Maximilian I, like other Holy Roman Emperors…
1495 CE
Maximilian I, like other Holy Roman Emperors before and after him, has to face struggles with other powerful princes in the empire and he thus seeks to secure his position and the imperial monarchy by furthering centralization.
Within the Holy Roman Empire, Maximilian faces pressure from local rulers who believe that the King's continued wars with the French to increase the power of his own house are not in their best interests.
There is also a consensus that in order to preserve the unity of the Empire, deep reforms are needed.
The reforms, which have been delayed for a long time, are launched in 1495 at the Imperial Diet held in Worms.
Maximilian is partly successful at Worms, but he also has to make concessions in favor of the princes.
The imperial reform proclaim an "eternal public peace" (Ewiger Landfriede) to put an end to the abounding feuds and the anarchy of the robber barons and it defines a new standing Imperial Army to enforce that peace, to which each imperial estate (Reichsstand) will have had to send troops.
It also mandates the common penny (Reichspfennig), a new head tax to finance this army.
However, its collection will never be fully successful.
Among the concessions Maximilian has to make is the institution of a new supreme court, the Reichskammergericht, thus separating the highest judicial authority from the person and the whereabouts of the emperor.
As the local rulers want more independence from the Emperor and a strengthening of their own territorial rule, Maximilian also has to agree to the formation of a governmental council of princes called the Reichsregiment, which will meet in Nuremberg and consist of the deputies of the Emperor, local rulers, commoners, and the prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire.
It will never play a significant role: convened for the first time only in 1500, it will be dissolved by Maximilian two years later.