History Wiki
Advertisement
History Wiki

The Burgundian Circle (German: Burgundischer Reichskreis) was an Imperial Circle of the Holy Roman Empire. It was created in 1512 during the Imperial Reforms of the Emperor Maximilian I. The original territories of the circle were Breda (centre of the House of Nassau in the Netherlands), the Counties of Hoorn, Bergen and Egmont, and the various Imperial lands of the Duchy of Burgundy. Most of the territories of the Circle were alienated from the rest of the Empire so at the Diet of Augsburg in 1548 the Circle was extracted from the upper rule of the Empire, but the territories continued to enjoy the protection of the Empire and to provide the equivalent of two armies of the electors for the general defence of the Empire, and as much as three during the Turkish Wars. That year the circle was expanded with the addition of Guelders and the Lordships of Utrecht, Groningen, Jever (Circle-free from 1588) and Overijssel with Drenthe.

In 1566 the Burgindian Netherlands were transferred to the Kingdom of Spain. The Dutch began their rebellion against the Spanish in 1567 and the Eighty Years' War in 1568. The Peace of Westphalia in 1648 ended the warfare and removed the rebelling provinces (Frisia, Groningen, the northern half of Guelders, Holland, Overijssel, Utrecht, Zeeland, Zutphen) from both the Circle and the Empire. The Circle was further diminished in various wars against France: Artois (Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659)), parts of Hainaut and Flanders (Treaty of Aachen (1668)) and Franche Comté (Treaty of Nimwegen (1678)). In 1713/4 the Spanish Netherlands were transferred to Austria in the War of the Spanish Succession. The remaining lands of the much reduced Circle were annexed to France by the Treaty of Campo Formio in 1797.


Name

Type

Arms-Antwerp-Marquis Antwerp Margraviate 1512 - 1797
Arms-Brabant Brabant Duchy 1512 - 1797
Arms-Flanders Flanders County 1512 - 1797
Arms-Gelders1276-1378 Guelders with Zutphen Duchy & County 1548 - 1797; Half seceded to the Netherlands in 1648
Arms-Hainaut1354-1473 Hainaut County 1512 - 1797
Arms-Limburg Limburg Duchy 1512 - 1797
Arms-Luxembourg Luxembourg Duchy 1512 - 1797
Arms-Mechelen Mechelen Lordship 1512 - 1797
Arms-Namur Namur County 1512 - 1797
Arms-Tournai Tournai County 1521 - 1797


Former Estates of the Burgundian Circle[]

Name

Type

Arms-Artois Artois County 1512 - 1659; Annexed to France in 1659
Arms-BergenopZoom Bergen and Walen Margraviate 1512 - 1579
Arms-Breda Breda Barony 1512 - 1538
Arms-Franche-Comte1280 Burgundy Free County 1512 - 1678; Annexed to France in 1678
Arms-Egmont Egmont and Ijsselstein County 1512 - 1548
Arms-Frisia-Count Frisia Lordship 1512 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands
Arms-Groningen Groningen Lordship 1548 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands
Arms-Holland Holland County 1512 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands
Arms-Hoorn Hoorn County 1512 - 1614
Arms-Jever Jever Lordship 1548 - 1588
Arms-Overijssel Overijssel with Drenthe Lordship & County 1548 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands
Arms-Utrecht-Diocese1 Utrecht Lordship 1548 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands
Arms-Zeeland Zeeland County 1512 - 1579; Joined the Netherlands


Burgundian Circle
Antwerp | Brabant | Flanders | Guelders | Hainaut | Limburg | Luxembourg
Mechelen | Namur | Tournai


Earlier Members
Artois | Bergen and Walen | Bergen op Zoom | Breda | Burgundy | Drenthe
Egmont and Ijsselstein | Frisia | Groningen | Holland | Hoorn | Jever | Overijssel
Utrecht | Zeeland | Zutphen


Imperial Circles
Austrian | Bavarian | Burgundian | Electoral Rhenish | Franconian | Lower Rhenish-Westphalian
Lower Saxon | Swabian | Upper Rhenish | Upper Saxon
Advertisement