Charles IV ( , , ; 14 May 1316 – 29 November
1378), born Wenceslaus (
Václav), was the
second king of
Bohemia from the
House of Luxembourg, and
Holy Roman Emperor.
He was the eldest son and heir of
John
the Blind, who died on 26 August 1346, thus Charles inherited
the
County of Luxembourg and the
Kingdom of Bohemia. On 2 September
1347 Charles was crowned as the king of Bohemia.
On 11 July 1346
Prince-electors had
elected him
King of the Romans
(
rex Romanorum) in opposition to
Emperor Louis IV.
Charles was crowned on
26 November 1346 in Bonn
.
After his opponent had died, he was re-elected in 1349 (
17 June) and crowned (
25
July) King of the Romans. In 1355 he was also crowned
King of Italy on
6
January and
Holy Roman
Emperor on
5 April. With his coronation
as
King of Burgundy, delayed until
4 June 1365, he became the personal ruler of all the kingdoms of
the
Holy Roman Empire.
Life
Born to
John and Elisabeth of
Bohemia in Prague
as
Wenceslaus (Václav), the name of her father, but later chose
the name Charles at his confirmation
after he went to France, at the court of his uncle, Charles IV of France, where he remained
for seven years.
Charles received French education and was literate and fluent in
five languages:
Latin,
Czech,
German,
French, and
Italian. In 1331 he gained some experience
of warfare in Italy with his father. From 1333 he administered the
lands of the Bohemian
Crown due to his father's frequent absence and later also
deteriorating eye-sight. In 1334, he was named
Margrave of Moravia, the traditional
title for the heirs to the throne.
Two years later he undertook the
government of Tirol
on behalf of
his brother John
Henry, and was soon actively concerned in a struggle for the
possession of this county.
In
consequence of an alliance between his father and Pope Clement VI, the relentless enemy of the
emperor Louis IV,
Charles was chosen Roman king in opposition
to Louis by some of the prince-electors at Rhens
on 11 July
1346. As he had previously promised to be subservient to
Clement he made extensive concessions to the Pope in 1347.
Confirming the papacy in the possession of wide territories, he
promised to annul the acts of Louis against Clement, to take no
part in Italian affairs, and to defend and protect the
church.
Charles IV was initially in a very weak position in Germany. Owing
to the terms of his election, he was derisively referred to by some
as a "priest's king" (Pfaffenkönig). Many bishops and nearly all of
the Imperial cities remained loyal to Louis the Bavarian. Worse
yet, Charles backed the wrong horse in the
Hundred Years' War, losing his father and
many of his best knights at the
battle
of Crecy in August 1346, with Charles himself escaping wounded
from the field.
Civil War in Germany was prevented, however, when Louis IV died on
11 October 1347, when he suffered a stroke during a bear-hunt. In
January 1349
Wittelsbach partisans
attempted to secure the election of
Günther von Schwarzburg as
king, but he attracted few supporters and died unnoticed and
unmourned after a few months. Thereafter, Charles faced no direct
threat to his claim to the Imperial throne.
Charles initially worked to secure his power base. Bohemia had
remained untouched by the plague.
Prague became his capital, and he rebuilt
the city on the model of Paris, establishing the New
Town
of Prague (Nové Město). In 1348, he
founded the
University of
Prague, named after him, the first university in Central
Europe. This served as a training ground for bureaucrats and
lawyers. Soon Prague emerged as the intellectual and cultural
center of Central Europe.
Charles,
having made good use of the difficulties of his opponents, was
again elected and recrowned at Aachen
on 25 July
1349, and was soon the undisputed ruler of the Empire. Gifts
or promises had won the support of the Rhenish and
Swabian towns; a marriage alliance secured the
friendship of the Habsburgs; and that of
Rudolf II of Bavaria, count
palatine of the Rhine, was obtained when Charles, who had become a
widower in 1348, married his daughter Anna.
In 1350
the king was visited at Prague by the Roman tribune Cola
di Rienzo, who urged him to go to Italy, where the poet
Petrarch and the citizens of Florence
also
implored his presence. Turning a deaf ear to these entreaties,
Charles kept Cola in prison for a year, and then handed him as a
prisoner to Clement at Avignon
.
Outside of
Prague, Charles attempted to expand the Bohemian crown lands, using
his imperial authority to acquire fiefs in Silesia, the Upper Palatinate
, and Franconia. The
latter regions comprised "New Bohemia", a string of possessions
intended to link Bohemia with the Luxemburg territories in the
Rhineland. The Bohemian estates were not, however, willing to
support Charles in these ventures. When Charles sought to codify
Bohemian law in the Majestas Carolina of 1355 he met with sharp
resistance. After that point, Charles found it expedient to scale
back his efforts at centralization.
In 1354
he crossed the Alps without an army, received the Lombard crown at Milan
on January
1355, and was crowned emperor at Rome by a cardinal in the April in
the same year. His sole object appears to have been to
obtain the imperial crown in peace, and in accordance with a
promise previously made to Pope Clement he only remained in the
city for a few hours, in spite of the expressed wishes of the Roman
people. Having virtually abandoned all the imperial rights in
Italy, the emperor recrossed the Alps, pursued by the scornful
words of Petrarch but laden with considerable wealth. On his return
Charles was occupied with the administration of the Empire, then
just recovering from the
Black Death,
and in 1356 he promulgated the famous
Golden Bull to regulate the election of
the king. Having given Moravia to one brother, John Henry, and
erected the county of Luxemburg into a duchy for another,
Wenceslaus, he was
unremitting in his efforts to secure other territories as
compensation and to strengthen the Bohemian monarchy.
To this end he
purchased part of the upper Palatinate of the Rhine in 1353, and in
1367 annexed Lower
Lusatia
to Bohemia and bought numerous estates in various
parts of Germany. On the death in 1363 of
Meinhard, duke of Upper
Bavaria and count of Tirol, Upper Bavaria was claimed by the
sons of the emperor Louis IV, and Tirol by
Rudolf IV, Duke of Austria. Both
claims were admitted by Charles on the understanding that if these
families died out both territories should pass to the house of
Luxemburg. About the same time he was promised the succession to
the
Margravate of
Brandenburg, which he actually obtained for his son Wenceslaus
in 1373. He also gained a considerable portion of Silesian
territory, partly by inheritance through his third wife,
Anna von Schweidnitz, daughter of
Henry II, Duke of
Świdnica.
In 1365 Charles visited Pope Urban V at Avignon and undertook to escort
him to Rome; and on the same occasion was crowned king of Burgundy
at Arles
.
His
second journey to Italy took place in 1368, when he had a meeting
with Pope Urban VI at Viterbo
, was besieged in his palace at Siena
, and left
the country before the end of the year 1369. During his
later years the emperor took little part in German affairs beyond
securing the election of his son Wenceslaus as king of the Romans
in 1376, and negotiating a peace between the Swabian league and
some nobles in 1378.
After dividing his lands between his three
sons, he died in November 1378 at Prague
, where he
was buried, and where a statue was erected to his memory in
1848.
Charles IV suffered of
gout (metabolic
arthritis), a painful disease quite common in that time.
Evaluation and legacy
His reign was characterised by a transformation in the nature of
the Empire and is remembered as the golden age of Bohemia. He
promulgated the
Golden Bull of
1356 whereby the succession to the imperial title was laid
down, which held for the next four centuries.
He also organized the states of the empire into peace-keeping
confederations. In these, the Imperial cities figured prominently.
The Swabian Landfriede confederation of 1370 was made up almost
entirely of
Imperial Cities. At
the same time, the leagues were organized and led by the crown and
its agents. As with the electors, the cities which served in these
leagues were given privileges to aid them in their efforts to keep
the peace.
He assured his dominance over the eastern borders of the Empire
through succession treaties with the
Habsburgs and the purchase of Brandenburg. He also
claimed imperial lordship over the crusader states of
Prussia and
Livonia.
Patronage of culture and the arts
He made
Prague the imperial capital, refusing even at the insistence of
Petrarch to move to Rome, and he was a great builder in that city,
which bears his name in so many spots: Charles University, Charles Bridge, and Charles Square
. Prague Castle
and much of the cathedral of Saint Vitus
, by Peter Parler, were
completed under his patronage. Finally, it is from the reign
of Charles that dates the first flowering of manuscript painting in
Prague.
In the present Czech Republic
, he is still regarded as Pater Patriae (father of the country or otec
vlasti), a title first coined by Adalbertus Ranconis de
Ericinio at his funeral.
Charles
IV also had strong ties to Nuremberg
, staying within its city walls 52 times and thereby
strengthening its reputation amongst German cities.
Charles
was the patron of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche
, built between 1352 and 1362 (the architect was
likely Peter Parler), where the
imperial court worshiped during its stays in
Nuremberg.
Charles's imperial policy was focused on the dynastic sphere and
abandoned the lofty ideal of the Empire as a universal monarchy of
Christendom. In 1353, he granted Luxembourg to his nephew
Jobst. He concentrated his energies chiefly
on the economic and intellectual development of Bohemia, where he
founded the university in 1348 and encouraged the
early humanists. Indeed, he
corresponded with Petrarch, whom he invited to visit his residence
in Prague, but the great Italian hoped — to no avail — to see
Charles move his residence to Rome and reawaken tradition of the
Roman Empire.
Charles's sister
Bona, married
the eldest son of
Philip VI of
France, the future
John II of
France, in 1335.
Thus, Charles was the maternal uncle of
Charles V of France, who
solicited his relative's advice at Metz
in 1356
during the Parisian Revolt.
This family connection was celebrated publicly when Charles IV made
a solemn visit to his nephew in 1378, just months before his death.
A detailed account of the occasion, enriched by many splendid
miniatures, can be found in Charles V's copy of the
Grandes Chroniques de
France.
Genealogy
Family and children

Charles and his first wife
Blanche
Charles was married four times. His first wife was
Blanche, (1316–48), daughter of
Charles,
Count
of Valois, a half-sister of
Philip VI of France. They had two
daughters:
He secondly married
Anna of Bavaria,
(1329–53), daughter of the Count Palatine
Rudolph II and they had one son,
His third wife was
Anna von
Schweidnitz, (1339–62), daughter of
Henry II, Duke of Świdnica
and
Katharina of Anjou
(daughter of
Charles I Robert, King
of Hungary), by whom he had three children,
His fourth wife was
Elizabeth of
Pomerania, (1345 or 1347–1393), daughter of Duke
Bogislaw V, Duke of Pomerania
and
Elisabeth,
daughter of
Casimir III of
Poland. They had six children:
Named after Charles IV
Several places have been named after Charles:
Ancestors
Charles IV, Holy Roman
Emperor
See also
References
- Charles IV (autobiography), edited by Balázs Nagy, Frank
Schaer: Autobiography of Emperor Charles IV; And, His Legend of
St. Wenceslas: Karoli IV Imperatoris Romanorum Vita Ab Eo Ipso
Conscripta; Et, Hystoria Nova de Sancto Wenceslao Martyre,
Published by Central European University Press, 2001, ISBN
9639116327, 9789639116320, 259 pages [6557]
[aged 62]