William Tell Misses by Jeff Provine
Author
says: we're very pleased to present a new story from Jeff Provine's
excellent blog This
Day in Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in
this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).
November 18th 1307,
in a legendary act that seemed almost Biblical in magnitude, Albrecht
Gessler, the Austrian bailiff of the Alpine town of Altdorf, set his hat
atop a pole in the center of town.
He ordered the townspeople to bow before it in recognition of the
Austrian emperor (although, as it was his own hat and thus "crown", they
may have been bowing to him). The Alps had been under the influence of
various foreign ruling houses such as Savoy and Kyburg who maintained key
passes for military supremacy. In 1264, Kyburg toppled, and the Holy Roman
Emperor Rudolph I claimed the Swiss territory as his own.
Please click
to comment on Reddit.After decades of rule, local Swiss grumbled,
and Gessler was dispatched to quell them. Many suspected that the emperor
sent him there to provoke the Swiss so that an Austrian invasion would
seem a peacekeeping force, but such secrets would remain behind closed
doors. Gessler conducted government business with a heavy hand, staging
rules to find naysayers and execute them before the rabble was roused.
While other townsfolk bowed to the hat, a hunter named William Tell
walked through the square and refused to bow. Gessler had him arrested and
gave him a choice: be executed outright or use his crossbow to knock an
apple from his son Walter's head. Tell, an expert marksman, chose the
apple. Surrounded by Austrian troops, Tell would trust his skills and play
the overlord's game. If he missed, both he and his son would be executed.
If he struck true, as he felt certain he would, they would be given
freedom.
"A lot can come from a little, can't it?" -
reader's commentsDuring the attempt, a man coughed behind Tell,
breaking his concentration enough to have the arrow bury itself several
inches below the apple. As Walter fell dead, Tell turned on Gessler and
fired a second arrow, killing the Austrian instantly. Guards seized Tell
and nearly beat him to death before their captain stopped them. Tell would
be sent back to Austria and put on trial for murder.
The case at court would prove instrumental in establishing political
jurisdiction over Switzerland for Austria. While the Swiss balked at their
lack of freedom, the Austrian crown gradually began to assert control by
giving sway in the competition for Holy Roman Emperor against the
Luxembourgs. Rather than a crackdown militarily, the Austrians offered
pacts to the various Alpine communities such as Uri and Berne, creating a
confederation that would evolve into Austrian domination by the fifteenth
century.
The uproar of the Reformation broke apart the Holy Roman Empire and
spilled southward into the Alps, led before his death by Huldrych Zwingli.
Seizing freedom of religion as an opportunity to seek political freedom as
well, the confederation shattered and set about militarized valleys among
the mountains. Guerrilla warfare pitted communities against one another
and, especially, against Austrian influence. With such interruption in the
south, the Swedish-backed northern Germans were able to free themselves
from Roman authority early in the Twenty-five Years' War.
Switzerland would come under heavy sway in the Counter-Reformation
following those violent years. Ideals of religious freedom were cast aside
as heresy and disunity, and great significance was put into building up
cathedrals and Catholic institutions, even to the cost of economic growth.
Much of Europe would pass by Switzerland in this time, but the resilience
would be recognized as the key to halting French invasion in 1798.
Empowered by victories during the growth of Nationalism, Switzerland would
seek independence in 1870 from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, gaining great
military support from Giuseppe Garibaldi, whose unification of Italy also
fought against Austrian imperialism. Finally standing as its own free
republic, Switzerland would follow Italy and its neighbor Bavaria into
Fascism in the early twentieth century. After the war defeated fascist
thought, Switzerland would be occupied by French and American troops,
eventually returned to its own elections. In 1997, Switzerland joined the
European Union, hoping to gain much of the economic and technological
improvement it had missed for so many years.
Author
says in reality or so the legend goes, William Tell struck the apple
cleanly from his son's head. Gessler had Tell arrested again, going against
his word of freedom, and transported across Lake Lucerne, where a sudden
storm allowed Tell to escape. Tell would later kill Gessler, giving the
Swiss a step to begin its struggle toward the independent Swiss
Confederation. Forged through the troubled days of the Thirty Years' War,
Switzerland holds its neutrality and defense as important aspects to this
day in its economically rigorous and developed land. To view guest
historian's comments on this post please visit the
Today in Alternate History web site.
Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In
History That Never Occurred Today. Follow us on
Facebook, Myspace and
Twitter.
Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit
differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items
explore that possibility. Possibilities such as America becoming a Marxist
superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy
Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting
fictional blog.

Sitemetre
 |