READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER XXIII.THE REVOLT OF THE NETHERLANDS
THE revolt of the
Netherlands and the establishment of the Dutch Republic, the most remarkable
fruits of that spirit of civil and religious liberty which the Reformation had
engendered, form an episode of exceeding interest. Fortitude the most enduring,
courage the most heroic, struggling for rational freedom against the narrowest
and most obstinate bigotry enforced by bloody and ferocious tyrants, and at
length emerging victorious from the strife — such are the materials from which
History draws her brightest and most cheering as well as her most instructive
pages. But before entering on the narrative of these momentous events, we must
briefly recapitulate the situation of the Netherlands.
As many of the
seventeen provinces comprehended under that name as belonged to the House of
Austria in 1512, were then formed by the Emperor Maximilian I into a Circle of
the Empire, called the Circle of Burgundy, which, as we have related above, was
reconstituted and enlarged by Charles V in 1548. Of these provinces, those
which adjoined the French border, viz., Luxembourg, Namur, Hainault, Cambray, and Artois, were called Welsh or Walloon, because
in them a Romance or Latin dialect was spoken. In all the other provinces, with
the exception of a small Walloon strip of Flanders and Brabant, and a small
High-Dutch strip of Luxembourg and Limburg, some variety or other of the
Low-Dutch language was universal; that of the midland ones being Flemish, that
of the northern Dutch. They differed still more in their laws and customs than
in language. Each province was a separate state, having its own constitution,
which secured more liberty to those who lived under it than was then commonly
enjoyed in most other parts of Europe. Brabant, in particular, possessed
singular political rights, so that it was not uncommon for women to come from
other provinces to lie in there, in order to secure these privileges to their
offspring; and on the accession of a new Duke, at what was called his Blyde Inkomst,
or Joyeuse Entrée, when the States took an oath of allegiance,
they stipulated for the right of withdrawing it, in case the Duke should
violate their laws and customs. The main practical links of union among the
different Netherland provinces were the States-General, or assembly of deputies
sent from each, and the Supreme Tribunal established at Mechlin, having an
appellate jurisdiction over them all. The States General, however, had no
legislative authority; they were rarely convened, and chiefly for the purpose
of voting supplies. Their members were not representatives chosen by the
people, but deputies, or ambassadors from the provinces. The different
provinces had also their own States, which were variously composed. Hence it
will appear that Charles V himself, with all his power as Lord of the
Netherlands, was virtually only the head of a republican confederation. He had,
however, made some innovations. He named and paid the judges composing the
Mechlin Chamber; he sometimes nominated the provincial judges; he interfered in
the election of magistrates. But the circumstance of his having been born in
Flanders, the predilection which he always manifested for his native land, and
the favors which he heaped on Netherlanders at the expense of his Spanish
subjects, had rendered him popular in the Low Countries in spite of his
encroachments and oppressions.
In the middle of
the sixteenth century the Netherlands enjoyed a greater share of prosperity
than any other European land. At that time the seventeen provinces contained
more than 350 cities and 6,300 towns, besides innumerable villages. Commerce,
agriculture, and manufactures flourished; and though the trade of some towns
had fallen off after the discovery of the maritime route to the Indies, the
deficiency had been more than made good by the rise of Antwerp, whose share,
through Spain and Portugal, in Indian commerce rendered it the richest city in
Christendom, whilst Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and other towns were by the same
means also rapidly increasing in wealth. Hence the Netherlands formed the chief
treasury both of Charles V and Philip II. Charles drew from them in a few years
twenty-four million ducats; yet through the ill policy of Philip, they soon
became unable to supply his necessities. Nor were the people of the Netherlands
thriving only in a material sense. They were also well educated, and it was
rare to find even a peasant who could not read and write.
Among such a
people the doctrines of the Reformation found easy entrance, and were soon
extensively adopted. The Lutheran tenets were naturally the first to find
acceptance, and they continued to predominate in the provinces bordering upon
Germany, while Holland and Zealand abounded with Anabaptists. But Calvinism
rapidly penetrated into the Walloon provinces, and its disciples soon
outnumbered both the other sects put together. The state of religion in the
Netherlands had early attracted the notice of Charles V, and between the years
1520 and 1550 he published no fewer than eleven “Placards”, or edicts, for the
suppression of heresy. The last, which appeared in 1550, and has been already
described, formed the groundwork of Philip II’s subsequent proceedings. Charles
V had early attempted to introduce the Spanish Inquisition into the Low
Countries, and obtained a bull from his old preceptor. Pope Adrian VI,
appointing an Inquisitor-General; but the people rose and compelled the new and
unwelcome functionary to fly for his life. The scheme was then altered. By
another bull four Inquisitors were appointed, belonging to the secular clergy,
whose powers, which, however, during twenty years were ill defined, were in
some degree placed under control of the law; and in 1546 it was decreed that no
sentence pronounced by an Inquisitor should be carried into execution, except
with the sanction of a member of the Provincial Council. Hence the Netherland
tribunal was far less terrible than the Spanish. Nevertheless many thousand
persons are said to have perished in the Netherlands during the reign of
Charles for their religious opinions; in spite of which that Emperor, in the
last year of his reign, confessed that heresy went on increasing.
Such briefly was
the condition of the Netherlands when they passed under the dominion of Philip
II of Spain, as Duke, or Count, or Lord of the various provinces, in the manner
already related. The predilections of that King soon called him back to his
Spanish realms. By birth, language, and manners he was entirely a Spaniard, and
was always regarded as a foreigner by the Flemings; nor did his stay among them
remove the unfavorable impression produced at his first visit. His cold and
haughty manners ill accorded with the temper of the Netherlanders, and instead
of meeting the joyous greetings of the people, he shut himself up in his
carriage and seemed anxious to avoid their gaze.
A scene that
occurred before Philip’s departure already gave token of future troubles. In an
assembly of the States-General at Ghent loud complaints were uttered of
religious persecution and the presence of Spanish troops. Philip’s first care
after his accession had been directed to religion. He confirmed Charles’s
“Placard” of 1550; making, however, by the advice of the Bishop of Arras, no
alteration in the original edict, in order to shelter himself under the
popularity attaching to his father's name. He had also matured a scheme for a
great increase in the Netherland episcopal sees, which was put in execution a
year or two later. At present popular indignation was chiefly directed against
the Spanish troops, who, though not more than 3,000 or 4,000 in number, had
committed the most scandalous excesses. A paper signed by William Prince of
Orange, Lamoral Count Egmont, and many
other leading nobles, complaining of the pillage, insults, and other disorders
daily perpetrated by the Spanish soldiery, was presented to the King before the
adjournment of the States-General in the name of that body : Philip was furious
at hearing remonstrances to which he was so totally unaccustomed. He
abruptly quitted the hall, and turning round at the door, inquired “whether he
also, as a Spaniard, was expected to leave the country?”. His suspicions had
already been excited against Orange and Egmont by a letter of the Prince's
which had fallen into his hands. William, when a hostage at the court of France
for the execution of the treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis, had accidentally learnt
more than was convenient of Philip’s future policy. Henry II, who took him for
a staunch Catholic, communicated to him the secret determination of himself and
the Catholic King to extirpate heresy; but, although the Prince at that time
belonged to the Roman communion, nobody could be further removed from bigotry,
or entertain a more sincere dislike of all religious persecution.
Notwithstanding
his suspicions, Philip found it impossible to neglect men of so much power and
influence as Orange and Egmont, and he was obliged to leave them in possession
of their governments, those of William being Holland, Zealand, Utrecht, and
West Friesland, while Egmont had Flanders and Artois. The King also found it
politic to concede on the subject of the Spanish troops; but he would not yield
a jot with regard to religion, declaring that he would rather not reign at all
than rule over heretics. When on the point of embarking at Flushing for Spain (August
20th, 1559), he could not help again manifesting his anger at the constraint
which had been put upon him; and turning abruptly to the Prince of Orange, he
accused him of having organized the opposition. William, in reply, having
attributed it to the States, Philip seized his wrist, and shaking it violently,
exclaimed in Spanish, “No, no! not the States, but you, you, you!”. An ominous
separation! Orange took care not to trust himself on board the Spanish fleet.
Margaret appointed
regent
Before his departure
Philip II had appointed his sister Margaret to be Governess of the Netherlands,
— an illegitimate daughter of Charles V, by a Flemish lady, and wife of Ottavio Farnese, Duke of Parma. Thus the Low Countries
were administered almost consecutively by three Princesses of the House of
Austria, and by all with distinguished ability. Margaret was now thirty-seven
years of age. From her masculine understanding Strada characterizes
her as a man in petticoats; yet she was not destitute of the gentler qualities
of her sex. Philip had received her with great state on her arrival at Brussels
in June, 1559, and early in August presented her to the States-General as the
future Regent. She was assisted in the government by the ancient councils, —
the Council of Finance, the Privy Council for Justice and Home Affairs, and the
Council of State for Foreign Affairs. The Prince of Orange and Count Egmont
were included in the last, together with Granvelle,
Bishop of Arras, and some members of the other councils. Besides these,
Margaret had also a smaller council or cabinet, called the Consulta,
consisting of only three members : these were, Count Berlaimont,
President of the Council of Finance; Viglius,
President of the Privy Council; and Granvelle. Berlaimont was a Hainault noble of the first class, of
great integrity and loyalty. Viglius was an eminent
Frisian jurist, a good writer, and sagacious statesman, of dogged tenacity and
not over-scrupulous honesty. Granvelle we have
already had occasion to describe as the minister of Charles V. His qualities
were congenial with those of Philip; his manners were polished, he was a good
courtier, and the Flemings detested him equally with his sovereign. His post of
prime minister was an additional cause of hatred with the Flemish nobles, who
thought that it should have been filled by one of their own body.
Philip had engaged
that the Spanish troops should quit the Netherlands in four months, yet they
still remained; which, as there was no foreign war to require their presence,
could only be ascribed to a design to enforce the King’s arbitrary acts; and
Orange and Egmont resigned their employments, alleging that they dare not hold
them because the government was become so unpopular. Granvelle saw the danger, and pressed Philip to withdraw the troops for fear of an
insurrection. The King demurred on the plea that he could not pay their
arrears; an allegation hardly to be credited considering their small number,
although the royal exchequer was undoubtedly low. At length some members of the
Council became security for the arrears, and the troops sailed in January,
1561, nearly a twelvemonth after the stipulated time.
In the same year
the discontent was increased by the introduction into the Council of a plan for
the erection of several new bishoprics. Hitherto the Netherlands had contained
only four bishoprics, namely, those of Utrecht, Arras, Tournay,
and Cambrai; the first of which acknowledged the Archbishop of Cologne as
its metropolitan, while the last three were in the metropolitan province of
Rheims. The extent of these four dioceses was enormous and inconvenient,
Utrecht alone comprising 300 towns and 1,100 churches. Charles V had
contemplated erecting six new Netherland bishoprics, but effected nothing.
Philip II, however, soon after his accession, obtained the sanction of Pope
Paul IV for the erection of three metropolitan sees, namely, Utrecht, Mechlin,
and Cambray, in which were to be comprehended
the following bishoprics : in Utrecht the sees of
Haarlem, Middleburg, Leeuwarden, Groningen, and Deventer; in Mechlin those of
Antwerp, Hertogenbosch, Roermonde, Ghent,
Bruges, and Ypres; in Cambray those
of Tournay, Arras, St. Omer, and Namur. The bull
authorizing the establishment of these sees had arrived just when Philip was on
the point of quitting the Netherlands; but it had not been thought expedient to
prosecute the scheme till the period just mentioned.
So vast an
increase in the Netherland hierarchy excited the suspicion and discontent of
Catholics as well as Protestants. The latter were naturally hostile to a scheme
which threw so much fresh ecclesiastical power into the hands of the Pope and
the King; for the new bishops were to be named by Philip, but subject to the
approbation of the Roman See; and as the King's persecutions in Spain were well
known, the whole scheme was regarded only as a prelude to the introduction of
the Spanish Inquisition. The Catholics also were alarmed at the thoughts of
that formidable tribunal, and the nobles of that confession had additional reasons
for discontent with the scheme. The nomination of so many bishops by the King
would diminish the power of their order; while, as various ancient abbeys were
either to be suppressed or to be deprived of great part of their revenues in
order to furnish out the incomes of the new prelates, the nobility would thus
lose a source of provision for their younger sons. The whole odium of the
measure fell on Granvelle, who was to be Archbishop
of Mechlin and Primate of the Netherlands, and who had early in this year,
through the intercession of the Regent Margaret, received from Paul IV a
Cardinal’s hat.
The clouds were
gradually gathering, yet it was some time before the storm burst. The measures
of the King and his minister were firmly but quietly opposed. Philip having
called upon the Netherlands to assist the Catholic party in France with troops,
the Prince of Orange invited the Knights of the Golden Fleece to assemble at
his palace (May, 1562), when the majority agreed that the minister must be
resisted. Only a pecuniary aid was sent to France. Soon after we find Orange
and Egmont complaining to the King that they had no share in the government,
although they were held responsible for its measures by the people. The great
nobles began to absent themselves entirely from the Council, and indeed from
all public business, and to treat the minister and his measures with sarcasm
and ridicule. Granvelle grew alarmed, and talked of
resigning. In March, 1563, the nobles formed themselves into a league, in which
they were supported by the people. Great part of the Walloon population,
inflamed by the French Huguenot preachers, sympathized with their brethren in
France; for churches on the model of that of Geneva had been established in the
southern Netherlands in 1561, and a formal confession of the Calvinist tenets
subscribed. The union of the Protestants with the local authorities had given
them a political standing. Large assemblies met and chanted the psalms of
Marot, and at Valenciennes two Calvinist ministers condemned to be burnt were
rescued by the people. Philip, who did not understand the genius of the
Netherlanders, and wished to render them as submissive as his subjects in Spain
and Italy, urged his ministers to use the most vigorous measures; without
reflecting that the Netherlanders were protected by laws which the Regent and
her cabinet naturally demurred to violate.
In the opposition
organized against the government three men stood out pre-eminent: William,
Prince of Orange, Count Egmont, and Count Horn; and as they played a leading
part in the troubles which ensued it will here be proper to give some account
of them.
Family of Nassau
The family of
Nassau, from which William, Prince of Orange, was descended, had its origin
from the old Counts of Laurenburg, who in the
twelfth century built the Castle of Nassau on the Lahn,
and henceforth were called Counts of Nassau. In the thirteenth century the
family became divided into two branches, the elder of which, in 1292, gave an
Emperor, Adolf of Nassau, to Germany. The younger, but more distinguished
branch, besides the petty sovereignty of Nassau Dillenburg,
also acquired large private possessions in the Netherlands. Count Engelbert II, who had distinguished himself in the
time of the Emperor Maximilian I and Charles the Bold of Burgundy, having died
without issue, the family possessions were ultimately divided between his two
nephews, Henry and William. The German possessions fell to the share of
William, who turned Protestant; while Henry, the elder brother, inherited the
family domains in Luxembourg, Brabant, Flanders, and Holland, and became the
confidential friend of the Emperor Charles V. In 1515, Henry married Claude de Châlons, sister of Prince Philibert of Orange; to which
principality his son, René of Nassau, succeeded. René died of wounds received
at the siege of St. Dizier in 1544, and,
having no legitimate children, left his titles and estates to his cousin,
William of Nassau. William, who thus acquired the principality of Orange,
besides large possessions in the Netherlands, was born at his father's castle
at Dillenburg, April 25th, 1533. Both his parents
were Lutherans, but he himself was bred up at Brussels in the Catholic faith,
in the family of the Regent Queen Mary of Hungary, and under the tuition of a
brother of Granvelle. Charles V, in whose household
he became a page at the age of fifteen, soon discerned his abilities, and at
the siege of Marienburg gave him the command of the
Imperial army over the heads of veteran captains. Charles afterwards employed
the Prince with great success in several diplomatic missions, and manifested
the confidence which he reposed in him by making him, as already related, his
envoy, when he abdicated the Imperial Crown.
While the light
hair and complexion of Philip II gave him the appearance of a Fleming, the
Prince of Orange, on the contrary, looked like a Spaniard. His complexion,
hair, and beard were dark; his brown eyes were full and expressive; his head
was small, the forehead capacious, and as he advanced in life furrowed with the
lines of care and thought; the other features were well chiseled. He was above
the middle height, and well-proportioned though somewhat spare. In temper he
was cheerful and convivial. The surname which he acquired of “the Silent”, was not
derived from a morose taciturnity, but from his knowing how to conceal what it
was not prudent to tell. He was said to be an assiduous reader of Machiavelli.
William married in early life a daughter of Count Buren, who soon died, leaving
him a son Philip and a daughter Mary, afterwards married to Count Hohenlohe. He
next addressed himself to Anne, daughter of the Elector Maurice of Saxony, — a
match highly disagreeable to the Court of Brussels, by which it was warmly
opposed. Long negotiations ensued, in which the Prince is said not always to
have observed a perfect candor; but at length all obstacles were overcome, and
the marriage was celebrated at Leipzig in August, 1561. Anne, however, was not
remarkable for chastity, and after thirteen years’ cohabitation, the Prince was
obliged to dismiss her.
Count Egmont and
Count Horn
Lamoral, Count Egmont was descended from the Dukes of Gelderland. In right of his
mother he also inherited the principality of Gaveren,
or Waveren, near Ghent, but he always preferred
the title of Egmont. Of handsome person and attractive manners, of generous impulses
but no great ability, Egmont was the beau idéal of
a dashing cavalry officer; and his victories at Gravelines and
St. Quentin were the result rather of brilliant valor than of military genius.
Philip de
Montmorency, Count of Horn, belonged to a branch of the French family of that
name which had established itself in the Low Countries. He had been Governor of
Gelderland and Zutphen, and Admiral of the
Netherlands, but, like Egmont, he was not distinguished by ability. These two
nobles are but the fortis Gyas fortisque Cloanthus of
the Prince of Orange.
In March, 1563,
Orange, Egmont, and Horn addressed a letter to Philip, in the name of the
Coalition, in which they represented to him that, in consequence of the odium
incurred by Granvelle, his affairs in the Netherlands
could never be successfully conducted by that minister; and they prayed for his
dismissal. After considerable delay, the Spanish King answered this application
on the 6th of June. He observed that the nobles had not alleged any specific grievance
against Granvelle, and that he was not accustomed to
dismiss his ministers on mere vague and general charges; he hoped soon to visit
the Netherlands in person, meanwhile he should like to see one of the nobles in
Spain, and discuss the matter with him. To this communication Orange and his
confederates replied (July 29th) in a firm and dignified tone, to which the
ears of Philip were but little accustomed. They observed that it was not their
intention to turn accusers; the state of the country, the discontent and
disorders which prevailed, were sufficient evidence of the minister's
incapacity; that they did not solicit his condemnation, but simply his removal;
nor did they esteem him so highly as to undertake a journey to Spain on his
account. And they begged the King, since he reposed so little confidence in
their opinions, that he would be pleased to dispense with their further
attendance in the Council, where under these circumstances they could not be
present without a loss of dignity. The Regent Margaret, who was much alarmed at
the state of affairs, seconded the application for the Cardinal’s dismissal.
Philip, whose favorite maxim was “that he and time were a match for any two
others”, resorted to his usual artifice of procrastination. The Duke of Alva,
whom he consulted, advised him on no account to dismiss Granvelle,
but to divide the nobles, by gaining over some of them till he could punish the
others. The Cardinal, meanwhile, displayed surprising fortitude, and clung to
office amid a perfect storm of disapprobation. At length, after the lapse of
more than half a year, the Coalition received an answer, in February, 1564,
intimating that the King would deliberate further on the matter. Moved,
however, by another and still more pressing application on the part of
Margaret, Philip had already written a short letter of dismissal to the
Cardinal, to be used in case of need; and such was the dissatisfaction
manifested by the nobles at the King’s answer, that Granvelle found it prudent to make a virtual resignation under the pretext of paying a
visit to his aged mother in Franche-Comté. In March, 1564, he retired to his
estate near Besançon, where he amused himself with
art and literature, of which he was a liberal patron; but he still kept up an
active correspondence with the King, and it was not long before he re-entered
Philip’s service.
The news of the
Cardinal’s departure was received with joy and exultation, which found a vent
in lampoons and caricatures. The aristocracy discarded their splendid liveries,
and adopted universally a plain, dark grey, while the aiguillette on the
shoulder was replaced by a head and fool’s cap; the head bore a striking
resemblance to the Cardinal’s, and the cap was red. When Margaret at length
persuaded them to lay aside this badge they substituted for it a sheaf of
arrows, the origin of the device afterwards assumed by the Seven United
Provinces. In times of public disturbance trifles like these are not to be
despised; they serve as the rallying ensigns of faction, display its strength,
and promote its organization.
Egmont in Spain
After the removal
of Granvelle, the Netherland government was divided.
The Regent Margaret inclined towards the nobles, and her correspondence at this
period testifies great disgust at the Cardinal. On the other hand, the policy
of the ex-minister was still pursued by Berlaimont and Viglius, the two remaining members of the Consulta.
Hence the measures of the government became feeble. Calvinism spread; Huguenot
preachers and refugees came in great numbers from France and made many
proselytes; the proceedings of the Inquisition occasioned serious riots at
Bruges, Antwerp, and Brussels; while the disordered state of the finances and
the increase of the public debt aggravated the popular discontent. It was in
such a state of things that Philip wrote to Margaret instructing her to
proclaim and enforce the decrees of the Council of Trent (August, 1564). He was
constantly urging the Regent to measures of severity; and so well was he served
by his spies that he would sometimes denounce particular individuals by
describing their personal habits and appearance with an accuracy that would
have done credit to a minister of police. As the pressure was becoming
unendurable, it was determined to adopt a former suggestion of the King’s, and
to dispatch Count Egmont to Madrid to state the grievances of the nation and to
urge Philip to visit the Netherlands in person. The mission was regarded as one
of no small danger. Egmont’s friends had secret forebodings of Spanish dungeons
and assassins; and they signed with their blood an agreement that if any harm
should come to him they would take ample vengeance on the authors of it. Their
fears, however, were on this occasion groundless. Philip adopted the more
politic method of conciliation; treated Egmont with the most flattering
attention; made him a present of 100,000 crowns, and bestowed upon him several
offices in the Netherlands. The Count’s head was completely turned. On his way
home he wrote to the King from Valladolid that “he was the best satisfied man
in all the world”; and he brought back to his countrymen a most favorable
account of the disposition of the Spanish Court. Yet he had scarcely returned
when letters from the King arrived, in which, although Egmont’s behavior at
Madrid was noticed in the most flattering terms, Philip declared that if he had
a hundred thousand lives he would rather lose them all than permit any change
in religion; and he recommended a commission to be formed of three bishops and
a number of jurists to “instruct” the people in their spiritual concerns,
advising at the same time some other method of execution in the case of
heretics. These recommendations were faithfully carried out. Condemned heretics
were executed in their dungeons. The spy system was worked with redoubled
activity. Even looks and gestures were noted. The striking contrast between
Egmont’s report and the actual state of things could not escape observation.
The people accused the Count of having sold himself; the Prince of Orange
reproached him to his face with forgetting the views of his confederates and
the best interests of the country, though he had remembered himself and
accepted the King’s bounty. William, however, saw that Egmont was only a dupe;
the people held him to be a traitor. Either imputation was sufficiently
mortifying to a man of Egmont's temper. He now saw through Philip’s artifices,
declared that they were intended to ruin him with his countrymen, and announced
his intention of throwing up all his offices.
In October, 1565,
Philip indited, at his country retreat in the wood of Segovia, the letter
which may be said to have decided the fate of the Netherlands. It was his will
that the Inquisitors should proceed as heretofore, and as they were entitled to
do both by divine and human law; the edicts must all be enforced, both his
father's and his own. This letter filled the government with the most gloomy
apprehensions. Viglius was for concealing it till the
King could be again consulted, but the Prince of Orange, supported by Egmont
and Horn, prevailed on the Regent to publish it immediately. It was the wish of
Orange to hasten on the catastrophe. “Now”, he exclaimed, “we shall see the
beginning of a remarkable tragedy!”. All hope of toleration vanished with the
publication of the royal dispatches, which were regarded as a declaration of
war. The press teemed with pamphlets and lampoons; secret meetings were held;
resistance was hinted at; Orange and Egmont were called on to stand forth and
defend their country.
The time was not
yet come for the Prince of Orange to take the lead of an organized resistance;
but he was preparing himself for such an event, and he foresaw and favored its
inevitable approach. His motives have often been the subject of discussion. His
panegyrists have held him up as the model of a disinterested patriot, while his
enemies have charged him with being actuated by selfishness, hypocrisy, and
ambition. William, as a Netherland noble, would naturally resent the neglect
displayed towards his order, while as the firm and consistent friend of civil
and religious liberty he viewed with abhorrence the bigoted and tyrannical
conduct of the Spanish King. To these grievances, which he shared in common
with his countrymen, were added others of a more personal kind. Having enjoyed
so much of the confidence of the Emperor Charles V, Orange might naturally have
expected a large share in the counsels of his son; instead of which Philip
entrusted the direction of affairs to the Archbishop of Mechlin, a foreigner,
and the Prince’s enemy. On Philip’s departure for Spain, Orange wished the
regency of the Netherlands to be given to Christina, the widowed Duchess of
Lorraine, a niece of Charles VV, whose daughter he hoped to marry, and thus to
obtain an influence in the government; but Granvelle and the Duke of Alva, who thought that Margaret was a much better Spaniard than
Christina, not only defeated the Prince’s object, but also procured that he
should be disappointed of his intended bride. Thus his patriotism felt the
additional stimulus of private wrongs; but it would never have obtained a field
for its exercise, had not the conduct of the Spanish government been revolting
to the whole mass of the Netherland population.
The “Compromise”
arranged
Towards the close
of the year 1565, the symptoms of popular disaffection became so alarming, that
Margaret begged the King would allow her to resign the government; but Philip
answered the application only with a cool expression of regret that his
dispatch from Segovia should have occasioned so much offence. It was
universally believed in the Netherlands that at the meeting between Alva and
Catharine de' Medici at Bayonne, in June, an arrangement had been made with
France for crushing their liberties. Numbers of the Netherlanders emigrated;
30,000 of them established themselves in England, whither they brought their
capital and their skill. Egmont had escorted from Spain Margaret's son, the
young Prince Alexander Farnese, whose marriage with Doña Maria of Portugal was
celebrated at Brussels, November 11th, 1565. On that day, Francis Junius,
a young Calvinistic divine, a native of Bourges in France, and pastor of the
Huguenot congregation which assembled in secret at Antwerp, preached a sermon
at Cuilenburg House at Brussels, before a
small party of Netherland nobles. After the sermon was concluded, they entered
into an agreement to resist the oppressions of the government, by forming a
league, in which Philip de Marnix, Lord of
Ste. Aldegonde, played a prominent part.
Ste. Aldegonde, the intimate friend of the
Prince of Orange, was a man of the most varied accomplishments. He was at once
a scholar and a poet, a brave soldier and an able diplomatist, and had devoted
so much study to theology, that it was said he could argue victoriously with a
bench of bishops. Other leaders were Henry, Count Brederode,
remarkable chiefly for his ancient descent, which he traced through five
centuries from the Counts of Holland, otherwise a dissolute, vapouring character; and Count Louis of Nassau, a
younger brother of the Prince of Orange. In a meeting held at Breda, in
January, 1566, the league promulgated their views in a paper called the
Compromise, attributed to the hand of Ste. Aldegonde.
The document contained a severe denunciation of the Inquisition as an illegal,
pernicious, and iniquitous tribunal; the subscribers swore to defend one
another against any attack that might be made upon them; and declared, at the
same time, that they did not mean to throw off their allegiance to their
Sovereign, but, on the contrary, to maintain peace, and to prevent, as far as
it lay in their power, all sedition, tumult, and rebellion.
In the course of
two months, the Compromise was signed by about 2,000 persons, including many
Catholics : but only a few of the great nobles could be prevailed on to
subscribe it. The original document bore only the signatures of Brederode, Charles of Mansfeld, and Louis of Nassau.
The league had been formed without the knowledge of the Prince of Orange, who expressed
his disapprobation when he heard of it, and recommended that no violent
measures should be adopted. Nevertheless he, as well as most of the members of
the Council of State, sympathized with the objects of the movement. William, as
Governor of Holland and Zealand, in a remarkable letter which he addressed from
Breda to the Regent, January 24th, 1566, refused to enforce the obnoxious laws;
and several other Governors declared that they would not see their countrymen
burnt by thousands.
Margaret did not
hear of the league till the spring of 1566, when she took some vigorous steps
to resist it, by strengthening the garrisons of fortresses, calling out
the compagnies d'ordonnance, &c.
She had, however, formed a correct idea of the importance of the movement; she
perceived that no middle course would answer, that it must either be put down
at once with a high hand, or the malcontents appeased by ample concessions; and
in her dispatches to her brother she clearly indicated her preference for
conciliation.
The Prince of
Orange at first kept aloof from the league, and at this period Egmont, who was
of a more impulsive temper, seemed to act the leading part : but the nation
relied solely upon William. The latter gave at least a tacit sanction to the
league in the spring of 1566, by joining the members of it in a petition to the
Regent which he had himself revised. It had been resolved that the petition, or
"Request", should be presented by a numerous deputation; and on the
evening of the 3rd April, two hundred members of the league, armed and mounted,
and headed by William’s brother, Count Louis of Nassau, and by Brederode, entered Brussels. On the following day, Brederode read to them a letter which he had just received
from Spain announcing the burning by the Inquisition of Morone,
a well-known Netherland nobleman. This news caused great exasperation. On the
5th of April the confederates went in solemn procession from Cuilenburg House to the Palace to present their
petition, which was couched in respectful terms. Margaret received them
graciously; and when on the following day they came in still greater force to
receive her answer, she referred them to the decision of Philip, assuring them
at the same time that she would use her influence in favor of their prayer.
At a banquet which
took place a little afterwards, at which three hundred of the confederates were
present, Brederode related to the guests what took
place after the presentation of the “Request”. The Regent, he said, appeared at
first a little disconcerted, till Berlaimont, in
order to reassure her, after they were gone, told her that the petitioners were
nothing but a parcel of Gueux (beggars). “My
friends”, continued Brederode, “have no objection to
the name; they are ready to become beggars in the service of their country”.
This sally was applauded with loud cries of “Vivent les Gueux!'” amidst which Brederode left the apartment. He soon returned with a wallet and a wooden bowl, such as
were used by mendicants; both were sent round the table, and each guest pledged
his confederates with redoubled shouts of “Vivent les Gueux!”
Orange, Egmont,
and Horn, who were passing at the time, attracted by the noise, entered the
hall, and are said to have joined in the cheers : an incident afterwards
employed against Egmont and Horn at their trial. The term Gueux remained ever after the appellation of the Netherland malcontents. A medal was
struck in gold and silver, called the “Gueux penny”,
having on the obverse the King’s head, with the legend, Fidèles au Roy, and on the reverse two hands grasping
a beggar’s wallet, with the further inscription, “jusques à
la besace”. The confederates quietly left
Brussels, April 10th, firing a grand salute with their pistols outside the
gate. The greater part of them proceeded to Antwerp, where they were
enthusiastically received. The result of the petition was that the government
caused a document to be drawn up which they called a “Moderatie”
or “Moderation”, because it professed to be a mitigation of the existing law
respecting heresy; although all the alleviation consisted in substituting the
halter for the faggot. The people, by a pun which holds good in Flemish, called
it the “Murderation”.
Progress of the
Missionaries
It was about this
time that the missionaries, or field-preachers, began to appear in the
Netherlands. These men preached at first in the woods and forests at night;
but, gaining courage after a while, they began gradually to appear in the open
plains, in the villages, and even in the suburbs of towns. A platform was
erected for the preacher, round which gathered the women and children; the men
stood outside, generally armed; the outer ground was kept by patrols on
horseback, while barricades of wagons were thrown across the roads to prevent
the approach of the military. Besides religious topics, the missionaries
frequently touched with pathos and eloquence on the misfortunes of the country,
mingled occasionally with violent abuse of the Inquisition, the Pope, and the
clergy; and the meeting was usually concluded by the singing of psalms, either
in French or Flemish. At Antwerp these assemblies sometimes consisted of 20,000
or 30,000 persons, among whom were some of the wealthiest citizens; and they
excited so much alarm that the Prince of Orange, at the request both of the
Regent and of the magistrates of Antwerp, proceeded to that city, and used his
best endeavors to allay the tumults. Even at Brussels, the seat of government,
the singing of psalms and shouts of “Vivent les Gueux!” might be heard at night, and many of the leading
citizens wore the insignia of the league. The Regent offered 700 crowns for
every preacher that was brought in, whether dead or alive; notwithstanding
which, and the daily executions, the preachings still
proceeded.
As the year 1566
wore on, affairs assumed a still more alarming aspect. Louis of Nassau, with
the connivance of his brother William, had begun to subsidize a considerable
German force. The leaders of the movement were loud in their demands that the
States- General should be convened; and Margaret, whose situation was become
embarrassing, urged her brother Philip either to consent to this measure or to
come in person into the Netherlands. In such a juncture, Charles V would have
hastened to the scene of action; Philip II preferred to write his decision from
the wood of Segovia (July). He consented to the abolition of the Inquisition in
the Netherlands; but its place was to be supplied by investing the bishops with
inquisitorial powers. He left it to Margaret to devise some scheme for the
modification of the edicts; which, however, when thus amended, were to be
submitted for his approval. He conferred on the Regent power to pardon all
persons except those already condemned; but he absolutely forbade the
assembling of the States-General; and at the same time he remitted money to
Margaret for the purpose of levying German mercenaries. Yet he was not sincere
even in the trifling concessions which he deemed it prudent to make. At the
very moment of writing them he protested before a notary, in the presence of
the Duke of Alva and two other persons, that they had been wrung from him by
force, and that consequently he did not feel himself bound to ratify any pardon
granted by the Regent. The Catholic zeal of Philip had received a fresh impulse
from the accession of Pius V, to which Pontiff he was singularly devoted. Pius
wrote both to Philip and Margaret, exhorting them not to give way, and offering
men and money to assist them in washing out heresy in the blood of the
heretics.
Meanwhile the anti-Catholic
movement was spreading in the Netherlands. The churches in and about St.
Omer, Tournay, Ghent, Ypres, and other places
were broken into, and the images, altars, and glazing shattered to pieces. Like
scenes of havoc took place in the cathedral of Antwerp, where the image of the
Virgin was seized and rolled in the dust. The disturbances spread into Holland,
Utrecht, Friesland, everywhere in short except a few places in the southern
provinces; in less than a fortnight 400 churches were sacked in Flanders alone.
The authority of the Regent preserved order in Brussels; yet such was her alarm
that she thought of flying to Mons, a thoroughly Catholic town. The Council
remonstrated against such a step; Egmont threatened; the magistrates of
Brussels shut the gates. Being thus a sort of prisoner, Margaret was forced to
make concessions. On the 23rd of August she signed an instrument by which she
engaged that no members of the league should be molested on account of their
past conduct, and consented that the Reformers, provided they were unarmed and
did not molest the Catholics, should hold their religious assemblies, until the
King and the States-General should determine otherwise : while the confederates
on their part took an oath that they would assist her in suppressing all
disturbances. Margaret, however, was highly mortified by this proceeding, and
she wrote to her brother urging him to come in person and subdue the country.
Until these
disturbances, the Regent had acted with the Margaret party of the Prince of
Orange; but she now returned to the conservative party in the Council, which
she had abandoned two years before, and took as her chief counselors Viglius, Berlaimont, Aerschot, and Count Mansfeld. The Orange party bore
the estrangement of the Regent with great coolness, with the exception of
Egmont, a staunch Catholic and conservative, although his generous temper led
him to sympathize with his oppressed fellow-countrymen. The Prince of Orange,
Count Horn, and Count Hoogstraaten proceeded
into their respective governments and made arrangements by which the
malcontents were to retain some of the churches which they had seized, and to
give up others; while Egmont on the other hand proceeded with severity against
the rioters in his provinces of Flanders and Artois. Order seemed for awhile to be restored, and the league fell into
abeyance.
Commencement of
the civil war
These divisions
among the leaders of the opposition necessarily strengthened the Regent's
hands. In fact the confederacy was composed not only of Lutherans and
Calvinists, hostile to one another, but also of Catholics hostile to both.
Before the close of 1566 the Prince of Orange, whose religion always sat easily
upon him, seems to have returned to the Lutheran faith, in which as a child he
had been bred up, but which at the early age of eleven, through his education
at the Imperial Court, he had changed for Catholicism. Margaret began to
restrict the concessions which she had made. She told the Governors of
provinces that the license which she had granted for preaching must be
construed literally, and that she would not suffer under it the exercise of
other Protestant rites, as baptism, the burial service, &c. Thus
interpreted, the license was nothing but a mockery. The Regent was also raising
German and Walloon levies. From these proceedings, as well as from the secret
advices which he received from Madrid, the Prince of Orange foresaw that
religion and liberty must soon be asserted by the sword; for William’s spies
are said to have peered into the very letters which Philip II had locked in his
desk at night; nay, even into the memoranda which he put into his pocket on
going to bed. Among his agents was Van den Esse,
the King’s secretary. He knew that Philip’s anger was chiefly directed against
the great nobles. Montigny, brother of Count
Horn, who had been deputed to Madrid and detained by Philip, also supplied
intelligence, and informed his brother that he must be prepared either to fight
or fly. Open war was evidently at hand. Margaret's troops had laid siege to
Valenciennes, a town noted for heresy. On the other hand Count Louis of Nassau
and Brederode were busy in organizing resistance. The
royalists under Count Meghem made an
attempt on Bois le Duc, which failed, but they
succeeded in taking Utrecht. In March, 1567, a bloody battle was fought near
Antwerp, between the insurgents, led by Marnix,
lord of Thoulouse, and the royalists under Lannoy, in which 1,500 of the Gueux fell,
and 300 more were afterwards massacred in cold blood. During this fight, the
Prince of Orange, who was at Antwerp, having caused the gates to be shut in
order to prevent the citizens from joining Tholouse,
a great riot ensued. William was received with shouts of execration and
epithets of the Pope's servant, antichrist, &c. A clothier levelled at
him an arquebus, which was fortunately pushed aside by another hand; yet
the Prince continued calmly to address the mob, and such was the influence of
his character that he at length persuaded them to cry with him, Vive le Roi! Valenciennes surrendered
soon after (April 2nd); Maestricht, Ghent, Ypres, Oudenarde,
and many other towns consented to admit garrisons; Meghem and Aremberg restored the royal authority in Gelderland,
Groningen, and Friesland; and in the course of a few weeks, except at Antwerp
and some places in Holland, all resistance was subdued.
Margaret now
proposed to the chief nobles an oath of implicit obedience to the King. Most of
them complied; but Brederode, Horn, and Hoogstraaten declined it, and resigned their
governments and commands. Orange, also, in spite of the wheedling of the
Regent, most positively refused to swear, alleging that such an oath would
imply a foregone breach of it; but he saw his danger, and determined to leave
the country, although Margaret employed every effort to detain him. A last
attempt was made through Count Egmont, who had taken the oath, and who had an
interview with William at Willebroek. Each
strove, but without success, to win over the other to his views, and they now
parted for ever, though with mutual esteem and
kindness; William ominously predicting that the Spaniards would use the Count
as a bridge to pass into the Netherlands. It should, however, be remembered
that the situation of the two men was different. Egmont' s possessions lay
entirely in the Low Countries, and his whole hope was consequently bound up
with that country, while the Prince had lands in High Germany. To one of these, Dillenburg, the place of his birth, William now
retired, carrying with him his younger son, Maurice; his heir, Count Buren, was
studying at Louvain. Many other nobles followed the Prince’s example, and fled
into Germany; among them his brother Louis, Count Hoogstraaten,
and others. William in his retirement applied himself to the study of the
Lutheran religion, for which purpose he procured the services of an eminent
divine.
Emigration
Philip’s authority
seemed to be now completely re-established in the Netherlands. Antwerp
submitted and received a large garrison; Margaret entered that city in great
state, and attended a Te Deum in the
cathedral, as if a victory had been achieved over some foreign enemy. The
meeting-houses of the Reformers were pulled down and their schools closed; and
four of the ringleaders in the late riots were put to death. The Regent
published, May 24th, a severe and bloody edict, ordaining that all Protestants
who had preached in public, as well as all who had aided and abetted them, and
all printers of heretical tracts should be punished with death and confiscation
of their property; while lighter penalties were imposed for minor offences, so
that hardly a single Protestant could escape some of its provisions. Yet Philip
II ordered Margaret to recall this edict, as too lenient; — it did not
proscribe private worship! Holland was the only province which still remained
refractory. Brederode, from his head-quarters
at Viana, endeavored to stir up the citizens of Amsterdam to revolt, but,
finding his party subdued, escaped into Westphalia, where in the summer of 1568
he died of a fever, brought on, it is said, by disappointment and hard
drinking. After Brederode’s departure,
Amsterdam submitted to the Regent; but numbers of the citizens availed
themselves of the permission to leave the city, and their example was imitated
by the inhabitants of many other towns in the Netherlands. France, Germany, and
especially England, afforded a refuge to these fugitives. The stream of
emigration had already set in towards the last-named country. It was computed
in 1566 that there were 30,000 Netherlanders settled in Sandwich, Norwich, and
other places assigned to them by Queen Elizabeth; and from a return of the
population of London in the following year, it appeared that the Netherlanders
domiciled there equaled all the other foreigners put together. Thus England was
enriched, through the impolitic conduct of Philip II, with foreign capital and
skill; each Netherland manufacturer was compelled to employ at least one
English apprentice; the produce of the loom became an article of export instead
of import; and the Protestant cause flourished in its strongest hold through
the very means adopted abroad for its repression. A chief motive for the flight
of the reformers was the rumored approach of the Duke of Alva with his
Spaniards. Those who remained were exposed to dragonnades, and wherever
they assembled in numbers were ridden down by the military. Crowds of wandering
exiles filled the roads, along the sides of which gibbets were erected in terrorem.
It may admit of a
question whether the disturbances would have revived in the Netherlands but for
the entry of the Duke of Alva and his troops. Margaret had succeeded in
quelling them; she was tolerably popular, at least among the Catholic part of
the population; and she naturally felt indignant that when she had done the
work, another should come to enjoy the profit and reputation. Philip talked of
going in person into the Low Countries; he even directed Margaret to prepare
some vessels to convey him to Zealand; and when he sent Alva instead, it was
only, he said, to prepare the way for himself. But Philip had an aversion to
long journeys, and probably never contemplated keeping his word. It was Pope
Pius V who advised the hesitating Philip to take up arms. “He who negotiates
without arms”, Pius observed, “must submit to receive laws; with arms he can
dictate them”.
Alva took leave of
his Sovereign in April, 1667, and proceeded to Carthagena,
where a fleet under Andrea Doria was awaiting him and
his army. His commission of Captain-General was here delivered, the
instructions in which were so minute that Alva complained of them as betraying
a want of confidence. Charles V had never so hampered him; but such was
Philip’s character. The commission, however, which was dated March 1st,
invested Alva with the civil as well as military command in the Netherlands,
and was, therefore, in fact, a virtual dismissal of Margaret.
1667. Alva in the
Netherlands
Landing at Savona,
Alva began his march with a picked body of Spanish veterans, 10,000 in number,
all superbly equipped; and he was also accompanied by many noble volunteers.
His forces marched in three divisions, each a day behind the other, so that the
quarters vacated by one division were occupied on the following night by
another. Philip, as related in the preceding chapter, had obtained permission
for his army to pass through part of France, and he had caused a map to be made
of the proposed route through Savoy. Alva led the van over Mont Cenis. In order
to facilitate his march, he took with him no artillery; but to each company
were attached men who carried huge muskets to be fired from rests, such as had
hitherto been used only for the defence of
fortresses. As Alva's route lay near Geneva, Pope Pius V exhorted him to clean
out that nest of devils and apostates, and the Genevese put
themselves into a posture of defence; but Alva did
not attempt the enterprise, alleging that it lay not within his commission.
Passing through Burgundy and Lorraine, he was met at Diedenhofen by
Egmont and several of the Netherland nobles. The Spaniards entered Brussels
August 22nd, amid the silence of the people; and at the threshold of the palace
an altercation took place between Alva's guard and that of the Regent. His
reception by Margaret was most chilling.
Alva was now sixty
years of age, and with increasing years was grown only more stern and
inflexible — a fitting instrument of Philip's intolerance. One of his first
acts was to replace the Walloons in the garrisons of the principal towns by
Spaniards, who were indulged in reckless license. He also caused new fortresses
to be constructed. In accordance with his maxim, that the surest method of
suppressing all revolutions is to get rid of the leaders, he determined on
seizing Counts Egmont and Horn. Egmont thought that he had nothing to fear; the
more wary Horn was induced to come to Brussels by protestations of friendship
on the part of Alva and his son Frederick de Toledo. On the 9th of September
the two nobles were invited to a banquet at the Grand-Prior’s; and before it
was over they received a message from Alva that he would be pleased to see them
after dinner at Jassy House, his residence, in order to consider some
plans for the fortification of Antwerp. During the repast, the Grand-Prior
earnestly whispered to Egmont to fly the place on his swiftest horse; but Noircarmes and others dissuaded him from a flight
which would have the appearance of guilt. Accompanied by Horn, he therefore
repaired to Jassy House, where the Council was assembled. When it
broke up, Alva strolled with Egmont through some of the adjoining apartments,
till at length they entered a small room filled with soldiers, when Davila,
captain of the Duke’s guard, approached Egmont, demanded his sword, and told
him that he was a prisoner. The Count, as he yielded his sword with dignity,
only remarked, in allusion to Gravelines and
St. Quentin, that it had more than once done the King good service. Horn was
entrapped in a similar manner in another part of the house by Alva’s son
Frederick. It will be remembered that Alva had employed much the same artifice
in order to seize the Landgrave Philip at Halle. The prisoners were carried to
Ghent, the command of which place had been given to Ulloa, one of Alva’s
most trusty captains.
The arrest of
Egmont and Horn does not appear to have been ordered by Philip II, who, when
the Regent complained of it, denied that it had been done by his command,
although, by furnishing Alva with blank warrants, Philip had given him an
absolute discretion. In the letter in which Alva announced what he had done, he
also counseled the Spanish Court to arrest Horn's brother, Montigny, who was still at Madrid. The seizure of Egmont
and Horn occasioned no attempt at resistance or insurrection; but it was the
signal for increased emigration; which, however, a few weeks later, was
prohibited on pain of death and confiscation.
Alva next
proceeded to organize that terrible tribunal which, instead of its official
title of the “Council of Tumults”, obtained from the people the name of the
“Council of Blood”. It consisted of twelve judges, among whom were Berlaimont and Noircarmes;
but the soul of it were two Spanish lawyers, Del Rio and especially Juan de
Vargas, a man of infamous character; and to these men was assigned the
prosecution of Egmont and Horn. This court, though established by Alva’s sole
and verbal appointment, possessed a power as arbitrary as that of the
Inquisition; it sat in Alva’s own house, who at first presided over it in
person; its jurisdiction within the limits assigned to it, was supreme, and its
award final. Its proceedings were so contrary to all law and justice,
that Berlaimont, Noircarmes,
and some of the more respectable members soon withdrew, and the whole business
fell into the hands of the two Spaniards, with Blasere and Hessels,
two Netherlanders, who equaled them in atrocity. The manner of its proceedings
may be learnt from a single anecdote. On one occasion it was found that a man
summoned for trial had been executed before he was arraigned; and it further
appeared from his papers that he was entirely innocent. “Never mind”, cried
Vargas; “so much the better for him when he is arraigned in the next
world!”. Hessels would often fall asleep during the trials, and when
awakened to pronounce judgment would rub his eyes and exclaim, Ad patibulum!
ad patibulum! (to the gallows! to the gallows!).
1567. Margaret
resigns
The Prince of
Orange and the nobles with him were summoned by the Council to appear at
Brussels and answer the charges brought against them within six weeks, under
pain of confiscation and perpetual banishment; and a long list of accusations
against them was proclaimed by the public crier at Brussels and Breda. William
answered by denying the authority of the tribunal. By the advice of Cardinal Granvelle, who was now employed at Rome in the service of
Philip, William’s son, Count Buren, was seized at Louvain, and sent to Madrid,
where, by the blandishments of the Court, he was entirely alienated from the
Protestant cause; and being detained twenty-nine years in Spain, became almost
a Spaniard in his habits and disposition. The plans of finance, or rather the
schemes for extorting money, devised by Alva and his master, were on a par with
their administration of justice. The great instruments were confiscation and
terror. Alva wrote to Philip he would have every man feel that his house might
fall about his ears. Margaret, finding that she had become a mere cipher in the
presence of Alva, obtained the King’s permission to retire from the government
before the end of the year; and Alva was now made Regent and Governor-General,
with all the powers she had formerly possessed. Philip would not allow his
sister to assemble the States-General in order to take a formal farewell; and
she therefore took her leave in letters addressed to the principal cities. She
retired first to Parma and afterwards to Naples. Her resignation caused general
regret, and several of the provinces voted her large donations.
Margaret’s
government, though far from spotless, came out in strong relief when contrasted
with that of Alva. After her departure began a complete reign of terror. On the
16th of February, 1568, a sentence of the Holy Office condemned all the
inhabitants of the Netherlands to death! excepting only from the universal doom
a few persons especially named. A royal proclamation, dated ten days later,
confirmed this decree, and ordered it to be carried into immediate execution,
without distinction of age, sex, or condition. Such a sentence, in its literal
sense, was, of course, only an impotent though atrocious absurdity; yet it was
by no means entirely a dead letter. On Ash Wednesday alone 500 citizens were
dragged from their beds, all of whom received sentence of death. Alva, in a
letter to Philip, coolly estimates at 800 heads the executions to take place
after Passion-week. The higher criminals were beheaded, the lower ones hanged;
obstinate heretics were burnt. There were also sentences of banishment and
confiscation by wholesale; in one alone were comprehended thirty-five citizens
of Amsterdam. These penalties were merely a temporary source of revenue; for
trade decayed, and the towns became depopulated; at Ghent half the houses were
abandoned. The people in the interior, who could not escape so easily as those
in the border provinces, banding together in large bodies, took refuge in the
forests, where they committed all sorts of excesses, and became nothing more
nor less than banditti; whence they obtained the name of Gueux Sauvages, or Wild Beggars. The mild and enlightened Emperor
Maximilian II addressed to Philip an autograph letter (March 2nd, 1568), in his
own name and that of the German Electors, in behalf of the oppressed
Netherlanders, interceding also for Egmont and Horn; and he even reminded the
Spanish King that the Netherlands formed part of the Empire, and were entitled
to be protected by the humane laws of the Imperial constitution. Philip replied
by vaunting his regard for justice, which had prevented him from putting an end
to the disturbances in a single day. He asserted that all the world would at
last approve his conduct, and declared that he would not act differently,
though he should risk the loss of the provinces, and though the sky should fall
upon his head!
Meanwhile the
Prince of Orange was making every exertion to raise an army to repress these
tyrannies. He applied for assistance to the English government, the German
princes, the French Huguenots; he raised money by contributions from the
Netherlands, from the nobles attached to him, and by pawning his own plate and
jewels; and by the end of April he had collected a considerable force, which
would have been still larger but for the bigotry of the zealous German
Lutherans, whose divines openly preached that the Huguenots and Calvinists of
France and the Netherlands were rebels and sacramentaries,
and that it would be doing God good service to abolish and ruin them.
Orange had planned
a campaign to consist of an attack in three divisions. A French adventurer
named Cocqueville was to lead a body of
Huguenots into Artois; Count Hoogstraaten,
accompanied by other nobles, was to penetrate into Brabant; the Prince's
brothers, Louis and Adolf, were to attack Groningen; while William himself,
fixing his head-quarters with a reserve force near Cleves, was to join any
division that might stand in need of support. When on the point of thus openly
taking up arms against his Sovereign, Orange, in reply to the sentence of
condemnation which had been passed upon him, published in the summer of 1568 a
paper or manifesto, which he called his “justification”. The chief purport of
it was to repudiate the jurisdiction of the infamous Council of Blood; and it
was concluded with an eloquent burst of indignation against Philip, who had
forgotten the Prince's services and those of his ancestors, and had robbed him
of his honor and his son, both dearer to him than life, while at the same time
the King had degraded himself by breaking all his royal oaths and obligations.
William also announced in this paper his change of religion.
1568. Battle
of Heyligerlee
Two of the attacks
projected by Orange completely failed. Hoogstraaten’s division
was beaten by Davila about the end of April, and the remnant of it joined the
reserve at Cleves; Cocqueville’s force of
about 2,500 men was cut to pieces at St. Valeri, July 18th, by Marshal
de Cosse, Governor of Picardy, scarce 300 men
escaping. Louis of Nassau was more successful in Groningen against the Count
of Aremberg and a body of Spanish veterans.
Louis had taken up a strong position near Winschoten.
His rear was covered by the abbey of Heyligerlee and
a thick wood; in front the ground sloped down to an extensive morass; his left
was protected by a hill, and on his right he had planted his cavalry, under his
brother Adolf. Aremberg was loth to attack
so strong a position, till, nettled by the taunts of the Spaniards, who accused
him of cowardice and treachery, he gave the order to advance. The Spaniards had
soon occasion to repent their rashness. Their vanguard immediately became
entangled in the morass, where it was at the mercy of the enemy's musketeers
and pikemen, while Louis's cavalry charged their rearguard in flank, and
put them completely to the rout. Aremberg himself
fell, and 1,600 of his men; besides which the royalists lost nine guns, their
military stores, and a considerable sum of money. On the other side. Count
Adolf was slain. Such was the Battle of Heyligerlee,
fought May 23rd, 1568.
The victory
of Heyligerlee proved the death-warrant of
Counts Egmont and Horn. Although those noblemen had been imprisoned nearly nine
months, their trial was not yet finished, and Alva now determined to bring it
to a close. In his correspondence with Philip, Alva observed that this disaster
to the royal arms had thrown the people into a ferment; it was necessary,
therefore, to show that he did not fear them, and to crush all hope that the
prisoners could be liberated by a fresh insurrection; and he adverted to the
error of Charles V, who, by retaining the Elector of Saxony and Landgrave
of Hesse in custody, instead of putting them to death, gave occasion
to a new conspiracy, by which he was ignominiously driven from Germany, and
almost deprived of the Imperial Crown.
As a prelude to
the proceedings against Egmont and Horn, nineteen members of the Union, chiefly
men of rank, and including both Catholics and Protestants, were condemned to
death, and were executed June 1st, in the great square before the Hotel de
Ville at Brussels. The Catholics were beheaded, the Protestants burnt. Other
executions followed during the next two days.
Egmont and Horn,
who had been treated with great rigor in the Castle of Ghent, and hardly
allowed the necessaries of life, were now told that the time allowed for their defence had expired, and that no further evidence could be
heard. Both prisoners being Knights of the Golden Fleece, claimed to be tried
by the statutes of the order; while Egmont, as a Bra- banter, further appealed
to the protection of the Joyeuse Entrée, and Horn, as a Count
of the Holy Roman Empire, demanded to be judged by his peers, the Electors and
Princes of Germany. But precedents and constitutional forms were of no account
in the eyes either of Alva or of his master. Alva declared that he represented
Philip not as head of the order, but as sovereign of the land, and refused to
receive any more petitions; while the King of Spain violated without scruple
the oath which he had sworn both to the Fleece and to the Joyeuse Entrée.
The wives of both prisoners made great exertions in their favor, but in vain,
although Egmont’s consort was sister to the Rhenish Palgrave, Frederick III.
Egmont’s
indictment consisted of ninety-nine articles, of which the principal were,
plotting to expel the King of Spain from the Netherlands; conspiring against
the life and character of Cardinal Granvelle;
demanding the removal of that minister and inventing the foolscap livery;
requiring that the three Councils should be fused into one; demanding the assembly
of the States-General; declaring that the edicts were too rigorous, and that he
would not assist in burning 40,000 or 50,000 men; making arrangements with the
Prince of Orange and others for the levying of troops; permitting at his table
the cry of Vivent les Gueux!, and many other charges of a similar
description.
The accusations
against Count Horn were of much the same kind. Casembrot,
Lord of Beckerzel, Egmont’s secretary, who had
been condemned to death for signing the “Compromise”, was tortured in the most
barbarous manner to make him accuse his master, and finally killed. On the 2nd
of June, the Council of Tumults pronounced Egmont and Horn guilty, and they
were sentenced to death by that illegal and arbitrary tribunal. On the same day
a body of 3,000 soldiers was dispatched to Ghent to escort the prisoners to
Brussels, which city they entered on the 4th, and were conducted to the Broodhuis in the market-place.
At the news of his
unexpected fate Egmont was at first struck with astonishment and dismay; but
soon recovering himself, prepared, with the assistance of the Bishop of Ypres,
to meet his death with calmness and resignation. He then addressed a letter to
his wife, and another to Philip, in which he protested that he had done nothing
against the King, and besought him to have pity on his wife and children. He
was beheaded in the great square on the morning of the 5th of June, and met his
death with constancy. Horn's execution followed on the same scaffold about
noon. He also died with fortitude, though he displayed more indignation than
Egmont at his unmerited fate. He was outshone by Egmont, who, though far from
being a great man, was a showy personage, brave, popular, but weak and
vacillating. Horn, who was of more quiet, retiring manners, passed for morose;
yet he also was but a commonplace character, and has been rendered conspicuous
only by his tragic fate. More than two years after, Horn's brother, Baron Montigny, who, though a prisoner in Spain, had been tried
and condemned by the Council of Tumults at Brussels, was privily put
to death by order of Philip II in the fortress of Simancas. He and the
Marquis of Bergen had been dispatched, in 1566, to Madrid, to lay before Philip
the critical state of the Netherlands, and to demand an alteration of policy.
They never returned. Bergen appears to have died a natural death, hastened on
by fear and anxiety : Montigny was executed
by the garotte, October 16th, 1570. It was given out that he also had died
from natural causes; but the true story has at length come out from Philip's
own letters preserved in the archives of Simancas.
Defeat of Louis of
Nassau
Since his victory
at Heyligerlee, Count Louis of Nassau had been
forced to remain inactive, for want of funds to pay his troops; and Alva, after
the execution of Egmont and Horn, resolved to march against him in person.
Louis, having thus opposed to him the most consummate captain of the age, at
the head of 15,000 veterans, while his own army, though superior in number, was
composed of raw recruits, deemed it prudent to evacuate Groningen and East
Friesland; and he took up a fortified position at Jemgum,
between Emden and Leer. It would have been difficult to select a worse
position. He had shut himself up, as in a cul-de-sac, in a small peninsula, formed
by the river Ems and the Dollart, so that in
case of a reverse, retreat was impossible. Here he was attacked by Alva on the
20th and 21st July; his whole army was dispersed or killed, and he himself
escaped with difficulty by stripping and swimming across the Ems. His men had
basely fled before the action began, and Louis was obliged to fire with his own
hand the guns which defended the road leading to the position. After this
victory, Alva marched against Orange, who had at length appeared on the banks
of the Meuse and the Schelde with so
considerable a German force that Alva did not venture to attack him; but
knowing that he had no money wherewith to pay his troops, resolved to wear him
out by delay. The plan succeeded : the Prince’s army could not be kept
together, and he and his brother Louis retired into Germany, whence they
afterwards proceeded, with about 1,200 horse, to assist the Huguenots in
France. The campaign being thus concluded, Alva made his triumphant entry into
Brussels; and he soon after gave a signal proof of his vanity and arrogance by
causing a bronze statue of himself to be erected at Antwerp, which represented
him trampling upon a monster bearing emblems typifying the Petition, the
Compromise, and the ensuing insurrection. An inscription on the pedestal
described him as having extinguished heresy and rebellion, and restored the
Netherlands to peace and justice. He also caused several medals to be struck,
equally offensive by their vanity and presumption.
The next year or
two was passed in comparative tranquility, although Alva still continued his
cruelties and oppressions. Having dried up by his impolitic government the
usual sources of revenue, he naturally found himself in want of money, and he
was forced to have recourse to an assembly of the States-General in order to
obtain supplies; but he experienced nothing but unwillingness and opposition.
His extortionate system of taxation, as it reached everybody, procured for the
Spanish government more universal hatred even than the religious persecutions,
and alienated Catholics as well as Protestants. Regardless of the essential
difference between the two countries, Alva applied the Spanish system of
finance to the Netherlands, and in March, 1569, issued decrees for a tax of the
one-hundredth penny, or one per cent., on all property real and personal; of
the twentieth penny, or five per cent., on every transfer of real estate; and
of the tenth penny, or ten per cent., on every article sold. This last tax,
which was similar to that called the Alcavala, in Spain, naturally
occasioned the utmost anger and consternation in a commercial country like the
Netherlands. It was Alva’s ill-success as a financier that first led Philip to
withdraw from him his confidence; and the increasing disorders in the
Netherlands at length determined the Spanish King to supersede him.
In the civil
disorganization produced by bad government had risen up, besides the Gueux Sauvages already
mentioned, a host of formidable pirates, called Gueux de la Mer, or Beggars of the Sea. These rovers, to whom the Prince of
Orange had granted letters of marque, were accustomed, without any very
scrupulous regard to international law, to seize all the prizes they could lay
their hands on, which they sold in English ports. These practices had
occasioned disputes between the Spanish government in the Netherlands and that
of Queen Elizabeth, between which there already existed a bad feeling,
occasioned by Elizabeth having temporarily laid an embargo on some vessels
having money on board for the Netherland government; an act which Alva had
retaliated (January 1569) by not only seizing all English property in the Low
Countries, but also by arresting every Englishman he could lay hands on. Alva,
however, advised Philip not openly to resent the injuries of Elizabeth till he
had subdued his revolted subjects in the Netherlands; and for the next three or
four years it was difficult to say whether Spain and England were at peace or
war. Elizabeth helped the patriots in the Netherlands with money, while Philip
fomented sedition and conspiracy in England. The aggressions of the water Gueux, however, became at length so daring, and the remonstrances of
the Spanish government so loud, that, in March, 1572, Elizabeth found herself
obliged to issue an order forbidding her subjects to supply the Dutch pirates
with provisions. This event may be said incidentally to have occasioned the
foundation of the Dutch Republic. La Marck, one
of the chief leaders of the water Gueux, finding
himself obliged to leave England, sailed with twenty-four vessels to Voorne, the northernmost island of Zealand, and succeeded
in seizing Brille, its chief town, which, with its fortified harbour, now became the stronghold of these pirates. Hence
the revolt gradually spread to other northern towns and provinces. The isle of
Walcheren, and then Enkhuisen, the key of the
Zuider Zee, threw off the Spanish yoke; and their example was soon followed
by Oudewater, Dort, Haarlem, Leyden, Gorcum, Gouda, Medemblik,
Alkmaar, and other places, as well as by many towns in Utrecht, Gelderland
and Overyssel. The towns of Friesland next
received patriotic garrisons. The Prince of Orange summoned deputies from the
nobles and twelve principal towns of the county of Holland, to meet at Dort,
July 15th, 1572. Amsterdam and Rotterdam, being still in possession of the
Spaniards, could not comply with this requisition; but deputies from eight
towns appeared, and declared that they recognized William as Philip’s
lawful Stadholder in Holland, Zealand, Friesland and Utrecht, and
that they would use their influence with the other provinces to procure his
appointment as Protector of all the Netherlands during the King's absence. The
revolt was assisted by the talents of Ste. Aldegonde,
whose ode of Wilhelmus van Nassouwe, the Dutch Marseillaise, has remained the national
air. At the same time he published his Byenkorf (Beehive),
a satire on the Romish Church, in the manner of Ulrich von Hutten.
Alva and Orange
opposed
In these alarming
circumstances, Philip thought it prudent to try a change of policy. The bow,
drawn too tightly, had snapped in his hands, and he was therefore disposed for
a while to relax his coercive policy. He was further embarrassed at this period
by an empty exchequer, and by the attitude assumed by the French Court, which,
as we have related in the preceding chapter, seemed heartily to have embraced
the cause of the Netherland Calvinists. The mere sojourn of Coligni at Paris, and the expectations which resulted
from it, gave an immense moral force to the patriotic party in the Low
Countries. Louis of Nassau, with the aid of a body of French Huguenots headed
by La Noue, had succeeded in seizing
Valenciennes and Mons (May, 1572); a diversion which had disabled Alva from
immediately attending to the revolt in Holland. While Alva was employed in
besieging Louis in Mons, the Prince of Orange appeared on the Meuse with an
army levied in Germany, captured Roermonde and
Louvain, obtained possession of Mechlin through the mediation of the Lord
of Dorp, and advanced to the relief of Mons by Dendermonde and Oudenarde, which he took. Abandoned by his master,
oppressed by the difficulties which surrounded him, Alva had completely lost
his head and taken to consulting the necromancers. The capture of Genlis, and a body of Huguenots with whom he was marching
to the relief of Mons (July 19th), who, as we have already related, were
betrayed by the French Court, somewhat improved the prospects of Alva. It was
September ere Orange arrived before Mons, and his hopes of assistance from
France had now been completely frustrated by the massacre of St. Bartholomew,
and the change of policy on the part of the French Court. While he lay encamped
at Hermigny, William was nearly seized in his
tent on the night of September 11th by a camisade of
the Spaniards. His guards had fallen asleep; but he was alarmed by a little
spaniel which always passed the night on his bed. He had barely time to escape.
His master of the horse, his two secretaries, and some of his servants were cut
down, his tents burnt, and 600 of his men killed, while the Spaniards suffered
a loss of only sixty. As William was ill-provided with funds for the payment of
his troops, who had already begun to murmur, his only resource was an immediate
action, which, however, Alva carefully avoided; and the Prince was at length
compelled to retreat by Nivelles, Mechlin
and Orsoy. On crossing the Rhine he disbanded
his troops, who had begun to mutiny. After his departure, his brother Louis
obtained an honorable capitulation from Alva (September 20th), who had begun to
despair of reducing Mons, and agreed that all the soldiers and volunteers who
had borne arms during the siege should be dismissed with the honors of war.
La Noue and his band of Huguenots retired
into France. La Noue was received with
distinction by Charles IX, and afterwards employed by him in negotiating with
the Huguenots in La Rochelle; but the soldiers who came with him appear to have
been put to death.
Perfidy of Charles
IX
With a horrible
perfidy, Charles IX, after the massacre of St. Bartholomew, had
instructed Mondoucet, his envoy in the
Netherlands, to urge upon Alva the necessity of putting to the sword, as rebels
to the Crown of France, all the French prisoners whom he had made, or might
capture in Mons, although they had been dispatched into the Netherlands with
Charles’s sanction. “If he tells you”, said Charles, “that this is tacitly
requiring him to put to death all the French prisoners now in hand (Genlis and his companions), as well as to cut to pieces
every man in Mons, you will say to him that this is exactly what ought to be
done, and that he will be guilty of a great wrong to Christianity if he does
otherwise”. Yet at the same time he instructed Mondoucet to
maintain the closest but most secret intelligence with the Prince of Orange. To
the slaughter of the French, Philip of course cordially agreed, and in a letter
to Alva added this postscript with his own hand : “I desire that if you have
not already rid the world of them, you will do so immediately, and inform me
thereof, for I see no reason why it should be deferred”.
Genlis and his companions accordingly fell victims. The opinion that Alva
faithfully observed the capitulation of Mons, seems to be erroneous. Many of
the volunteers who had lingered behind were put to death; a Commission of
Tumults, like that at Brussels, was erected by Noircarmes,
and for nearly a year executions went on. The fall of Mons involved that of the
other towns of Brabant and Flanders, and put an end to the temporary revolution
of the southern provinces. Alva determined to make an example of Mechlin, where
neither man, woman nor child was spared.
Orange ultimately
retired into Holland, where the revolt had been completely successful. We have
already adverted to some symptoms of a milder policy on the part of Philip. He
contemplated superseding Alva by the Duke of Medina Celi,
which nobleman had been dispatched with a fleet to reduce the Beggars of the
Sea on the Netherland coasts. But the Duke's fleet, consisting of fifty large
ships was useless in those shallow waters; the rebels, who had three times the
number of small vessels, completely worsted him, and he was glad to save a
remnant of his fleet in Sluys. He saw how
difficult would be the government of the Netherlands, and he declined to
relieve Alva from responsibilities which he had himself created, though he
assisted that commander with his presence at Mons.
During William’s
absence the revolt in Holland was conducted by his deputy Stadholder, Sonoy; while in Gelderland, Friesland, and Utrecht, it was
organized by Count van den Bergh, who had married a sister of the Prince's.
When Orange appeared in Holland he was formally recognized as Stadholder,
and a council of State was assigned him to conduct the government. He soon
afterwards obtained possession of Gertruidenberg.
After the capture
of Mons, Alva returned to Brussels and left the conduct of the war to his son,
Frederick de Toledo. Zutphen and Naarden successively yielded to Frederick’s arms, and
became the scenes of the most detestable violence. Alva ordered his son not to
leave a single man alive in Zutphen, and to burn
down all the houses, — commands which were most literally obeyed. The treatment
of Naarden was still more revolting. The
town had capitulated, and Don Julian Romero, an officer of Don Frederick's, had
pledged his word that the lives and property of the inhabitants should be
respected. Romero then entered the town with some 500 musketeers, for whom the
citizens provided a sumptuous feast; and he summoned the inhabitants to
assemble in the Gast Huis Church, then used as a town hall. More
than 500 of them had entered the church when a priest suddenly rushing in, bade
them prepare for death. Scarcely had the announcement been made when a band of
Spanish soldiers entered, and, after discharging a volley into the defenseless
crowd, attacked them sword in hand. The church was then fired, and the dead and
dying consumed together. But these cruelties only steeled the Netherlanders to
a more obstinate resistance; nor must it be concealed that in these plusquam civilia bella, where civil hatred was still further embittered
by sectarian malignancy, the Dutch sometimes displayed as much cruelty and
brutality as their adversaries.
Siege of Haarlem
The war was
continued during the winter (1572-73). In December the Spaniards marched to
attack a fleet frozen up near Amsterdam. It was defended by a body of Dutch
musketeers on skates, who, by the superior skill of their evolutions, drove the
enemy back and killed great numbers of them. In consequence of this
extraordinary combat, Alva ordered 7,000 pairs of skates, and directed his
soldiers to be instructed in their use. Siege was then laid to Haarlem, which
town, warned by the fate of Zutphen and Naarden, made a defence that
astonished all Europe. A corps of 300 respectable women, armed with musket,
sword, and dagger, and led by Kenau Hasselaer, a widow of distinguished family, about
forty-seven years of age, enrolled themselves among its defenders, and partook
in some of the most fiercely contested actions. Battles took place upon Haarlem
lake, on which the Prince of Orange had more than 100 sail of various kinds;
till at length Bossu, whose vessels were larger,
though less numerous, entirely defeated the Hollanders, and swept the lake in
triumph (May 28th). The siege had lasted seven months, and Frederick de Toledo,
who had lost a great part of his army by hunger, cold and pestilence, was
inclined to abandon the enterprise; but he was kept to it by the threats of his
father, and on the 12th of July Haarlem surrendered. Don Frederick had written
a letter solemnly assuring the besieged that no punishment should be inflicted
except on those who deserved it in the opinion of the citizens themselves; yet
he was in possession of strict orders from his father to put to death the whole
garrison, except the Germans, and also to execute a large number of the
inhabitants. Between 2,000 and 3,000 were slaughtered; 300 were drowned in the
lake tied by twos, back to back.
Siege of Alkmaar
The resistance of
Haarlem and other places determined Alva to try what might be done by an
affectation of clemency; and on the 26th of July he issued a proclamation in
which Philip was compared to a hen gathering its chickens under the parental
wing. But in the same breath his subjects were admonished not to excite his
rage, cruelty, and fury; and were threatened that if his gracious offers of mercy
were neglected, his Majesty would strip bare and utterly depopulate the land,
and cause it to be inhabited by strangers. So ludicrous a specimen of paternal
love was not calculated to inspire the Hollanders with much confidence; and
Alkmaar, the next town to which Don Frederick laid siege, though defended only
by 800 soldiers and 1,300 citizens against 16,000 veterans, also resolved to
hold out to the last extremity. Enraged at this contempt of what he called his
clemency at Haarlem, Alva resolved to make Alkmaar an example of his cruelty,
and he wrote to Philip that every one in it
should be put to the sword. But the inhabitants made an heroic defence and repulsed the besiegers in many a bloody
assault; till at length the superstitious Spaniards, believing that the place
was defended by the devil, whom they thought the Protestants worshipped,
refused to mount to the attack, suffering themselves rather to be run through
the body by their officers; and Don Frederick, finding from an intercepted
letter that the Prince of Orange contemplated cutting the dykes and flooding
the country, raised the siege (October 8th).
About this time,
William published an Epistle in the form of supplication to his Royal Majesty
of Spain, from the Prince of Orange and States of Holland and Zealand, which
produced a profound impression. It demanded that the privileges of the country
should be restored, and insisted on the recall of the Duke of Alva, whose
atrocities were vigorously denounced. Orange, as Stadholder, had always
acted as the King’s representative in Holland, and gave all his orders in
Philip’s name. He had recently turned Calvinist, and in October publicly joined
the Church at Dort. It was reserved for the two greatest Princes of the age to
alleviate by their apostasy the evils inflicted on society by a consistent but
bloodthirsty bigotry : an apostasy, however, which approached more nearly than
the orthodoxy of their adversaries the spirit of true Christianity.
The siege of
Alkmaar was one of the last acts under Alva’s auspices in the Netherlands, and
formed a fitting termination to his career. He had himself solicited to be
recalled, and in . December, 1573, he was superseded by Don Luis de Requesens, Grand Commander of St. Iago. In fact,
Philip had found this war of extermination too expensive for his exhausted
treasury. Alva boasted on his journey back that he had caused 18,600
Netherlanders to be executed. He was well received by Philip, but soon after
his return was imprisoned, along with his son, Don Frederick. Alva was,
however, subsequently released to undertake the conquest of Portugal.
Requesens, the new Governor, had been vice-admiral to Don John of Austria, had
distinguished himself at the battle of Lepanto, and had subsequently governed
the Milanese with reputation. He was mild and just, and more liberal than the
generality of Spaniards, though inferior to Alva in military talent. He
attempted immediately after his arrival in the Netherlands to bring about a
peace through the mediation of Ste. Aldegonde;
but Orange was too suspicious to enter into it. Requesens put
down robbery and murder; but he was neither able to abrogate the Council of
Tumults nor to lighten the oppressive taxes. Philip had selected him as
Governor of the Netherlands as a pledge of the more conciliatory policy which
he had thought it prudent to adopt; yet Requesens’
hands were tied up with such injunctions as rendered all conciliation hopeless;
and he was instructed to bring forward no measures which had not for their
basis the maintenance of the King's absolute authority and the prohibition of
all worship except the Roman Catholic.
The Gueux of the sea were at this time most troublesome to the
Spaniards, as their small vessels enabled them to penetrate up the rivers and
canals. A naval action had been fought (October 11th, 1573) on the Zuider Zee
between Count Bossu, who had collected a
considerable fleet at Amsterdam, and the patriot Admiral Dirkzoon, in which Bossu was
completely defeated, and taken prisoner. One of the first acts of Requesens was to send a fleet under Sancho Davila,
Julian Romero, and Admiral Glimes to the relief
of Middelburg, which had been besieged by the patriots upwards of eighteen
months, and was now reduced to the last extremity. Orange visited the Zealand
fleet under the command of Louis Boisot (January
20th, 1574), and an action ensued a few days after, in which the Spaniards were
completely beaten. Requesens himself beheld
the battle from the lofty dyke of Schakerloo,
where he stood all day in a drenching rain; and Romero, who had escaped by
jumping out of a porthole, swam ashore and landed at the very feet of the Grand
Commander. The Hollanders and Zealanders were now masters of the coast; but the
Spaniards still held their ground in the interior of Holland. After raising the
siege of Alkmaar, they had invested Leyden, and cut off all communication between
the Dutch cities.
1574. Battle
of Mook Heath
The efforts of the
patriots were less fortunate on land, where they were no match for the Spanish
generals and their veteran troops. It had been arranged that Louis of Nassau
should march out of Germany with an army of newly-levied recruits and form a
junction with his brother William, who was at Bommel on the Waal.
Towards the end of February, 1574, Louis encamped within four miles of Maestricht,
with the design of taking that town; but finding that he could not accomplish
this object, and having suffered some losses, he marched down the right bank of
the Meuse to join his brother. When, however, he arrived at Mook, a
village on the Meuse, a few miles south of Nymegen,
he found himself intercepted by the Spaniards under Davila, who, having
outmatched him on the opposite bank, had crossed the river at a lower point on
a bridge of boats, and placed themselves directly in his path. There was now no
alternative but to fight, and battle was delivered on the following day on the
heath of Mook, when fortune declared against the patriots. The gallant
Louis, seeing that the day was lost, put himself at the head of a little band
of troopers, and, accompanied by his brother Henry, and Duke Christopher, son
of the Elector Palatine Frederick III, made a desperate charge, in which they
all perished and were never heard of more. The only effect of Louis’s invasion
was to cause the Spaniards to raise the siege of Leyden, which, however, they
resumed May 26th.
The defence of Leyden formed a worthy parallel to that of siege
of Haarlem and Alkmaar, and acquired for the garrison and the inhabitants the
respect and admiration of all Europe. A modern historian has aptly observed
that this was the heroic age of Protestantism. Leyden was defended by John van
der Does, Lord of Nordwyck, a gentleman of
distinguished family, but still more distinguished by his learning and genius,
and his Latin poetry published under the name of Joannes Douza. The garrison of Leyden was small, and it relied for
its defence chiefly on the exertions of the
inhabitants. The revictualling of the city had been neglected after
the raising of the first siege, and at the end of June it became necessary to
put the inhabitants on short allowance; yet they held out more than three
months longer. Orange, whose head-quarters were at Delft and Rotterdam, had no
means of relieving Leyden, except by breaking down the dykes on the Meuse and
the Yssel, and thus flooding the country; a step
which would involve the destruction of the growing crops, besides other
extraordinary expenses; yet he succeeded in obtaining the consent of the States
of Holland to this desperate measure. On the 3rd of August he super-intended in
person the rupture of the dykes on the Yssel; at
the same time the sluices of Rotterdam and Schiedam were opened; the flood
began to pour over the land, while the citizens of Leyden watched with anxious
eyes from the so-called Tower of Hengest the
rising of the waters. A flotilla of 200 flat-bottomed vessels had been
provided, stored with provisions for the relief of the town, and manned by
2,500 veterans under the command of Boisot. But
unexpected obstacles arose. Dykes still appeared above the water, and had to be
cut through amid the resistance of the Spaniards. Twice the waters receded
under the influence of the east wind, and left the fleet aground; twice it was
floated again by violent gales from the north and west, which accumulated on
the coast the waters of the ocean. Meanwhile the besieged were suffering all
the extremities of famine; while a pestilence carried off thousands. In this
extremity a number of the citizens surrounded the burgomaster, Adrian van
der Werf, demanding, with loud threats and clamors, that he should either
provide them food or surrender the city to the enemy. To these menaces Adrian
calmly replied, “I have taken an oath that I will never put myself or my
fellow-citizens in the power of the cruel and perfidious Spaniards, and I will
rather die than violate it”. Then, drawing his sword, he offered it to the
surrounding crowd, and bade them plunge it in his bosom, and devour his flesh,
if such an action could relieve them from their direful necessity. This
extraordinary address filled the people with admiration, and inspired them with
a new courage. Their constancy was soon rewarded with deliverance. On the night
of the 1st October a fresh gale set in from the north-west; the ocean rushed
furiously through the rained dykes; the fleet had soon two feet of water, and
pursued its onward course amid storm and darkness. It had still to contend with
the vessels of the enemy, and a naval battle was fought amid the boughs of
orchards and the chimney-stacks of houses. But this was the last attempt at
resistance on the part of the Spaniards. Appalled both by the constancy of
their adversaries and by the rising flood, which was gradually driving them
into a narrower circle, the Spaniards abandoned the two remaining forts
of Zoetermonde and Lammen,
which still stood between the fleet and the city. From the latter they fled in
alarm at the noise of the falling of a large portion of the town walls which
had been thrown down by the waters, and which in the darkness they luckily
mistook for some operation of their adversaries; otherwise they might easily
have entered and captured Leyden. The fleet of Boisot approached
the city on the morning of October 3rd. On the 4th of October another
providential gale from the north-east assisted in clearing off the water from
the land. In commemoration of this remarkable defence,
and as a reward for the heroism of the citizens, was founded the University of
Leyden, as well as a ten days' annual fair, free from all tolls and taxes.
During this siege the Gueux had been again successful
at sea. On the 30th of May, Boisot defeated
between Lilloo and Kalloo a
Spanish fleet, took the admiral and three ships, and chased the rest into
Antwerp.
Marriage of
William of Orange
The bankrupt state
of Philip II’s exchequer, and the reverses which his arms had sustained,
induced him to accept, in the following year, the proffered mediation of the
Emperor Maximilian, which he had before so arrogantly rejected, and a congress
was held at Breda from March till June, 1575. But the insurgents were
suspicious, and Philip was inflexible; he could not be induced to dismiss his
Spanish troops, to allow the meeting of the States-General, or to admit the
slightest toleration in matters of religion; and the contest was therefore
renewed with more fury than ever. The situation of the patriots became very
critical when the enemy, by occupying the islands of Duiveland and Schouwen, cut off the communication between Holland and
Zealand; especially as all hope of succor from England had expired. Towards the
close of the year envoys were dispatched to solicit the aid of Elizabeth, and
to offer her, under certain conditions, the sovereignty of Holland and
Zealand. Requesens sent Champagny to counteract these negotiations, which
ended in nothing. The English Queen was afraid of provoking the power of Spain,
and could not even be induced to grant the Hollanders a loan. The attitude
assumed at that time by the Duke of Alençon, in France, also prevented them
from entering into any negotiations with that Prince.
In these trying
circumstances Orange displayed the greatest firmness and courage. It was now
that he is said to have contemplated abandoning the Netherlands and seeking
with its inhabitants a home in the New World, having first restored the country
to its ancient state of a waste of waters; a thought, however, which he
probably never seriously entertained, though he may have given utterance to it
in a moment of despondency. On June 12th, 1575, William had married Charlotte
of Bourbon, daughter of the Duke of Montpensier. The
Prince's second wife, Anne of Saxony, had turned out a drunken, violent
character, and at length an intrigue which she formed with John Rubens, an
exiled magistrate of Antwerp, and father of the celebrated painter, justified
William in divorcing her. She subsequently became insane. Charlotte of Bourbon
had been brought up a Calvinist, but her father having joined the party of the
persecutors, Charlotte took refuge with the Elector Palatine; and it was under
these circumstances that she received the addresses of the Prince of Orange.
1576. Death
of Requesens
The unexpected
death of Requesens, who expired of a fever,
March 5th, 1576, after a few days' illness, threw the government into
confusion. Philip II had given Requesens a
carte blanche to name his successor, but the nature of his illness had
prevented him from filling it up. The government therefore devolved to the
Council of State, the members of which were at variance with one another; but
Philip found himself obliged to in entrust it ad interim with the
administration, till a successor to Requesens could
be appointed. Count Mansfeld was made commander-in-chief, but was
totally unable to restrain the soldiery. The Spaniards, whose pay was in
arrear, had now lost all discipline. After the raising of the siege of Leyden
they had beset Utrecht and pillaged and maltreated the inhabitants, till Valdez
contrived to furnish their pay. No sooner was Requesens dead
than they broke into open mutiny, and acted as if they were entire masters of
the country. After wandering about some time and threatening Brussels, they
seized and plundered Alost, where they established themselves; and they were
soon afterwards joined by the Walloon and German troops. To repress their
violence, the Council of State was fain to restore to the Netherlands the arms
of which they had been deprived, and called upon them by a proclamation to
repress force by force; but these citizen-soldiers were dispersed with great
slaughter by the disciplined troops in various encounters. Ghent, Utrecht,
Valenciennes, Maestricht were taken and plundered by the mutineers;
and at last the storm fell upon Antwerp, which the Spaniards entered early in
November, and sacked during three days. More than 1,000 houses were burnt,
8,000 citizens are said to have been slain, and enormous sums in ready money
were plundered. The whole damage was estimated at 24,000,000 florins. The
horrible excesses committed in this sack procured for it the name of the
“Spanish Fury”.
The government at
Brussels was at this period conducted in the name of the States of Brabant. On
the 5th of September, De Heze, a young Brabant
gentleman, who was in secret intelligence with the Prince of Orange, had, at
the head of 500 soldiers, entered the palace where the State Council was
assembled, and seized and imprisoned the members. William, taking advantage of
the alarm created at Brussels by the sack of Antwerp, had persuaded the State
Council to call a general Netherland congress. To this assembly, which met at
Ghent on the 14th September, all the provinces, except Luxembourg, sent
deputies. The deputies of the southern provinces, although many of them viewed
the Prince of Orange with suspicion, feeling that there was no security for
them so long as the Spanish troops remained in the citadel of Ghent, sought his
assistance in expelling them, which William consented to grant only on
condition that an alliance should be effected between Holland and Zealand on
the one part and the other provinces of the Netherlands on the other part. This
proposal was agreed to, and towards the end of September, Orange sent several
thousand men from Zealand to Ghent, at whose approach the Spaniards
surrendered, and evacuated the citadel. The proposed alliance was now converted
into a formal union by the treaty called the Pacification of Ghent, signed
November 8th, 1576; by which the Congress agreed, without waiting for the
sanction of Philip, whose authority, however, was nominally recognized, to
renew the edict of banishment against the Spanish troops, to suspend all
placards against heresy, to summon the States-General of the northern and
southern provinces, according to the model of the assembly which had received
the abdication of Charles V, and to forbid anything to be done by Holland and
Zealand against the Roman Catholic religion outside their own territory. About
the same time, all Zealand, except the island of Tholen,
was recovered from the Spaniards.
Affairs of the Emperor
Maximilian II
At this point we
shall direct our attention to the reign of the Emperor Maximilian II, who
expired this year (1576). Under his pacific sway the history of Germany
presents little of European importance. His wars in Hungary and with the Turks,
the only occurrences not of a domestic nature, have been already related. The
grand feature of Maximilian's reign is his wise moderation in religious
matters. To him belongs the honor of being the first European Sovereign to
adopt toleration, not from policy, but principle. The Diet assembled at
Augsburg in 1566 would have excluded the Calvinists from the religious peace,
and recognized only Papists and Lutherans; but when the Elector Palatine,
Frederick III, surnamed the Pious, the only Calvinist Prince in Germany,
protested, Maximilian procured for him a tacit toleration. As King of Bohemia,
Maximilian annulled the Compactata in
the first Diet which he held at Prague; and in consequence, the middle and
lower classes of the Bohemians, who were mostly Calixtines,
and had hitherto enjoyed their religion only by sufferance, openly professed
Lutheranism, whilst other sects also publicly displayed their dissent from
the Romish Church. This is, perhaps, the first example of unlimited
toleration given by any monarch. In the following year he relaxed the religious
despotism in Austria; but he was arrested by political considerations from
carrying out these concessions so far as he might otherwise have done, though
he did not withdraw those already granted. His wife, Mary of Castile, a
daughter of Charles V, was led by the Jesuits, against whose arts Maximilian
himself was proof. The marriage of his eldest daughter Anne to Philip II of
Spain, in November, 1570, strengthened the Roman Catholic party in Austria.
Maximilian’s eldest son, Rodolph, through the influence of his mother,
Mary, and her brother, Philip II, was educated in Spain in the strictest
principles of the Roman Catholic faith.
The early part of
Maximilian's reign was disturbed by a foolish and abortive conspiracy on the
part of John Frederick II of Saxe-Gotha, who ruled, along with his brother,
John William, the dominions of the Ernestine Saxon line. The Duke, who was weak
and credulous, was haunted with the idea of recovering his father's Electorate;
and William of Grumbach, a Franconian knight,
who had taken refuge at his Court, after procuring the assassination of the
Bishop of Wurzburg, by working on this fancy made him the tool of his plots. A
necromancer was employed, who, after many magical rites and incantations, by
means of an optical illusion, exhibited to John Frederick his own figure,
clothed in the Electoral cap and robes. Infatuated with this delusion, he was persuaded
to consent to the assassination of his cousin the Elector Augustus; after which
the knights and nobility were to rise, and not only to recover the Electorate,
but even place John Frederick on the Imperial throne. These projects being
discovered, and the Duke having refused to dismiss Grumbach,
both were included in the Imperial ban published by the Diet of Augsburg, 1566.
The execution of the sentence was entrusted to the Elector Augustus, who laid
siege to Gotha. After a blockade of three or four months, the garrison revolted
for want of pay, seized Grumbach and the
leaders of his party, and delivered them and the town to Augustus by
capitulation (April, 1567). The Elector, on entering Gotha, caused his cousin
to be apprehended and sent to Vienna, where he spent the remainder of his life,
a prisoner in the Castle of the Neustadt. Grumbach and
his principal adherents were put to death.
Maximilian, after
his treaty with the Porte in 1567, continued the war in Hungary; till at
length, John Sigismund, weary of the Turkish insolence, concluded a secret
treaty with the Emperor in 1570, by which he agreed to resign the title of King
elect of Hungary. It was also arranged that he should marry Maximilian's niece,
Anne, daughter of Albert III, Duke of Bavaria; but the Bavarian princess was
persuaded by the Jesuits to withhold her consent, because John Sigismund was
a Socinian. That Prince, however, died in the following year (March,
1571), when all his possessions reverted by the treaty to the Emperor, except
Transylvania, which, on the death of John Sigismund without issue, was to be
considered as an elective principality dependent on Hungary. The Transylvanian
Diet elected Stephen Bathory for their voyvode;
and their choice was confirmed by Maximilian and the Turks.
In the last year
of his life (January, 1576), Maximilian confirmed the title of Francesco, son
of Cosmo de' Medici, as Grand Duke of Tuscany, in consideration of Francesco
paying a large sum of money, and marrying the Emperor's sister Jane. This
affair had excited a violent contest between the Emperor and Rome. Maximilian
had annulled the act of Pius V in erecting the Grand Duchy, and in 1572 had
recalled his ambassador from Rome, because Gregory XIII refused also to annul
the bull of Pius for that purpose. After the deposition of the Duke of Anjou
(Henry III) in Poland, Maximilian became a competitor for the Crown of that
Kingdom, and obtained the suffrages of the Polish Senate; but Stephen Bathory,
by consenting to marry Anne Jagellon, sister of
the late King, Sigismund I, then fifty years of age, was elected by the
Palatine and nobles. Maximilian was preparing to contest the Crown with
Stephen, when he was surprised by death, October 12th, 1576, aged forty-nine.
One of his last acts was the confirmation of the Turkish truce with Amurath III, the son and successor of Selim II.
Maximilian was one
of the most amiable and enlightened princes that ever occupied the Imperial
throne. Both Philip II and Charles IX had entered into secret negotiations with
the German Princes in 1573, with a view to obtain the Imperial Crown after the
death of Maximilian; and the Empire, although Philip had made it the business
of his life to extirpate heresy, yet he pledged himself, in case of his being
elected, to withdraw the Spaniards from the Netherlands, to recognize the union
of those provinces with Germany, and, consequently, their claim to the benefits
conferred upon Protestants by the treaty of Passau, and to restore the Prince
of Orange and his “accomplices” to their dignities. But Maximilian was
succeeded by his son Rodolph II, who had been elected King of the
Romans in October, 1575, and had previously received the Crowns of Hungary and
Bohemia.
CHAPTER XXIVTHE RISE OF THE LEAGUE IN FRANCE |