preview

The Role Of Law And Order In The Thirty Years War

Decent Essays

Peter Hagendorf was a German mercenary for several armies during the Thirty Years’ War. The remnants of his diary chronicle his experiences during the conflict. The diary is linear in form and records events he encountered from 1629 to 1649. His military career enabled him to travel extensively throughout Europe witnessing skirmishes in several countries such as Belgium, France, Germany, and Poland. Peter Hagendorf’s diary and documentation of his numerous exploits is a useful primary source to review the role of law and order in the Thirty Years’ War. His diary reports many acts of lawless behaviour from soldiers and citizens and the crimes they committed such as theft, extortion, arson, terrorism, and implied sexual violence. Throughout the …show more content…

Hagendorf’s recounting of events suggests multiple war crimes were committed in his presence and he never explicitly expresses satisfaction or disgust towards such events. This essay will concentrate on the Thirty Years’ War as a conflict devoid of appropriate law and order based on textual information taken from Peter Hagendorf’s diary which reports an array of crimes committed over the twenty-year period such as the maltreatment of civilians (theft, extortion and rape), war crimes (terrorism, arson, property destruction and murder), and the administration of justice (trials and executions).
In Hagendorf’s diary there are several passages that indicate the Thirty Year’s War was a period in which both soldiers and citizens had no consideration of law and order and treated the circumstances of war as an opportunity to gain illicitly or to commit crimes without repercussions. Most of the criminal offences mentioned in the document were committed by the soldiers and the victims of the crimes were mostly civilians. Such disregard for law and order is evident when Hagendorf recalls an event in the Kashubian region of Lower Pomerania in which soldiers in his …show more content…

One passage from Hagendorf’s log records the execution of seven soldiers in the Swedish army by their own commander . Hagendorf states that the commander lured the seven soldiers to accompany him to soldiers that temporarily abandoned the regiment where he shot all seven of them to remind people of the consequences of disobeying commands. There are no legally justifiable reasons for these killings as the soldiers murdered were innocent of any wrongdoing. This event highlights the abandonment of law and order within the military as seven innocent soldiers were murdered simply to send a message that anything perceived as insubordination will be punishable by death. Hagendorf does not express outrage or sympathy and instead sarcastically remarks upon the murders as ‘‘their escort payment’’ . Hagendorf casually recalls taking part in another war crime; the incineration of a castle on the French border with seven resisting peasants left to die inside . In sequence to this crime is the destruction of a nearby village, which per Hagendorf consisted of around one thousand settlers . The diary informs that an imperial and Bavarian force of two thousand and five hundred strong were met with resistance from the villagers and were resigned to bombarding the settlement with cannon fire before abandoning the village as it burned . Hagendorf fails to clarify whether the

Get Access