Stecklikrieg

The Stecklikrieg ("War of Sticks") of 1802 resulted in the collapse of the Helvetic Republic, the renewed French occupation of Switzerland and ultimately the Act of Mediation dictated by Napoleon on 19 February 1803. The conflict itself was between insurgents, mostly drawn from the rural population, and the official forces of the Helvetic Republic. The term Stäckli, or "wooden club," from which the conflict draws its name, refers to the improvised weaponry of the insurgents.

Stecklikrieg
Part of the French Revolutionary Wars

The death of Lieutenant Rudolf von Werdt on 18 September 1802, an episode of the Stecklikrieg. Pen and ink drawing by Karl Ludwig Zehender (1751–1814).
DateAugust – October 1802
Location
Result

Federalist victory

  • Fall of the Helvetic Republic
  • New French military occupation
  • Act of Mediation (10 March 1803)
Belligerents
Helvetic Republic

Federalists

City of Zürich
Bern
Luzern
Uri
Schwyz
Unterwalden
Glarus
Solothurn
Appenzell
     Aargau

The Swiss War

Following the Treaty of Lunéville, the French troops left Switzerland during the summer of 1802, resulting in rapid destabilization of the country.[1] This instability reached a head with the open rebellion which originated in Central Switzerland and was centered around the cities of Zürich and Bern, as well as rural parts of the Swiss plateau in the cantons Aargau and Solothurn. The war began with an engagement at Rengg pass in Pilatus on 28 August, followed by artillery attacks on Bern and Zürich during September, and a skirmish at Faoug on 3 October. After several hostile clashes with the under-equipped and less motivated forces of the Helvetic Republic, the central government capitulated militarily on 18 September, retreating from Bern to Lausanne, and then collapsed entirely.[2] It was succeeded by cantonal governments, and a Tagsatzung in Schwyz led by Alois von Reding.

Napoleon was concerned that the instability of Switzerland could infect Europe at large, and was authorized to negotiate a settlement between the feuding sides.[3] His Act of Mediation made concessions to the demands of the insurgents, abandoning the centralist structure of the Helvetic Republic in favor of a more federalist approach. He likewise stated the natural state of Switzerland was federal and that attempts to force any other system upon them were unwise.[4]

The British response

French intervention constituted a breach of the Treaty of Amiens, which was used as a pretext by the United Kingdom to resume their war against France on 18 May 1803. The French involvement within the internal affairs of the Swiss was exemplary of Britain's worry that it was to have a diminishing role in continental affairs. Though the British often attempted to stay removed from the internal struggles of the Continent, the actions of Napoleon's France threatened to upset the existing order and thus Britain's existing economic supremacy.[5] While the Acts of Mediation enforced by French intervention did not particularly upset the Swiss order, in fact restoring much of pre-existing traditions and forms of Swiss government from before the French Republican invasion, it was a technical violation of the Treaty of Amiens, which prohibited such foreign meddling by France.[6]

In regards to civil response to the actions of the French, William Wordsworth's poem Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland was directly inspired by the events of the Stecklikrieg. His poetry of the period was his response to the "easy jingoism" which he considered to often captivate the British populace. In the Subjugation of Switzerland, he relates his experiences on the differences between the "place" of a nation and the "politics" of one. He saw the French intervention in Switzerland as a repudiation of the philosophy of the Revolution and supported the British declaration of the continuation of the war against France, though he did still sympathize with the values initially claimed by the French Revolution.[7]

References

  1. AN, Jürg Stüssi-Lauterburg /. "Bâtons, guerre des". HLS-DHS-DSS.CH (in French). Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  2. Switzerland, Markus G. Jud, Lucerne. "History – All About Switzerland". swiss-government-politics.all-about-switzerland.info. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  3. "Diète fédérale". HLS-DHS-DSS.CH (in French). Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  4. PM, Andreas Fankhauser /. "Médiation". HLS-DHS-DSS.CH (in French). Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  5. Englund, Steven (2008). "xxMONSTRE SACRÉ: THE QUESTION OF CULTURAL IMPERIALISM AND THE NAPOLEONIC EMPIRE". The Historical Journal. 51 (1): 215–250. doi:10.1017/S0018246X07006656.
  6. "Treaty of Amiens | France [1802]". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  7. Behrendt, Stephen (1995). "Placing the places in Wordsworth's 1802 sonnets". SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900. 35 (4) via ProQuest.
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