| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:label
| |
| sameAs
| |
| image name
| - Peace-of-augsburg 1555.jpg
|
| Strength
| - variable: 10,000–28,000 until 1586, plus 18,000–28,000 troops of the Army of Flanders after 1586.
- variable: 10,000–28,000 until 1586
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| lon deg
| |
| Partof
| - the Protestant Reformation and the Counter Reformation
|
| Date
| - 1555(xsd:integer)
- 1583(xsd:integer)
|
| Commander
| |
| lat sec
| |
| map caption
| |
| lon sec
| |
| Caption
| - Contemporary engraving by Frans Hogenberg.
- Destruction of Godesburg fortress during the Cologne War 1583; the walls were breached by mines, and most of the defenders were put to death.
|
| Image caption
| - Negotiating the Peace of Augsburg
|
| Participants
| - Ferdinand, King of the Romans acting for Charles V. Delegates from the Imperial Estates
|
| Casualties
| |
| Result
| - Roman Catholic victory
- The principle of reservatum ecclesiasticum protected religious conformity within the ecclesiastical estates, but it did not clearly state how this was to be protected.
- The principle of cuius regio, eius religio established religious conformity within a single state. Two confessions of faith were acceptable: Catholicism or the Augsburg Confession . Any other expression of faith was heretical.
- The Declaratio Ferdinandei granted certain exemptions to the principle of cuius regio, eius religio to some knights, sovereign families, and imperial cities.
|
| lat min
| |
| combatant
| - 20(xsd:integer)
- and others
- House of Berlaymont-Flyon
|
| Image Alt
| - Men gather in a large room, seated on benches around an open center space. Two men read a document to another man seated on a throne.
|
| lon min
| |
| Place
| |
| lat deg
| |
| Event Name
| |
| Conflict
| |
| Location
| |
| is Partof
of | |