conrad of Franconia

|War against Arnulf I of Bavaria

919

|Fritzlar

926

|Worms

|Henry the Fowler

952

|on the Lech meadows near Augsburg

|Otto I

961

|Forchheim

|Otto I

967

|Ravenna

|Otto II

972

|Quedlinburg

|Otto I celebrated his son and Theophanu Byzantine princess' marriage and a plenty of foreigners came to celebrate with them. Hungarian envoys came to request mission priests.{{Cite web|title=Hóman-Szegfű : Magyar Történet|url=http://www.elib.hu/00900/00940/html/}}

976

|Regensburg

978

|Dortmund

|Otto II

|War against France in the Autumn

983

|Verona

|Election of Otto III

985

|Unknown

|End of the usurpation of Henry the Wrangler

993

|Dortmund

|Otto III

1018

|Nijmegen

|Henry II

|Preparing the Battle of Vlaardingen

1030

|Minden

|Conrad II

1066

|Tribur

1076

|Worms

|Henry IV

1077

|Augsburg

1098

|Mainz

|Henry IV

1105

|Ingelheim

|Henry IV

1119

|Tribur

|Henry IV

1122

|Worms

|Henry V

1126

|Speyer

|Henry V

1146

|Speyer

|Conrad III

|Decision to participate in the Second Crusade

1147

|Frankfurt

|Conrad III

|

1152

|Dortmund, Merseburg

|Frederick I Barbarossa

1154

|Goslar

|

1157

|Bisanz

|Frederick I Barbarossa

1158

|Diet of Roncaglia near Piacenza

|Frederick I Barbarossa

1165

|Würzburg

|Frederick I Barbarossa

1168

|Bamberg

|Frederick I Barbarossa, Henry VI

1178

|Speyer

|Frederick I Barbarossa

1180

|Gelnhausen

Frederick I Barbarossa, Henry VI

|Investiture of the Archbishop of Cologne with the Duchy of Westphalia

1181

|Erfurt

|Henry VI

|Exile of Henry the Lion

1188

|Mainz

|Henry VI

1190

|Schwäbisch Hall

|Henry VI

|Abolishment of the Duchy of Lower Lorraine

1193

|Speyer

|Henry VI

|Trial of Richard I

1196

|Frankfurt

|Henry VI

1205

|Speyer

|Philip of Swabia

1213

|Speyer

|Frederick II

|Frederick has his uncle, Philip of Swabia, who was murdered 1208 in Bamberg, interred in the Speyer cathedral

1235

|Mainz

|Frederick II

1273

|Speyer

|Rudolf I

1287

|Würzburg

|Adolf

1309

|Speyer

|Henry VII

|

1338

|Frankfurt

1356

|Nuremberg

|Charles IV

|Issuance of the Golden Bull

1379

|Frankfurt

1384

|Speyer

1389

|Eger

|Wenceslaus

|Peace of Eger

1414

|Speyer

|Sigismund

|

1444

|Speyer

|Frederick III

|

1487

|Speyer

|Frederick III

|

1487

|Nuremberg

|Frederick III

1488

|Esslingen

|Frederick III

|Formation of the Swabian League

1495

|Worms

|Maximilian I

|Imperial Reform; Common Penny in the wake of the Swabian War

1496/97

|Lindau

1497/98

|Freiburg

1500

|Augsburg

1505

|Cologne

|Arbitration ending the War of the Succession of Landshut

1507

|Konstanz

1512

|Trier, Cologne

|10 Imperial Circles

1518

|Augsburg

1521

|Worms

|Charles V

|Diet of Worms, ban of Martin Luther, Edict of Worms

1522

|Nuremberg I

1522/23

|Nuremberg II

1524

|Nuremberg III

1526

|Speyer I

|Diet of Speyer, suspension of the Edict of Worms

1529

|Speyer II

|Diet of Speyer, reinstatement of the Edict of Worms, Protestation at Speyer. Proclamation of the Wiedertäufermandat condemning Anabaptists

1530

|Augsburg

|Diet of Augsburg presentation of the Augsburg Confession

1532

|Regensburg

|

|Constitutio Criminalis Carolina

1541

|Regensburg

1542

|Speyer

1542

|Nuremberg

1543

|Nuremberg

1544

|Speyer

1548

|Augsburg

|Augsburg Interim

1550/51

|Augsburg

1555

|Augsburg

|Peace of Augsburg

1556/57

|Regensburg

|Ferdinand I

1559

|Augsburg

1566

|Augsburg

1567

|Regensburg

1570

|Speyer

|The infantry of the Empire gained a comprehensive military code

1576

|Regensburg

1582

|Augsburg

1594

|Regensburg

1597/98

|Regensburg

1603

|Regensburg

1608

|Regensburg

1613

|Regensburg

1640–41

|Regensburg

1653–54

|Regensburg

|Ferdinand III

|The Youngest Recess (Jüngster Reichsabschied, recessus imperii novissimus)

1663–1806

|In the Reichssaal
of the Regensburg town hall
as the Perpetual Diet

|See list

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Peter Claus Hartmann: Das Heilige Römische Reich deutscher Nation in der Neuzeit 1486–1806. Stuttgart 2005, {{ISBN|3-15-017045-1}}.
  • Axel Gotthard: Das Alte Reich 1495–1806. Darmstadt 2003, {{ISBN|3-534-15118-6}}
  • Edgar Liebmann: Reichstag. In: Friedrich Jaeger (Hrsg.): Enzyklopädie der Neuzeit, Bd. 10: Physiologie-Religiöses Epos. Stuttgart 2009, str. 948–953, {{ISBN|3-534-17605-7}}
  • Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger: Des Kaisers alte Kleider. Verfassungsgeschichte und Symbolsprache des Alten Reiches. München 2008, {{ISBN|978-3-406-57074-2}}
  • Helmut Neuhaus: Das Reich in der frühen Neuzeit (Enzyklopädie Deutscher Geschichte, Band 42). München 2003, {{ISBN|3-486-56729-2}}.
  • Heinz Angermeier: Das alte Reich in der deutschen Geschichte. Studien über Kontinuitäten und Zäsuren. München 1998, {{ISBN|3-486-55897-8}}