John Xenakis in 'Generational Dynamics - Forecasting America's Destiny' wrote:
.
German Civil War begins, 1618
The Thirty Years' War first began as a civil war in the Habsburg
Empire (Germany and Austria), following the unraveling of the 1555
Peace at Augsburg.
We can identify a big financial crisis component to the Thirty
Years' War, caused by the
debasing of coins, and leading to
the great "Tulipomania" bubble, as we'll see.
The financial crisis had, at its base, the price inflation caused
by the precious metals that Spain imported from the New World
during the Golden Age of Spain in the 1500s. After the disastrous
destruction of the Invincible Armada by England, Spain rebuilt its
Armada, but was forced to pull back many of its military
adventures, especially as sources of precious metals in the New
World began to peter out.
This led to financial hardship, but it doesn't take long for
clever people to devise sneaky new methods for making money.
The habit of
debasing coins had begun around 1600. The value of a
coin was determined by the value of the precious metal in
it. Princes and clergymen started to
debase the coins by
substituting cheap metal for good metal, or by reducing their
weight. Trading in these coins became increasingly speculative
during the "unraveling" period, since one could never be sure
whether a coin was
debased, or how much it was worth. By
1618,
debasement was widespread throughout the Habsburg
Empire, causing widespread financial hardship.
So by 1618, we had the two factors needed to forecast a new crisis
war -- a financial crisis and a generational change, the latter
coming from the death or retirement of people who were around
during the Peace at Augsburg.
The German civil war began.
The war expands
Rough map of Europe showing main participants in last decade of
the Thirty Years' War
The reason that the Thirty Years' War lasted 30 years is that it
comprised several different wars, because of the merger of
timelines. It's as if we described World War I and World War II
as a single war running from 1914 to 1945.
The Thirty Years' War was extremely destructive. It laid waste
large parts of central Europe. Population declined from 21
million in 1618 to 18 million in 1648. It started in Eastern
Europe in the early 1620s; then it spread to the north and
enveloped Denmark and Sweden in the late 1620s and 1630s.
Recall that France's timeline was about 20 years behind Germany's
timeline in the religious wars of the 1500s, and so it's not
surprising that France entered the Thirty Years' War 20 years
later than Germany did.
By the 1630s, Spain and Germany were closely linked by religion
and marriage. A Habsburg cousin was ruling Spain through
marriage.
More important, the two empires shared a common religious vision
of serving God by spreading Catholicism and defeating the
Protestants.
Furthermore, the Netherlands was also controlled by the Habsburg
Empire.
So, if you take a look at the above map, you can see that France
was pretty nervous, being surrounded on all sides by the
Habsburgs.
Furthermore, the financial health of Europe continued to decline.
Spain was becoming increasingly in debt, as the supply of precious
metals from the New World continued to decline, and the
debasement of coinage around Europe was unabated.
Tulips
This was the time of one of the most remarkable financial crises
in recorded history, the "Tulipomania" bubble. Tulips were the
"high tech" products of the day, and people were buying and
selling tulips at increasingly high prices, just as people bought
and sold high tech stocks at increasingly high prices in the
1990s. The Tulip Mania bubble is described in detail in chapter
6.
France's religious wars occurred in the 1550s-60s, with the brutal
St. Bartholomew's Massacre occurring in 1572, and so the
generational change in France occurred in the 1530s.
France declared war on Spain in 1634 and on Germany in 1635. This
extremely brutal war, which also involved Denmark and Sweden as
allies of France, lasted until 1648.
** Chapter 8 -- History of Western Europe
** http://www.generationaldynamics.com/cgi ... westeurope