1690 imperial election
The imperial election of 1690 was an imperial election held to select the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. It took place in Augsburg on January 23.
Background
On May 26, 1685, Charles II, Elector Palatine, the Calvinist elector of the Electoral Palatinate, died without children. He was succeeded by his Catholic cousin Philip William, Elector Palatine, bringing the balance of electors to six Catholics, one Calvinist, and one Lutheran.
The Holy Roman Empire had been embroiled since 1683 in the Great Turkish War, repelling attempted Ottoman conquests in Southeast Europe. On September 25, 1688, hoping to capitalize on the empire's preoccupation with the Turks, the French King Louis XIV invaded across the Rhine, precipitating the Nine Years' War. Louis's war aims were to install his preferred candidate, Wilhelm Egon von Fürstenberg, bishop of Strasbourg, as elector of Cologne, and to occupy the Electoral Palatinate, to which he believed he was entitled as Charles II's sister Elizabeth Charlotte, Madame Palatine was the wife of his younger brother Philippe I, Duke of Orléans.
Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor called for the election of his successor. He was granted one vote as king of Bohemia, but because the even number of electors might result in a tie, following the precedent of the elections of 1653 and 1658, he abstained. The remaining seven electors were:
- Anselm Franz von Ingelheim, elector of Mainz
- Johann Hugo von Orsbeck, elector of Trier
- Joseph Clemens of Bavaria, elector of Cologne
- Maximilian II Emanuel, elector of Bavaria
- John George III, elector of Saxony
- Frederick I of Prussia, elector of Brandenburg
- Philip William, Elector Palatine, elector of the Electoral Palatinate
Elected
Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor, Leopold's eldest son, was elected king of the Romans.
Aftermath
Joseph acceded to the throne on his father's death on May 5, 1705.