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Many of us who trace our roots back to the Baden region of
Germany are aware that family records from local parish
churches generally go back only as far as about 1650. This
should not be surprising to anyone familiar with the Thirty
Years War.
The Thirty Years War (1618-1648) was a result of conflicts of
interests of the European and Scandinavian powers, the Holy
Roman Empire, and the German Princely States and Free Cities:
everybody in Christendom was involved. Because of the details
of the initial fighting and the expressed motives of many of
the major combatants, casual observers often judge this
conflagration to have been mostly about religion. Historians,
however, believe that territorial lust and dynastic competition
were more important; easy to accept when one recalls that
Protestant Saxony was initially aligned with Catholic Bavaria
and, later, Catholic France (with foreign policy in the hands
of Cardinal Richelieu) joined forces with the paladins of the
Reformation. While the fighting was spread throughout Germany,
a few areas (such as Baden) were particularly busy.
War is always hell, but this particular war was a deeper and
longer hell for the populations on-site due to the then current
state of European warfare practices. Up to and during
most of the Hundred Years War, it was widely held that battles
be fought by nobles as the common man was judged to be too
oafish and cowardly to be of any potency (a belief that was
vigorously supported, no doubt, by the peasant lobby.)
Nobles also could afford war-horses. But by 1600, the longbow
had been proven to be vastly superior to mounted armour and
large numbers of peasants were required. Also,
peasants not quickly killed were expected to pillage for their
physical needs. When a conflict is sustained under such
conditions for thirty years it is little wonder that mass
depopulation; agricultural, commercial, and industrial ruin;
and the disruption of any remnant of social nicety (such as
parish record keeping) would result.
The stunning successes of King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden,
using paid, uniformed, fed, career soldiers changed much in
future conflicts, but not in time to make life any better for
our early seventeenth century ancestors.
Jim Riehle
Lindsay, Ontario
2004

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