Short History of Bavaria
The borders of Bavaria
have varied considerably in its history. The region was inhabited by Celts
when Drusus conquered it (15 BC) for Rome. The Baiuoarii (see Germans
) invaded it (6th cent. AD) and set up the duchy to which they gave their
name. It was one of the five basic or stem duchies of medieval Germany.
Irish and Scottish monks began the Christianization of the area, and it
was completed (8th cent.) by St. Boniface. In 788, Charlemagne defeated
Duke Tassilo III and added Bavaria to his empire. From 817 to 911, Bavaria
was ruled by the Carolingians Louis the German , Carloman (d. 880), Arnulf
, and Louis the Child .
In 911 the duchy (then comprising,
roughly, Bavaria proper, present-day Austria, and part of the Upper Palatinate)
came under indigenous rulers. Frequent Magyar inroads were stopped (955)
by Emperor Otto I , who in 947 had given Bavaria to his brother Henry.
Henry's grandson was duke of Bavaria when he was elected (1002) German
king as Henry II. After his accession Bavaria was ruled by various houses,
but in 1070 Emperor Henry IV gave the fief to Welf, or Guelph, d'Este
IV (see Este ), who began the dynasty of the Guelphs .
From
the 9th to the 12th cent. the Bavarian dukes, of whatever house, were
at the center of the rebellions of the great German princes against the
imperial authority. To reduce their power Emperor Otto II in 976 stripped
the duchy of all but present-day Upper and Lower Bavaria and the Tyrol.
When in 1137 the Guelph Henry the Proud acquired Saxony in addition to
Bavaria, Conrad III deposed him and gave Bavaria to the Babenberg rulers
of Austria. Frederick II restored (1156) Bavaria to Henry the Lion but
in 1180 deposed the rebellious Guelph and bestowed the duchy (from which
he detached considerable territory in what is now Austria) on Otto of
Wittelsbach. The political history of Bavaria, much reduced in importance,
became that of the Wittelsbach family, which ruled until 1918.
The
Wittelsbach fiefs, including the Rhenish Palatinate (acquired in 1214),
were almost always divided among the numerous branches of the dynasty.
Under the Wittelsbach emperor Louis IV (reigned 1328-47), Bavaria was
briefly reunited. Duke Albert IV (1467-1508), who again united Bavaria
(except the Rhenish Palatinate), introduced the law of primogeniture;
thus Bavaria entered the Reformation period much strengthened. The triumph
of Catholicism in Bavaria proper was crucial for its later history. Duke
Maximilian I (1597-1651) headed the Catholic League in the Thirty Years
War and was rewarded with the Upper Palatinate and the rank of elector.
The agricultural
wealth and the strategic position of Bavaria made it a coveted prize and
a frequent battleground then and later. Bavaria was overrun by foreign
armies, notably in the War of the Spanish Succession , the War of the
Austrian Succession , the War of the Bavarian Succession (1778, by which
Bavaria lost the Inn Quarter to Austria), and the French Revolutionary
Wars. Elector Maximilian IV Joseph, who in 1799 united all Wittelsbach
lands, allied himself with Napoleon I, joined the Confederation of the
Rhine , and in 1806 was proclaimed king of Bavaria as Maximilian I . In
1813 Maximilian abandoned Napoleon and joined the allies, who at the Congress
of Vienna (1814-15) left him in possession of virtually all of present-day
Bavaria, including the Rhenish Palatinate.
During
the period of reaction that followed in Europe, Bavaria stood out for
its relatively liberal government. The liberal constitution of 1818 lasted
exactly a century. King Louis I (1825-48), dethroned by the mild revolution
of 1848, was succeeded by the able Maximilian II (1848-64) and the brilliant
but insane Louis II (1864-86). All three rulers had a passion for the
arts, science, and architecture. The reputation of Bavaria, particularly
Munich, as a cultural center dates from their reigns. The abolition in
1848 of guild restrictions opened the way for industrialization.
At the same time,
the rural prosperity of Bavaria and the strong influence of the Catholic
Church (which predominates except in the Upper Palatinate and in Middle
Franconia) accented the hostility of Bavaria toward the rising power of
Prussia. Bavaria sided with Austria in the Austro-Prussian War (1866).
Defeated in that war, it acknowledged Prussian leadership, sided with
Prussia against France in 1870-71, and joined (1871) the German Empire.
As the chief German state after Prussia, Bavaria retained separatist tendencies.
King
Louis III , successor to the mad Otto I , was dethroned in Nov., 1918,
by Kurt Eisner , who established a socialist republic. The assassination
(Feb., 1919) of Eisner led to a Communist revolution (Apr., 1919), which
was bloodily suppressed by the German army. Bavaria then joined the Weimar
Republic. In the early 1920s, Munich became the center of the National
Socialist (Nazi) movement; in 1923 the National Socialists made an abortive
attempt (Beer Hall Putsch) in that city to seize power. Catholic Bavaria
as a whole gave little support to the movement until Adolf Hitler came
to national power in 1933. Under the National Socialist regime Bavaria
lost its autonomy.
After World War
II, Bavaria became part of the American occupation zone. The Rhenish Palatinate
was separated from Bavaria and was later made part of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.
A new constitution for Bavaria was drawn up in 1946. Since the founding
of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1949, the conservative Christian
Social Union, allied nationally with the Christian Democratic Union, has
been the strongest Bavarian political party.
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