Everything about Battle Of Morgarten totally explained
On
November 15 1315, the
Swiss Confederation thoroughly defeated the soldiers of
Duke Leopold I of Austria in an ambush near the
Morgarten pass.
The house of
Habsburg coveted the area around the
Gotthard pass in order to secure this shortest passage to
Italy, while the Confederates of
Uri,
Schwyz and
Unterwalden had imperial freedom letters from former emperors granting them local within the empire.
In 1314, Duke Louis IV of Bavaria (who would become
Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor) and
Frederick the Handsome, a
Habsburg prince, each claimed the crown of the
Holy Roman Emperor. The Confederates supported Louis IV because they feared the Habsburgs would annex their countries as Habsburg property - as they already had tried to do in the late 13th century.
War broke out over a dispute between the Confederates of Schwyz and the Habsburg-protected monastery of
Einsiedeln regarding some pastures, and eventually the Confederates of Schwyz conducted a raid on the monastery.
Frederick's Brother, Leopold of Austria, led an army of 3000 to 5000 men - about one third of them
knights on horseback - to crush the rebellious confederates, planning a surprise attack from south via
Lake Aegeri and the Morgarten pass and counting on a complete victory over the rebellious peasants.
The Confederates of Schwyz - supported by the Confederates of Uri, who feared for their autonomy, but not supported by the Confederates of Unterwalden - expected the army in the west near the village of
Arth, where they'd erected fortifications. A historically plausible legend tells of the Knight of Huenenberg who shot an arrow into the camp of the Confederates with the attached message "watch out on St. Otmar's day at the Morgarten".
The Confederates prepared a road-block and an ambush at a point between Lake Aegeri and Morgarten pass where the small path led between the steep slope and a swamp. When about 1500 men attacked from above with rocks, logs and
halberds, the knights had no room to defend themselves and suffered a crushing defeat, while the foot soldiers in the rear fled back to the city of
Zug. A chronicler described the Confederates, unfamiliar with the customs of battles between knights, as brutally butchering everything that moved and everyone unable to flee. This founded the reputation of the Confederates as barbarian, yet fierce and respectable fighters.
The Confederates renewed their oath of 1291 in 1314 and within forty years cities like
Lucerne,
Zug,
Zürich and
Berne joined the confederation.
The victory of the Confederates left them in their virtual autonomy and gave them a breathing-space of some sixty years before the next Habsburg attack resulted in the
Battle of Sempach (1386).
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