Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand (1609/16101 in Escorial near Madrid, Spain - 9 November 1641 in Brussels) (also known as Fernando and as Ferdinand von Österreich), Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, Cardinal, Infante, Archbishop of Toledo (1619-41), and commander during the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)
Born in Escorial near Madrid, Spain in 16091 as the son of King of Spain, Philip III, brother of King of Spain Philip IV, and Margaret of Austria, sister of Emperor Ferdinand II. His father wished that he make his career in the Catholic Church, and hence in 1619 he was made Archbishop of Toledo, and shortly afterwards received the title of Cardinal. The style Cardinal-Infante was a combination of his title of Cardinal and his title as a Prince (Infante in Spanish) of Spain. Ferdinand was never ordained as a Priest, which was common enough at the time for members of the aristocracy who were placed in clerical office.
Meanwhile, Ferdinand of Hungary was able to defeat the Swedish army at Regensburg in July 1634. This Ferdinand and his cousin the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand then raced to merge their armies. The Swedish forces of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar and Gustaf Horn desperately tried to prevent this merger, but were unable to catch up with Ferdinand of Hungary. The Cardinal-Infante crossed the Danube in August 1634. In September both armies were able to merge, and camped south of Nördlingen in Swabia. At that time Nördlingen was protected by a small Swedish garrison. Shortly thereafter, the armies of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar and Gustaf Horn also reached Nördlingen, preparing the events for the decisive Battle of Nördlingen. The cousins Ferdinand & Ferdinand then prepared for battle, ignoring the advice of the more experienced generals, such as the Imperial general Matthias Gallas. Bernhard and Horn also prepared for battle, but they were by now rivals and in disagreement with each other. They also underestimated the numerically superior enemy forces, and despite correct reports believed that the enemy forces numbered only 7,000, not 21,000 infantry, compared to 16,000 Swedish infantry. During the battle, almost anything that could go wrong went wrong for the Swedish forces, and the two Ferdinands achieved an outstanding military victory. Gustaf Horn was captured, the Swedish army was destroyed, and the remainder that fled to Heilbronn was only a shadow of the former glorious army.
However, his powers were secretly limited, and the leader of his army was instructed to follow Spanish orders instead of Ferdinand's orders if necessary. In 1635 the French attacked Namur, planning to merge with the Dutch near Maastricht. However, the Dutch hesitated, and the French retreated. Ferdinand subsequently was able to capture Diest, Goch, Gennep, Limburg, and Schenk.
In 1636 Ferdinand disempowered the last protestant priests in the Spanish Netherlands, and continued his military expansion by capturing Hirsen, Châtelet, and Chapelle, and securing Luxembourg using Croatian troops.
On October 10 1637, however, Breda was recaptured again after a 10 month siege by the Prince of Orange after being under Spanish control for 12 years. Despite repeated attempts the Cardinal-Infante was unable to recapture this critical fortress, strengthening not only the Dutch but also his enemies at the Spanish court in Madrid. Ferdinand also lost Chapelles, Landrey, and Damvilliers to the French, and was not only unable to capture Maubeuge but also lost significant ground to the French in the process. While Ferdinand was able to capture Antwerp, Chastillon, and Geldern in subsequent years, he lost the important town of Arras in 1640.
More dangerous than his military enemies were, however, his enemies at the Spanish court. Numerous rumors and lies floated about, and it was claimed that Ferdinand was planning to become an independent ruler of the Spanish Netherlands with the help of the French King, an enemy of Spain. This rumor was enhanced by another rumor that the French court was planning to marry Ferdinand to the daughter of the Duke of Orleans, the French king's brother. Both claims were totally without merit and only designed to hurt his reputation.
At the same time, the Spanish empire was in a bad state both military and financially. The Cardinal-Infante was even giving conflicting orders to send troops to Spain to aid against a Portuguese uprising.
Ferdinand fell ill during battles in 1641, and died on 9 November 1641 in Brussels at age 32. It is believed that the death was caused by exhaustion combined with ill health. Reports talk about an ulcer on the stomach, but continuing court rumors also claimed that he was poisoned. Before his death he also had an illegitimate daughter, Marie Anne de la Croix, who became a nun. She was born in Brussels 1641 and died in Madrid 1715.
His body was brought to Spain in 1643, and a total of 12,000 requiems were performed in accordance with his last wishes.
Disputes about who should be his successor as the Governor-General of the Spanish Netherlands also destroyed the alliance between the Emperor in Vienna and the Spanish in Madrid. The Emperor (by now the Cardinal-Infante's old comrade in arms, Ferdinand III) favored his brother Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria, a militarily unfortunate but otherwise capable leader. Madrid however favored John of Austria the Younger, the twelve year old illegitimate son of King Philip IV and the famous actress María Calderón. The inauguration of the unpopular bastard was delayed, and Spain lost control of much of the Spanish Netherlands in the following years due to the flawed rule of the interim governor Francisco de Mello, Marquis of Terceira.
1609 births | 1641 deaths | Non-ruling Austrian royalty | House of Habsburg | Governors of the Habsburg Netherlands | Spanish generals
Kardinalinfant Ferdinand | Fernando de Austria | Ferdinand de Habsbourg dit le Cardinal-Infant | Ferdinand van Oostenrijk (1609-1641)
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