These dashing Swedish officer had nothing to do in the Anglo-Swedish War.
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What
if they gave a war and nobody came? That
is essentially what happened in the Anglo-Swedish
War which was declared on
November 17, 1810 and dragged on for two years without a shot being fired by the belligerents. It was a sham
war between two erstwhile allies—and
still secret de facto ones. The faux conflict was a footnote to the international intrigue playing out in the background and on the
periphery of the titanic Napoleonic
Wars.
It
is so obscure that for a while the Wikipedia
entry on the paper war was
altered by some prankster to claim
that the British invaded Stockholm by sea, executed Crown Prince Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte and most of the government, and annexed Sweden into the British
Empire from which the Nordic country
did not gain independence until
1912. This post was evidently up completely undetected for quite some time. But within
minutes of when I first started writing this blog post back in 1917, it was corrected. My guess is some history geek like me who clicked on the link from Wikipedia’s On This Day… almanac
feature out of idle curiosity about a war they had never heard of, discovered and finally reported the ruse.
This
is what really happened.
In
the early 19th Century Sweden, the
once the dominant power of Northern Europe, had fallen on difficult times. As Allies
of the British they were defeated by French, Dutch, and Spanish
forces in the Pomeranian War of
1807-08. They lost the eastern third of their territory—Finland—to the Russians in the Finish War of 1808-09.
Sensing the weakness of its former master and under pressure from the French Denmark-Norway declared war on Sweden and began preparations
for an invasion.
At
this point, earlier grand coalitions against
Napoleon having collapsed, Sweden was the United
Kingdom’s only remaining ally and
it was a basket case. Pressured on all sides despite Britain
being its main trading partner
without which the economy might collapse, the Swedes were forced to
look for ways to find accommodation with
France and the nations in its orbit.
At
home, a war weary and exhausted nation was also in upheaval. A liberal
coup d’ état deposed King Gustav IV
Adolf and replaced him with King Charles
XIII who accepted a new constitution.
Russian cavalry over rides Swedish troops early in the Finish War of 1808.
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The
Swedes avoided having their country completely overrun when a British fleet
arrived after the ice melted in
the Baltic Sea—the ice Russian
forces had marched across to attack the Swedes in the winter. The Russian fleet was bottled up at Kronstadt and the Baltic became a British lake cutting off easy logistical support for the large armies
in Sweden. But in late summer, the fleet
sailed away to engage the French and Spanish in the Atlantic. Exposed
once again, the Swedes were forced to sue the Russians for peace.
In
the resulting Treaty
of Fredrikshamn in September 1809 Sweden not only lost Finland but
was coerced into renouncing its British alliance, closing its
ports to British shipping and subscribing to France’s Continental
System. Overnight the Swedes went
from being a British ally to being—for the time being—non-combatant French
allies.
Pacified, the Russians, then still French allies
themselves, used their good offices to facilitate the Treaty
of Paris signed in January 1810 by which the French returned Pomerania to
the Swedes in exchange for further pledges end still flourishing trade by winked-at
smuggling with Britain and to seize British property in Pomerania
and in warehouses in Swedish ports.
The reluctant Swedes dragged their feet on both
counts and by back channels assured the British that they would stay out
of the war and continue to allow sub
rosa trade.
The hapless Dane Charles August only survived months as Crown Prince of Sweden before being felled by a stroke.
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The
new King was both childless without
an apparent heir and disinclined to take much direct role in government. After casting about Charles August, a Danish prince who had lately commanded
forces against Sweden in Norway was proposed as Prince
Regent and Charles XIII dutifully formally adopted the middle
aged man he never met as his son and heir. The new Crown Prince was expected to be the de facto ruler for a figurehead
monarch.
The thinking was quite simple. The selection
of the Dane was a signal to Napoleon of friendlier intentions and a possible
avenue though which negotiations might achieve security from
further attacks by surrogates or even direct dismemberment by
France. It also reflected, even at this late
date the lingering reputation of Napoleon as a liberator that
was still held by some Continental liberals.
Charles August became Prince Regent co-incidentally
with the Treaty of Paris but barely had time to redirect Swedish policy
to a stronger pro-French stance because he died suddenly of a stroke
in May. Scrambling again for a new heir,
the Swedes made an even more astonish choice.
Jean-Baptist
Bernadotte was a Field Marshal of France and once one
of Napoleon’s most honored and trusted commanders but his relationship
with the Emperor had become rocky and contentious. In 1806
Bernadotte was one of the French Marshalls who crushed Prussian
General Von Blücher. In the process he trapped a
large Swedish force at the Baltic port of Lübeck. Not only did he protect them from his own
rampaging troops, he treated them with kindness and humanity and
allowed them to be safely repatriated with their arms. In doing so Bernadotte seems to have become
seen as a hero and savior by some in the Army.
In 1808 Bernadotte was entrusted with a planned
invasion of Sweden via the Danish islands but due to the withdrawal of Spanish
troops from his force and a lack of transport, the invasion never
came off. The Swedes seem to have
believed that Bernadotte had mercifully spared them out of sympathy. Most historians dismiss that as wishful
thinking.
The surprise offer of being made Swedish Crown
Prince stunned Bernadotte, but after giving it some thought, he accepted
it. He had already tried to retire from
the Grand Armee as his relations with Napoleon soured. This seemed not only an unbelievable opportunity
but an escape. For his part Napoleon
was likely glad to be rid of his Marshall but probably believed that as de facto ruler, he would be a loyal
satrap. He badly misread his
man. Bernadotte had no intention of
being an Imperial puppet like some of the monarchs Napoleon had set on
European thrones.
Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, former Marshal of France, was one of Europe's
great commanders before being elected Crown Prince Charles John of
Sweden.
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On August 21, 1810 Bernadotte was elected by the Riksdag of the Estates the new Crown
Prince and was subsequently made Generalissimus
of the Swedish Armed Forces by the
King, conferring real authority to go with the title and honor. He took office under the name Karl Johan—Charles John but continued
to be known as Bernadotte throughout Europe.
He became immediately immensely popular in Sweden and centered his
policy on wresting control of Norway
from the Danes and unifying the Scandinavian Peninsula. This policy put him at odds with the Danish
ally, France.
But
before he could act on any concrete plans, the Crown Prince was compelled to respond to a French ultimatum to enforce the earlier
commitments to halt trade with Britain and to officially declare war. Not yet ready to face a potential two front war against French, Danish/Norwegian forces on
one hand and the Russians of the other, Sweden declared War on the United
Kingdom in November.
But
it was, from the beginning, a phony
war. Bernadotte had no intention of
committing forces to action against the British and for their part, the British
understood that. Although trade was
somewhat curtailed, especially through southern ports where it might easily be
detected, it continued further north. It
fell by less than half in 1811, a blow,
but not a knock-out punch to the
economy. More over the British were allowed
to land unopposed on the island of Hanö in the South Baltic and use it as a base of
naval operations.
Although there was no armed conflict, Bernadotte did
use the war as a pretext for expanding and modernizing the Swedish Army for the
day it could be used in the conquest of Norway or incase either the British or
the French should decide to move against the country. He instituted an unpopular draft which
led to the only violence associated with the war. When farmers in Klågerup near
the southern tip of Sweden rose up in revolt against conscription
more than 800 of them were attacked by Army forces with two cannons
under Major Hampus Mörner killing more than 40
and arresting nearly 300.
As
1811 passed with no action by Sweden to join in actual combat and with ample evidence of collusion to continue trade and allowing the Royal Navy to operate from Hanö
Napoleon became increasingly angry at his former Marshal and the
Swedes. When Napoleon was
preparing to invade Russia in January 1812 citing Swedish breeches he re-occupied Pomerania and the island of
Rügen to protect his flank. Bernadotte later said he would never have
taken up arms against France but felt duty
bound to protect his new country.
In
April Sweden signed a new mutual defense
pact with the chief victim of
French aggression, Russia and both
nations jointly engaged in negotiations that led to the parallel Treaties of Orbero ending the
Swedish-Anglo War and the Russo-Anglo
War which were signed July 18, 1812.
Bernadotte
and the Swedes would take a much greater role in fighting the French than they
ever did in the faux dust up with the British. In 1813 Sweden officially joined Britain,
Russia, Prussia, Austria and others
in the Sixth Coalition against
Napoleon. Later that year he was
appointed commander of the Army of the North consisting of
Swedish, Russian, and Prussian troops and notched victories against French Marshalls Oudinot in August and against Ney
in September at the Battles of Großbeeren and Dennewitz.
Bernadotte's infantry overwhelmed the French under Marshall Oudinot at the Battle of Battle of Großbeeren. This was in the real War of the Sixth Coalition against Napoleon.
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After
the turning point Battle of Leipzig in
October Bernadotte turned his
attention on the Danes in a quick campaign that led to the Treaty of Kiel by which Denmark ceded Norway to Sweden in
exchange for Pomerania and switch sides to join the Sixth Coalition.
Although Bernadotte’s dream was somewhat thwarted
when the Norwegians rebelled and declared a republic
with liberal constitution, when he promised them autonomy under the
constitution, they agreed to personal union with the Swedish Crown, Sweden refused to hand over Pomerania to the
Danes because the terms of the treaty were not fulfilled. They only kept Pomerania until the post-Napoleonic
Wars Congress of Vienna re-drew the map of Europe handed Pomerania
to Prussia in a complex territorial swap.
The Arms of the House of Bernadotte which still rules Sweden in a modest, low-key manner.
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By that time King Charles XIII had died in 1818 and
Bernadotte ascended to the throne of Sweden as Charles XIV John and the
throne of Norway as Charles III John.
He ruled both countries as a successful and popular monarch from 25
years until 1844. Among his many
achievements was developing the policy of strict neutrality that
has kept Sweden out of war ever since.
He founded the House of Bernadotte that ruled
Norway until its independence in 1905 and still reigns in Sweden—however
modestly in a low-key Scandinavian manner—under King Carl XVI Gustaf.
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