Synopsis
The Habsburgs were Europe's most influential ruling dynasty of the early modern era. Their origins in Alpine obscurity gave no suggestion of the vast territories they would eventually control, governed from their European bases in Madrid, Vienna, Prague and Brussels. Dukes and Archdukes of Austria, Kings of Spain, Bohemia and Hungary, and Holy Roman Emperors - a mere handful of the many titles which became their Birthright, achieved where possible through marriage, but increasingly secured through war. By the mid sixteenth century this vast patrimony had become too unwieldy for one man, the Emperor Charles V, to rule alone. In 1556 he abdicated and divided his territories between his brother Ferdinand and his son, Philip. Ferdinand, who succeeded him as Holy Roman Emperor, inherited the central European territories ruled from Prague and Vienna. His son, Philip, was given Spain, parts of Italy, the Low Countries and the Spanish lands in the New World. These two Habsburg dynasties co-existed in harmony for a century and a half, secured by a series of family intermarriages. Frequently beset by the endless wars of religion and territorial ambition launched by enemies from both within and beyond their borders, their story is remarkable.
Art and power have always been linked and the Habsburgs built and furnished an amazing range of palaces and hunting villas, endowed churches and monasteries, all the while filling them all with extraordinary works of art. The rollcall of those who worked for them - for example Titian, Rubens and Velázquez amongst the painters - is to see the greatest names from the mid fifteenth to the mid seventeenth centuries pass before our eyes. Then there are the family patrons/collectors: the Emperor Charles V (seen above in Titian's iconic image); his son Philip II; Philip's Austrian cousin, the Emperor Rudolf; Philip's extraordinary daughter, the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia (Tom's 'favourite nun'); Isabella's less than bright brother, Philip III and her ungrateful nephew, Philip IV, the great patron of Velázquez; and finally, there is the splendidly industrious (though now largely forgotten) Archduke Leopold from the Austrian branch, whose collection forms the core of Vienna's Künsthistorisches Museum.
Tom Duncan will bring this amazing dynasty to life in a series of webinars over the coming weeks. The first sequence of four webinars will be given on successive Wednesdays and Thursdays, February 2, 3, 9 & 10.
Tom will return to complete his series on the later Habsburgs from Philip II to the Archduke Leopold on March 9, 10 & 16. Details of this second sequence will be published at later intervals in February.
Art and power have always been linked and the Habsburgs built and furnished an amazing range of palaces and hunting villas, endowed churches and monasteries, all the while filling them all with extraordinary works of art. The rollcall of those who worked for them - for example Titian, Rubens and Velázquez amongst the painters - is to see the greatest names from the mid fifteenth to the mid seventeenth centuries pass before our eyes. Then there are the family patrons/collectors: the Emperor Charles V (seen above in Titian's iconic image); his son Philip II; Philip's Austrian cousin, the Emperor Rudolf; Philip's extraordinary daughter, the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia (Tom's 'favourite nun'); Isabella's less than bright brother, Philip III and her ungrateful nephew, Philip IV, the great patron of Velázquez; and finally, there is the splendidly industrious (though now largely forgotten) Archduke Leopold from the Austrian branch, whose collection forms the core of Vienna's Künsthistorisches Museum.
Tom Duncan will bring this amazing dynasty to life in a series of webinars over the coming weeks. The first sequence of four webinars will be given on successive Wednesdays and Thursdays, February 2, 3, 9 & 10.
Tom will return to complete his series on the later Habsburgs from Philip II to the Archduke Leopold on March 9, 10 & 16. Details of this second sequence will be published at later intervals in February.