READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER XXV.THE RISE OF THE DUTCH REPUBLIC
THE history of the
revolt in the Netherlands has been carried down in a former chapter to the
pacification of Ghent, November 8th, 1576. It was a mistake on the part of
Philip II to leave the country eight months with only an ad interim government.
Had he immediately filled up the vacancy occasioned by the death of Requesens, either by the appointment of his sister
Margaret, or any other person, the States could not have seized upon the
government, and the alliance established at Ghent would not have been effected,
by which an almost independent commonwealth was established. But Philip seems
to have been puzzled as to the choice of a successor; and his selection, at
length, of his brother, Don John of Austria, caused a further considerable
delay. Don John, the hero of Lepanto, was, at that time, Governor of the
Milanese, where necessary arrangements compelled him to remain sometime after
his appointment. He had then to proceed to Spain for instructions, whence he
travelled through France into the Low Countries.
The state of the
Netherlands compelled Don John to enter them not with the pomp and dignity
becoming the lawful representative of a great Sovereign, but stealthily, like a
traitor or conspirator. In Luxembourg alone, the only province which had not
joined the new federation, could he expect to be received; and he entered its capital
four days before the publication of the treaty of Ghent, in the disguise of a
Moorish servant, and in the train of Don Ottavio Gonzaga,
brother of the Prince of Melfi. Without money or
arms, he was obliged to negotiate with the federal assembly, now removed from
Ghent to Brussels, in order to procure the recognition of his authority. At the
instance of the Prince of Orange, the congress insisted on the withdrawal of the
Spanish troops, the maintenance of the treaty of Ghent, an act of amnesty for
past offences, the convocation of the States-General, and an oath from Don John
that he would respect all the charters and customs of the country. The new
Governor was violent, but the deputies were firm; and in January, 1577, was
formed the Union of Brussels, the professed objects of which were, the
immediate expulsion of the Spaniards, and the execution of the Pacification of
Ghent; while at the same time the Roman Catholic religion and the King’s
authority were to be upheld. This Union, which was only a more popular
repetition of the treaty of Ghent, soon obtained numberless signatures. By the
stipulation in favour of Catholicism, it contained
the seeds of its own dissolution; but it became the stepping-stone to the more
important Union of Utrecht.
Meanwhile Rodolph
II, the new Emperor, had offered his mediation, and appointed the Bishop
of Liége to use his good offices between
the parties; who, with the assistance of Duke William of Jülich brought, or seemed to bring, the new Governor to a more reasonable frame of
mind. Don John, however, was perhaps in reality determined by instructions
brought to him from Spain by his secretary Escovedo,
recommending no doubt that duplicity which characterized the policy of the
Spanish Court. When the negotiations were resumed at Marche-en-Famène, Don John yielded all the points in dispute, and
embodied them in what was called the Perpetual Edict, published March 12th,
1577. The Prince of Orange suspected from the first that these concessions were
a mere deception, intended to be violated on the first opportunity; and his
suspicions of the Governor’s hypocrisy were afterwards confirmed by intercepted
letters. Although, to the astonishment of those not in the secret, the
Perpetual Edict was confirmed by Philip, the Prince of Orange refused to
publish it in Holland and Zealand. To his secret motives we have referred; the
chief objections, which he publicly alleged, were that no definite time had
been fixed for the assembling of the States-General; that the ratification of
the treaty of Ghent was not categorical; that the States were called upon to
pay the foreign mercenaries who had oppressed them; and that his son, Count
Buren, was still detained a prisoner. Don John endeavored to gain over the
Prince by private negotiations, in which magnificent offers were made to him;
but William was incorruptible.
The Perpetual Edict
did not produce any immediate separation between the northern and southern
provinces. Although the Spanish troops were actually sent away in April, the
Catholics as well as Protestants still harbored suspicions of the Spaniards;
and when Don John entered Brussels, May 1st, 1577, the citizens refused to give
him possession of the citadel. Finding himself a Governor merely in name, and
without any real authority, he resolved to seize by stealth the power which was
withheld from him. On pretense of paying a visit to the consort of Henry of
Navarre, who was on her way to the baths of Spa, Don John proceeded to Namur,
where the citadel was commanded by two sons of Count Berlaimont,
who were favorable to his views, and who gave him possession of that fortress.
He soon after got possession of Charlemont and Marienburg, but failed in an attempt upon the citadel of
Antwerp. These steps he excused on the ground that they were necessary to his
security, pretending that a conspiracy had been formed to take his life. The
Prince of Orange endeavored to prevail on the States to resent these
encroachments, and to attack Don John with all their force; but this seemed too
bold a step to the aristocratic and Catholic party, led by the Duke of Aerschot. The exertions of William were thus confined to
his own provinces of Holland and Zealand, where a college of eighteen persons
was appointed to promote the popular cause. Permission was obtained from the
Catholic States for deputies from Holland and Zealand to enter the Brussels assembly,
where they often gave the tone; and they even succeeded in effecting an
alliance between the States and the Elector Palatine, a Prince much dreaded by
the Catholic party. When the negotiations were resumed with Don John, the
States demanded that the citadels of Ghent and Antwerp should be razed; but the
popular party in those cities leveled them to the ground without waiting for
his answer.
On the 23rd of
September, 1577, the Prince of Orange, at the invitation of the States-General,
entered Brussels amid great rejoicings and the acclamations of the people, who
hailed him as "Father William". During his absence prayers were daily
offered up for his safety in the churches of Holland and Zealand. The Prince
immediately stopped all negotiations with Don John, and prescribed to him
conditions so stringent, that he regarded them as a declaration of war, and
retired to Luxembourg. Aerschot and the
Catholic nobility were averse to these proceedings, though they were unable to
hinder them. When they acceded to the Pacification of Ghent, they had hoped to
obtain the leading influence in the government; they now saw with jealousy the
chief power in the hands of Orange and his party, yet at the same time they
hated and suspected the Spaniards. On the other hand William became the
favorite of the people. The Brabanters elected
him their Ruward, a dignity which was generally
reserved for the heir to the sovereignty, and conferred upon him an almost
dictatorial power. He was also offered the Stadholdership of
Flanders, which, however, he declined. These marks of popular favour were bestowed upon Orange partly in consequence of a
step taken by his opponents. The Catholic aristocrats, who disliked both Don
John and the Prince of Orange, had called in as their Governor the Archduke
Matthias, a youth of twenty years of age, brother of the Emperor Rodolph II.
Matthias accepted the invitation, and came to Brussels without consulting his
brother; but he had no talent, and was never anything more than a puppet in the
hand of contending factions. To avoid useless contention, as well as not to
give offence to the Germans, Orange accepted the nomination of Matthias, and
received him with honor. On the 7th December, 1577, the States-General formally
deposed Don John, and declared all who should assist him rebels and traitors;
and on the 10th a fresh "Union of Brussels" was signed, by which
Protestantism was placed on a more favorable footing than by the Pacification
of Ghent. This, however, was the last time that the Netherlands were united,
nor did their union prove of long duration. Matthias was inaugurated at Antwerp
as Governor-General, January 18th, 1578, having first subscribed a constitution
drawn up under the superintendence of the Prince of Orange. William was to be
his Lieutenant-General; a step insisted on by Queen Elizabeth, who had now
begun to afford the Netherlanders some substantial assistance. Her motives were
somewhat selfish. She had discovered that Don John was plotting with the Pope
and the Guises to depose her, to espouse Mary Queen of Scots, and to seize the
Crown of England. Elizabeth's help to the Netherlanders had hitherto been
confined to small grants of money; but, although Philip II appears to have
disapproved of the scheme of Don John, she now adopted more warlike counsels,
and in 1577 made a treaty with the States, by which she agreed to send 5,000
foot and 1,000 horse into the Low Countries, to be paid for by the States, but
commanded by a general of her own, who was to be received into the Netherland
Council. She also agreed to lend them her credit for £100,000, for which she
was to receive the bonds of some of the chief towns in the Netherlands, and her
liability was to cease within a year. This treaty was signed January 7th, 1578,
and the English forces, under Sir John Norris, proceeded into the Netherlands.
It being now plain
that the acceptance of Don John as Governor could be accomplished only by
force, Philip II assembled an army of about 20,000 Spanish and Italian
veterans, which he entrusted to the command of Alexander Farnese, son of Ottavio, Duke of Parma, and Margaret, the late Regent of
the Netherlands. At the same time the Pope published a bull in favour of Don John, similar to those formerly issued during
the crusades against the Saracens. The Netherlanders also assembled a
considerable force under De Groignies, and
towards the end of January, 1578, both armies were ready to take the field. As
the soldiers of the States were mostly raw recruits. Orange advised an
immediate attack upon Don John, then at Namur; but this council was overruled,
and they waited to be assaulted near Gemblours,
January 31st. A charge of cavalry led by Alexander Farnese decided the victory
in favour of the Royalists. Vast numbers of the
Netherlanders fell in the battle, and all the prisoners, to the number of about
600, were put to death. It was thought that Don John would now march upon
Brussels, and the States, the Council, and the Prince of Orange fled to
Antwerp; instead of which, however, the victorious general employed himself in
taking some towns of less importance, as Louvain, Nivelles,
Bovines, and others.
Battle of Rymenants
Meanwhile Orange
was drawing into the League those Dutch towns which had not yet renounced their
allegiance to Philip II, and especially Amsterdam; the accession of which
important city, February 8th, 1578, more than counter-balanced the defeat
at Gemblours. Aerschot's party,
who had discovered that the Archduke Matthias was entirely useless, applied to
the weak Duke of Anjou, to accept the protectorate of the Netherlands; while
Queen Elizabeth, who dreaded the extension by that means of French influence,
by way of counterpoise, recommended the States to seek the assistance of John
Casimir, brother of the Elector Palatine; and she advanced money to pay the
German troops whom he might conduct into the Low Countries. John Casimir,
however, who had little military talent, and had only distinguished himself by
some marauding expeditions, did not join the patriots till near the end of
August; who, meanwhile, chiefly through the valour of
the English under Norris, had defeated Don John at Rymenants (August
1st). The allies were so strongly posted, being protected on one side by the
river Demer, on another by a wood, and on a
third by entrenchments, that Don John was counseled by his best captains not to
attack them; but he was anxious to give battle before the arrival of John
Casimir. The attack was repulsed, and Don John's army would have suffered
greatly in its retreat, had not Alexander Farnese covered it in a masterly
manner with his cavalry.
This was the last
exploit of the victor of Lepanto. He retired under the cannon of Namur; Philip
II sent him no assistance, and caused his secretary to be murdered in Spain for
too zealously promoting his master's chimerical marriage with Mary
Stuart. Bossu, the commander of the patriot
army, threatening Nivelles, Don John broke up to
attack him, but was seized on the way with a fatal illness (October 1st, 1578),
at Bougy, a poor village near Namur. The short
administration of Don John may appear to have produced no result; but he in
reality initiated the system which preserved so large a portion of the
Netherlands to the Spanish Crown. Although he began the war contrary to the
wishes of Philip, yet it was evident that matters had gone too far to be
accommodated by any reconciliation with the States : and he therefore
determined on a gradual subjugation of the revolted provinces, partly by force
and partly by negotiation. He revived the attachment of the Walloons to the
House of Burgundy; he won over to his view Pardieu de
la Motte, the commandant of Gravelines, and
Matthew Moulart, Bishop of Arras, and employed
them in his negotiations with singular success.
Don John was
succeeded, both in the civil and military command, by his nephew Alexander
Farnese, who was only a few months younger than his uncle, and had shared with
him the glory of Lepanto. In personal appearance he formed a striking contrast
to his relative. His head was round and covered with short, black, bristly
hair; his forehead high but narrow; his nose aquiline; the lower part of his
face covered with a bushy black beard; his features were handsome; but wore a
somewhat sinister expression. His character was cool, artful, determined; and,
though lacking the fascination of Don John, he had the power of inspiring
confidence. Both as a politician and a military commander he was by far the
ablest Governor that had yet been seen in the Netherlands.
Before the death
of Don John, the Catholic party and Walloon provinces had virtually superseded
the Archduke Matthias, by calling in the Duke of Anjou; nor had the Prince of
Orange opposed their choice, though he dictated to the French Prince a
convention which he signed at Mons, August 13th. Anjou’s vanity was tickled
with the magnificent title of "Defender of the liberty of the Netherlands
against the tyranny of the Spaniards and their adherents", but he was
deprived of all real power. Anjou’s coming had been dreaded and opposed by
Elizabeth on political grounds, although she still coquetted with him as a
suitor. He entered the Netherlands in September, 1578, took Binche by assault, and Maubeuge by
capitulation; but under pretense of a deference to the will of Elizabeth,
refrained from further conquests and retired into France. The policy of the
English Queen on this subject differed from that of her ministers, who would
have gladly seen the Netherlands separated, even by a French conquest, from the
Crown of Spain; while it was the wish of Elizabeth that they should be restored
to Philip, though with security for the preservation of their ancient
liberties. She had indeed too high an idea of the divine right of Kings to
regard the successful revolt of subjects with approbation.
Union
of Utrecht by Lucy M. Salmon.
Farnese pursued
the same policy as his predecessor in endeavoring to conciliate the Catholic
provinces; and the democratic violence of two demagogues at last enabled him to
destroy the Pacification of Ghent. In the autumn of 1577 the nobles Imbize and Ryhove had
incited an insurrection in Ghent, and had seized and imprisoned the Duke
of Aerschot and ten gentlemen of his suite,
because the Duke, who had been elected Stadholder of Flanders, had delayed the
promised confirmation of the ancient privileges of the city. Of these two
leaders Ryhove was bold, savage, and
unscrupulous. Imbize, with equal cruelty, was
treacherous and cowardly, but possessed more eloquence and talent. He had
conceived the chimerical idea of establishing a Republic and converting Ghent
into a second Rome. These demagogues had formed a democratic government
consisting of an executive of eighteen citizens, while the legislative power
was vested in the deans of the guilds and the council of war of the city
train-bands. The example of Ghent was followed by those towns where a
proletarian population abounded; as Dendermonde, Courtray, Hulst, Oudenarde,
and at last also Bruges. These proceedings were viewed with great
disapprobation by the Prince of Orange, as calculated materially to damage the
patriot cause. He sent an envoy to remonstrate with the leaders, and in
December proceeded himself to Ghent; but all that he could effect was the
liberation of the Duke of Aerschot. The
disorders in that city went on increasing, and in the course of 1578 attained
to such a height that the Walloon aristocracy trembled for their religion and
even for their lives. The democratic party raged against the Catholics, broke
the images in the churches, and seized on the property of the monks and clergy.
A sort of internecine war ensued. The Walloons, with a body of French, headed
by Pardieu, lord of La Motte, robbed,
murdered, and destroyed up to the very gates of Ghent; while on the other
hand, Ryhove and La Noue, having got together a force of French Huguenots,
desolated the Walloon territories. These disorders caused the dissolution of
the Brussels Union and of the Pacification of Ghent. The Walloons, who
complained that faith had not been kept with them, entered into negotiations
with Farnese; and in January, 1579, they concluded a separate league among
themselves at Arras. The Prince of Orange, on his side, united the Calvinist
provinces together in an alliance called a perpetual union; which, from its
being proclaimed at Utrecht, January 29th, 1579, obtained the name of the Union
of Utrecht. It was subscribed by deputies from Holland, Zealand, Utrecht, Gelderland,
and the rural districts of Groningen, and in the course of the same year was
acceded to by Friesland, Overyssel, Drenthe,
and the town of Groningen. The towns of Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, and Ypres were
also members of the Union for a time. The Union of Utrecht must be regarded as
the foundation of the Dutch Republic, although the various provinces and towns
which subscribed it did not renounce their allegiance to Philip II; on the
contrary, the professed intention of the union was to maintain the Pacification
of Ghent, which acknowledge that Sovereign. The United Provinces did not
propose in their corporate capacity to meddle with domestic politics or
religion, but merely to drive the foreigner from the land; and though they were
to remain perpetually united, each province and town was to retain its peculiar
laws, privileges, and customs.
Ste. Aldegonde having been dispatched by the Netherland
States to the Diet assembled at Worms to implore the assistance of the Empire
against the tyranny of the Spaniards, an attempt was made at the instance of
the Emperor, Rodolph II, whose brother Matthias was still the ostensible
Governor of the Netherlands, to effect a reconciliation between the provinces
and the Spanish King; and with that view a congress was held at Cologne in
April, at which plenipotentiaries attended from the Pope, the Emperor, the
Spanish King, and the Netherlands, as well as from France, England, and several
of the German Princes. Cobham and Walsingham were the English envoys; but the negotiations
had no result. The Papal Nuncio would of course listen to no proposals of
toleration, and Philip II insisted that the Netherlands should remain in the
same state as under Charles V. He promised, indeed, to remove the Spanish
troops; but he would acknowledge the Protestant religion only in Holland and
Zealand, and that only for a time; while on the other hand the States would
relax none of the conditions on which the governorship had been conceded to
Matthias. An appeal to arms became therefore again inevitable; hostilities,
indeed, had not been interrupted during the congress, and Farnese, after
threatening Antwerp, had laid siege to Maestricht. The Walloon provinces
now entirely separated themselves from the
rest, and concluded a treaty with Farnese in his camp before Maestricht,
May 17th, 1579, by which the authority of the King was indeed restored, but
under strict limitations. Philip promised to dismiss all foreign troops, and to
confirm all present possessors in the offices which they had acquired during
the disturbances. Of all the Walloon towns, Tournay, Cambray, and Bouchain alone
adhered to the States. The leading Walloon nobles who negotiated this treaty
made the Spaniards pay for their adhesion; the price of their loyalty being a
military command, the government of a province, the order of the Golden Fleece,
or even a payment in money. But as the Walloon provinces were as fanatical as
Philip himself, they made no stipulations about religion. Thus the Netherlands
became divided into three distinct parties : 1, the Calvinist provinces of the
north which had entered into the Union of Utrecht; 2, the Dutch-speaking middle
provinces, containing an almost equal number of Catholics and Protestants; and
3, the wholly Catholic Walloon provinces of the south which had resumed their
obedience to the Spanish government.
Maastricht, after
an admirable defence of three months, during which
numberless assaults were repulsed, was at length taken, June 29th, the
inhabitants having been surprised in their sleep. During three days the
Spaniards exercised the most abominable cruelties. Fortunately Farnese's treaty
with the Walloons compelled him now to dismiss his Spanish troops, and he was
consequently obliged to remain quiet for a period. The Prince of Orange availed
himself of the opportunity thus afforded to strengthen his party by getting rid
of the Archduke Matthias and the Ghent radicals. Matthias, as well as the Count
Palatine John Casimir, were members of the Ghent democracy. Davidson, the
English ambassador to the States, had complained bitterly of the Ghent
demagogues, and especially of John Casimir, who was subsidized by England. The
Count Palatine went to England to justify himself, and obtained from Elizabeth
the Garter and a pension; but his troops in the Netherlands, which had done
nothing but plunder, were dismissed. The Prince of Orange proceeded to Ghent in
August, 1579, to put the affairs of that city in order in the name of the
States-General. Imbize now fled into the
Palatinate; but having ventured to return in 1584, was seized and executed.
William restored in Ghent a mild and moderate government, established a
toleration of both religions, and enforced a restitution of the spoils that had
been committed both on private property and that of the Church.
After the taking
of Maastricht and withdrawal of the Spanish troops, the war languished, Philip
being fortunately occupied with other affairs. The Confederates, however, were
not in a position to take advantage of this state of things, and it plainly
appeared how difficult it is for a confederacy of this kind to make head
against a powerful and united monarchy. The several provinces which composed it
were more attentive to their own advantage than to the general good; while
those who held commands in them were not always inaccessible to the influence
of corruption. In March, 1580, a great Walloon noble, George de Lalaing, Count of Renneberg,
who, although a Catholic, had served the Union of Utrecht with his mercenaries
under John Casimir, and now occupied the town and fortress of Groningen, sold
himself to the Spaniards for a pension of 20,000 florins and other advantages.
Hence Groningen and Friesland were for some time lost to the league, and the
Prince of Orange himself was put into considerable danger. His peril was
increased by a step which Granvelle had
advised Philip to adopt. A change of ministry had at length restored that
Cardinal, who had languished many years in Italy, to the counsels of his
Sovereign. His predecessor, Don Antonio Perez, who had taken the Princess
of Eboli, a mistress of Philip's, for his own, was discovered and
disgraced : he and the Princess were arrested July 28th, 1579, and on the same
day Granvelle entered Madrid. One of his
first steps was to propose the proscription of the Prince of Orange. William
was accordingly placed under the royal ban, and a price of 25,000 gold crowns
was set upon his head. In the preamble to this instrument all the various
crimes imputed to Orange were recited; he was compared to Cain and Judas, and
declared an enemy of the human race; and besides the proffered reward, whoever
should kill him was promised, not only a pardon for any crime, however heinous,
that he might have committed, but also that, if not already noble, he should be
ennobled for his valou
Orange's Apologie
This proscription
was answered by William in his celebrated Apologie,
or Vindication; a paper drawn up with great eloquence and force of reasoning,
though it sometimes oversteps the bounds of moderation, and brings charges
against Philip, which, though the popular rumours of
the day, the judgment of history has not always confirmed. The Prince rejoices
in the opportunity of defending his character, not against an obscure libeller, but a great and powerful King. He recites the benefits
which his family had conferred upon the House of Habsburg, who were obscure
when his ancestors filled the Imperial throne. He observes that a Netherlander
owed Philip no allegiance as King, but only as Duke, or Count, or Lord; and as
Philip had violated the oath which he took to observe the privileges of the
various provinces, both parties were released from their engagements. Philip,
indeed, might plead the Pope's dispensation, and the Prince left it to divines
to determine whether the arrogance of the Pope in presuming to release men from
such obligations were not an invasion of the prerogative of heaven, and
destructive of all faith among men. It was enough for him to remark the folly
of such a proceeding; for, as the tie was mutual, the dispensation for Philip
himself released also Philip's subjects, whom it was therefore absurd to
reproach with disloyalty. He rebuts the charge of being the author of these
disturbances, which were imputable solely to the cruelty and tyranny of the
Spanish rule. He charges Philip with murder, and Granvelle with
having administered poison to the Emperor Maximilian. To this paper Orange
affixed his name and arms, with his motto, "Je maintiendrai";
and he sent a copy of it to most of the European Sovereigns. It alarmed even
the boldest of his friends, and Ste. Aldegonde,
when he read it in France, observed that the Prince was a dead man.
It was now plain
that even that limited recognition of Philip's authority, which had hitherto
prevailed in the Netherlands, could not much longer continue to be observed,
and must be superseded by open rebellion and the assertion of independence. But
such a step could not be ventured on without foreign assistance, and Orange
determined on calling in the Duke of Anjou. That Prince, as we have said, had
been named Protector of the Netherlands in 1578; but the state of affairs in
France had prevented him from taking possession of his new dignity. Orange now
persuaded the States to renew the negotiations with him, and to offer him
the Stadholdership; but as the Netherlanders reposed even less confidence
in Anjou than in Matthias, it was arranged that he should accept the office
under the same limitations as the Archduke. The conditions were carried by a
deputation from the States to the Duke, whom they found at Plessisles-Tours, where the treaty was concluded, September
29th, 1580. The chief stipulations were, that he was to maintain all the rights
and privileges of the different provinces, of which he was to be Duke, Count,
Margrave, or Lord, according to their different constitutions, and was to be
succeeded by one of his children. He agreed to assemble the States-General at
least once a year, to reside constantly in the Netherlands, and to bestow
offices on none but natives. Holland and Zealand, however, which had put
themselves specially under the authority of the Prince of Orange, were
altogether excluded from this arrangement; and, indeed, Anjou signed a secret
paper, entirely renouncing all pretensions to them. The Archduke Matthias laid
down his office at Antwerp, and was mean enough to accept a retiring pension of
50,000 florins, which, however, does not seem to have been regularly paid; and
in October, 1581, he returned to Austria, where he became the tool of those who
were discontented with the government of his brother, the Emperor Rodolph II.
In the Netherlands he had been simply insignificant.
Doctrine of
Sovereignty of the People
Circumstances
prevented the Duke of Anjou from being installed in his new dignity until 1582.
On the 26th of July, 1581, the States-General of the United Provinces assembled
at the Hague, formally renounced their allegiance to Philip by a solemn Act of
Abjuration, and deposed him from his sovereignty. In this act his crimes
against the people were elaborately enumerated; among which appear prominently
the introduction of the Spanish troops, the creation of the new bishoprics, the
establishment of the Inquisition, the cruelties of Alva, the "Spanish
Fury", and finally, the proscription of the Prince of Orange. The act is
justified by an appeal to the Law of Nature. Subjects, it is said, are not
created by God to be the mere chattels of the Prince, to obey his commands,
whether just or unjust, and to serve him like slaves; on the contrary, the
Prince is appointed, like the shepherd of a flock, for the good of his
subjects, to govern them according to law and reason. If he neglects to do
this, if, instead of defending, he oppresses them, by depriving them of their
ancient privileges and customs, he is no longer to be regarded as a Prince, but
as a tyrant; and if his subjects cannot deter him from his oppressions by their
prayers and their remonstrances, they are no longer bound, in law and reason,
to recognize him for their Sovereign.
Thus was raised
the first voice of political liberty proceeding from the spirit of the
Reformation; thus was struck the first blow which shook the monarchical
principle in its hitherto recognized foundation. Previous revolts had been mere
instinctive risings against tyranny and oppression; but the enunciation, as a
principle of natural law, of the right of resistance to tyrannous Sovereigns,
proclaimed an age that had begun to feel and to reflect upon its civil as well
as its religious privileges. The deliberate and solemn nature of the act
produced all the more profound sensation in Europe; for the Declaration of
Independence was not a democratic revolution, or an appeal to the people; the
United Provinces did not style themselves a Republic, nor, in fact, make any
change in their form of government; and the offer of their Sovereignty to Queen
Elizabeth, and to the Duke of Anjou, shows that they were still inclined to be
governed by a Prince. Still less was their formal connection with the Empire
dissolved by this measure. The whole proceeding was managed by the regular
assembly of the States, as if in the ordinary course of business; and so far
from sanctioning a democracy, such as that attempted by Imbize and Ryhove, the
divine right of Kings was acknowledged by the Act, and afterwards by the envoys
of the States at the Diet of Augsburg, in 1582. In fact, it is remarkable that
the doctrine of the Sovereignty of the people was first broached, not by the
Protestants, but by the Jesuits and the high Catholic party. It formed part of
their theory of the omnipotence of the Pope, who alone reigned by divine right,
and that only in his spiritual capacity. Bellarmine was the first who
attempted to establish this doctnne logically
and systematically. He maintained that the people have, in extreme emergencies,
a natural right to resume the government and alter its forms; and this view
became the prevailing doctrine of all the Jesuit schools, and was by none more
emphatically taught than by the Spanish Jesuits Suarez and Mariana. It was of
course levelled against heretical sovereigns such as Queen Elizabeth
in England, and Henry IV in France. Two days before the Act of Abjuration was
published, the Prince of Orange accepted the sovereignty of Holland and
Zealand, though limited at his own request to the period during which the war
should last; a limitation, however, afterwards cancelled by the States without
William's knowledge. He was to maintain in those provinces the public exercise
of the reformed religion alone; but no inquiries were to be made into any man's
belief, nor was any hindrance to be offered to him on the ground of his
religion.
Fortunately Philip
was at this time occupied with the affairs of Portugal, and Alexander Farnese
was not in a position to push the war with much vigour.
He had not only dismissed his Spanish and Italian veterans, but was also
involved in a quarrel with the Spanish King and with his own mother, Margaret,
whom Philip II had sent back to rule the Netherlands. Farnese, however,
refusing to share his power with her, Margaret at length withdrew her
pretensions, and though she lived under an assumed name upwards of three years
in the Netherlands, she forbore to take any ostensible part in public affairs.
The Duke of Anjou, whom Henry III had pretended to disavow, entered the Low
Countries about the middle of August (1581) with an army of some 15,000 men,
and compelled Farnese to raise the siege of Cambray,
one of the few Walloon towns which adhered to the Union of Utrecht. Anjou
entered Cambray in triumph; but this was the extent
of his exploits. Through his own improvidence, as well as for want of succour from the French Court, which was wasting its
resources in dissipation and extravagance, Anjou found himself obliged to
disband his army; and in November he went with a splendid retinue to England to
press in person his suit to Queen Elizabeth. Being disappointed at Cambray, Farnese next turned his arms against Tournay, which after a brave defence of two months, conducted by Christine de Lalaing,
Princess of Espinoy, in the absence of her
husband, the commandant, was forced to surrender, November 30th.
Queen Elizabeth
was at this period much embittered against the Spanish Court, on account of its
intrigues with the discontented nobles and with Mary Stuart. When Farnese
resumed hostilities, she sent some troops into the Netherlands under Colonel
Norris, who proved of considerable service to the Dutch; yet she was not
inclined to provoke an open war with Spain; and much to the regret of
Leicester, she for the second time declined the offer made to her by the States
of Holland and Zealand, early in 1582, of the sovereignty of these two
provinces. How far her negotiations with Anjou were the result of policy or
coquetry, it may not be easy to determine. The Duke, who was at that time
twenty-eight years of age, possessed considerable grace and vivacity, though in
person below the middle size, puny and ill-shaped. Elizabeth had always
reserved for herself a loophole of escape; and to the contract for the marriage
drawn up in June, 1581, was appended a provision for the exchange of certain
mutual explanations. He soon after quitted the shores of England and landed at
Flushing, February 10th, 1582. Hence he was conducted by the Prince of Orange,
by water, to Antwerp, took the customary oaths upon his joyeuse entrée into that city, and was formally
proclaimed Duke of Brabant.
About a month
after the installation of Anjou, an attempt was made at Antwerp to murder the Prince
of Orange. The Court of Spain followed up the diabolical policy adopted in the
ban by entering into a regular contract with one Anastro,
a bankrupt merchant of Antwerp, for the murder of William. This contract, which
was signed by Philip with his own hand, and sealed with his seal, guaranteed
to Anastro the sum of 80,000 ducats for the
perpetration of the deed, besides the cross of St. Iago! Anastro entrusted the matter, as if it had been in the
regular course of business, to his servant named Jauregui; who, being
incited by a fanatical friar, and tempted with the offer of near three thousand
crowns, undertook the assassination. Jauregui chose for that purpose
the birthday of the Duke of Anjou (March 18th). The Prince of Orange, who had
been dining at his own house, was just rising from table, when Jauregui approached
under pretense of presenting a petition, and discharged a pistol at him. The
ball entered the Prince's neck, under the right ear, passed through the roof of
the mouth, and came out under the left jaw, carrying away two teeth in its
passage. The pistol had been held so near that the flash cicatrized the wound,
which otherwise would probably have been mortal. The assassin was instantly cut
down. The more calculating Anastro had left
Antwerp before the attempt, and escaped into the Prince of Parma's lines.
William was in such danger during three weeks, that his wife, Charlotte of
Bourbon, died of anxiety.
The French were
not popular in the Netherlands, and a report was immediately spread that the
crime had been committed at the instigation of Anjou. The infuriated populace
crowded to the palace of St. Michael, the residence of this French Duke at
Antwerp; and but for the presence of mind of William's son Maurice, then a mere
youth, a fearful massacre would have ensued. Maurice had guessed at once that
the crime had its origin in Spain, and the papers found in the assassin's
pocket proved his suspicions to be correct. These papers he now showed to the
people, and thus appeased them for the moment; but a lurking suspicion still
remained, and all mutual confidence was lost. Anjou became daily more
dissatisfied with his position, in which he felt that he had no real power,
being constantly watched and controlled by the Prince of Orange. He told his followers
that only two alternatives were left for him; either to retire into France,
which would cover him with disgrace, or to assert his authority in the
Netherlands with a strong hand. Adopting the latter design, he distributed his
French forces in certain Flemish towns, which he wished to occupy, with
directions to the commanders, when the opportunity should arrive, to overpower
the magistrates and seize those places. It was in fact a repetition of the
policy of Don John when he seized Namur. The plan succeeded at Ostend, Dendermonde, Dixmude,
Dunkirk, and a few other towns; but it was frustrated at Bruges and Nieuport, while at Antwerp, which Anjou himself undertook
to master, it occasioned a fearful massacre.
The French Fury at
Antwerp, 1583
Except his
body-guard, Anjou had no troops inside Antwerp; but his French soldiers lay at
no great distance, and on the 17th January, 1583, having assembled them near
the city on pretense of a review, he rode out with his guard to one of the
gates; the burgher watch was suddenly overpowered, and the troops began to
enter with cries of Ville gagnée! Vive la messe! Tue, tue! and then began to disperse themselves for plunder.
Their triumph was premature. The inhabitants called to mind that several
distinguished French officers had some time before been carefully examining the
goldsmith's shops under pretense of purchasing: the object of the attack was
plain; the native troops and citizens flew to arms, and a terrible conflict
ensued. The streets were quickly secured with chains and barricades; the French
were shot at from the windows; even women and children attacked them; and after
a short struggle the 3,500 Frenchmen who had entered were driven out with the
loss of more than half their number, while the chief nobles in the Duke's
retinue were either killed or made prisoners. This treacherous attack which
obtained the name of "the French Fury", was much less disastrous than
the Spanish Fury. The French were not so well versed in the sacking of towns as
the Spaniards, who proceeded more methodically, by first butchering the
inhabitants and then appropriating their property; while the French began to
plunder before they had secured their opponents. Anjou was bitterly reviled by
many of his own officers, who were too honorable to partake in the plot and to
whom he had not ventured to reveal it. When he saw its ill success, he withdrew
towards Dendermonde; whereupon the citizens
of Mechlin, by cutting a dyke, let out the waters of the Dyle, and drowned about 1,000 of his followers. After this
act Anjou of course ceased to be regarded by the Nether- landers as their
protector, and he retired to Dunkirk. The Prince of Orange nevertheless
endeavored to effect a reconciliation with him; for which he had many reasons.
If Anjou should be cast off, Henry III might perhaps reconcile himself with
Spain, and the road through France would thus be opened to the troops of Philip
II. Queen Elizabeth also urged a reconciliation, and it was dangerous to offend
a Sovereign whose aid was of so much importance to the United Provinces.
William, too, discovered that while the Duke was writing to him in the tone of
injured innocence, he was at the same time treating with Farnese; and he
hastened to close with an opponent whose enmity might prove more dangerous even
than his friendship. A provisional arrangement was signed with Anjou in March,
1583, but towards the end of June the Duke left Dunkirk never to return.
Meanwhile the
Prince of Parma, having been reinforced by Philip with fresh troops released by
the termination of the war in Portugal, as well as by the return of the Spanish
and Italian veterans, to which the Walloons had been persuaded to consent, had
resumed more active operations. From July to November, 1583, the towns of Dixmude, Nieuport,
Dunkirk, Zutphen, the Sas,
or port of Ghent, Hulst, Axel, Rupelmonde,
and Alost fell into the hands of the Spaniards; while the States, for want of
friends, were able to make but little resistance. Besides military talent,
Farnese displayed a wise and politic moderation and clemency. He endeavored, as
much as possible, to spare the places which he attacked the evils which
ordinarily accompany warfare. Rather than take them by storm he preferred to
reduce them by blockade, or by diverting the course of streams and rivers, and
he offered them the most favorable capitulations that his instructions from
Philip would allow. But the inexorable bigotry of the Catholic King would not
yield a jot in the matter of religion; and on this head all that the Protestants
in the captured towns could obtain was the choice either of renouncing their
faith or quitting the country within two years. Farnese pursued his successes
in the following year (1584). Between March and August, Ypres, Mechlin,
Brussels and Dendermonde were forced to
capitulate; while Charles of Croy, Prince
of Chimay, son of the Duke of Aerschot, treacherously betrayed Bruges to the Spaniards,
in order to obtain the command of a division. Ghent, Sluys,
Antwerp and Ostend were now the only southern Netherland towns that remained in
the power of the States; and of these Ghent was no longer tenable after the
taking of the Sas, by which it was cut off from
the sea, and the fall of Dendermonde, which
interrupted its communications with Antwerp and Brabant. Ghent was again in the
hands of the demagogues, but after the execution of Imbize,
it capitulated September 17th.
Murder of Orange,
1584
Before this event,
both Anjou and the Prince of Orange had ceased to exist. William had succeeded
in effecting a new treaty with Anjou, but before it was signed the Duke died at
Chateau-Thierry, June 10th, 1584. Although the character of this Prince rendered
him altogether insignificant and contemptible, yet, from his peculiar position,
his death had a great effect upon the troubles both in the Netherlands and
France. In the latter country, by opening the way for the succession of Henry
of Navarre to the Crown, it served to stimulate the proceedings of the Guises
and the League. In the Netherlands it caused a dissolution of the government in
Flanders and Brabant; which provinces, as they did not belong to the Union of
Utrecht, had no longer any head to whom they could look; and thus, at a
critical moment, disunion was introduced into the counsels of the States. After
the death of Anjou, the Prince of Orange, disgusted at the disunion which
prevailed in Brabant and Flanders, returned into Holland after an absence of
six years. Convinced in the present circumstances of the necessity of a strong
government, he now accepted the dignity, which he had more than once refused,
of Sovereign Count of Holland and Zealand; and he declared that he would in
future rule those provinces with the same princely power as had been enjoyed by
Charles V and Philip II. But before the arrangements for his installation could
be completed he fell by the hand of an assassin.
After the abortive
attempt on the Prince's life by Jauregui, four more had been made with the
same ill-success; making five within two years, and all with the knowledge of
the Spanish government. The sixth was destined to be more successful. William's
murderer was one Balthazar Gérard, a native of Villefans,
in Burgundy, and, like Jauregui, a religious fanatic. Gérard communicated
his design to the Prince of Parma, by whom it was approved; for this
cool-headed and cold-hearted tactician admitted assassination in his art of
war. Farnese had, indeed, been long in search of a murderer, and had hired
several, who, after pocketing his money, shirked the deed. Assuming the name of
Francis Guion, and the aspect of a devout Calvinist, Gérard was sent to
Delft with dispatches to the Prince, and thus obtained entrance into his bedchamber.
It was not, however, till two days afterwards that Gerard was ready to
perpetrate the diabolical act. On the 10th of July, 1584, as Orange was
proceeding up stairs after dinner, Gérard shot him
with a pistol loaded with three balls, and William almost instantly expired.
The murderer was arrested in attempting to escape, and, before and at his
execution, was subjected to tortures, which he endured with an almost
superhuman fortitude. A commuted reward was paid to his parents, who received
three lordships in Franche-Comté, the property of the murdered Prince, and took
their place among the landed aristocracy. William the Silent was fifty-one
years of age at the time of his death. He left twelve children, viz.: by his
first wife, Anne of Egmont, a son, Philip Count Buren, a prisoner in Spain, and
a daughter, Mary, afterwards married to Count Hohenlohe; by his second wife,
Anne of Saxony, a son, Prince Maurice of Nassau, and two daughters; by his
third wife, Charlotte of Bourbon, six daughters; and by his fourth wife,
Louise, daughter of Admiral Coligni, and widow
of Teligni, whom he had married in April, 1583,
a son, Frederick Henry, afterwards the celebrated Stadholder.
William's place in
history is among the greatest benefactors of mankind, the deliverers of their
country. His untimely death, indeed, prevented him from fully accomplishing the
great work of emancipation, but he had put it in such a train as ensured a
successful result. Steadfastness, constancy of purpose, denial of self in the
service of his country, for which he rendered himself almost a beggar, are the
great traits in his character. As a commander he was outshone by other generals
of the age; yet he possessed considerable military genius, and the relief of
Leyden is a striking instance both of vastness of design and boldness of
execution. As a statesman he was unquestionably the first in Europe. With
great sagacity and power to penetrate the designs of others, he had the art, so
necessary to a politician, of concealing his own. He was possessed of a
singular eloquence, and his speeches and state papers are models of their kind.
In public he exhibited an exemplary piety, and his enlightened and liberal
toleration forms an agreeable contrast with the harsh and narrow bigotry then
everywhere displayed, not only in the Roman Catholic, but also in the
Protestant communions. A modern historian has well characterized him as
"the head of the party of humanity", at that time a new party in the
annals of Europe, but which has since gone on increasing. His company consisted
of the burgesses of Delft, and there was no external sign to distinguish him
from that multitude. The local States testified their respect for William's
memory by naming his son Maurice, although then only eighteen years of age, Stadholder
of Holland, Zealand and Utrecht, and High Admiral. Maurice was a quiet, steady
young man, devoted to the study of mathematics, in the hope of one day making
that science useful in the art of war; but as he had not of course yet
displayed that military talent by which he was afterwards distinguished, Count
Hohenlohe was appointed his lieutenant-general, to direct him in his
enterprises as deputy of the States.
Siege of Antwerp,
1585
After the fall of
Ghent, Farnese applied himself earnestly to the siege of Antwerp, one of the
most memorable recorded in history. The citizens were animated in their defence by the valour and
talent of Ste. Aldegonde. Farnese at once began
to make a bridge, which he carried across the Scheld,
below Antwerp, in order to cut off the communication of the city with the sea
and with Zealand. From the depth and swiftness of the river, the difficulty of
finding the requisite materials, and of transporting them to the selected place
in the face of an enemy who was superior on the water, the project was loudly
denounced by Farnese's officers as impracticable; yet, in spite of all these
difficulties, as the place seemed unapproachable in the usual way, he steadily
persevered, and at last succeeded.
During the
construction of the bridge, which lasted half a year, the citizens of Antwerp
viewed with dismay the progress of a work which was to deprive them of the
supplies necessary for their subsistence and defence.
At length they adopted a plan suggested by Giambelli,
a Mantuan engineer, and resolved to destroy the bridge by means of
fire-ships, which seem to have been first used on this occasion. Several such
vessels were one night sent down the river with a favorable tide and wind, of
which two were charged with 6,000 or 7,000 lbs. of gunpowder each, packed in
solid masonry, with various destructive missiles. One of these vessels went
ashore before reaching its destination; the other struck upon the bridge, and
blew up with terrible effect. Curiosity to behold so novel a spectacle had
attracted vast numbers of the Spaniards, who lined the shores as well as the
bridge. Of these 800 were killed by the explosion, and by the implements of
destruction discharged with the powder; a still greater number were terribly
maimed and wounded, and the bridge itself was broken through. Farnese himself
was thrown to the earth, and lay for a time insensible. The Zealand fleet,
however, was not at hand to bring relief, nor did the besieged follow up their
plan with vigour. They allowed Farnese time to
repair the damage, and the Spaniards, being now on the alert, either diverted
the course of the fireships that were subsequently sent against them
or suffered them to pass the bridge through openings made for the purpose. In
spite of the bridge, however, the beleaguered citizens might still have secured
a transit down the river by breaking through the dykes between Antwerp and
Lillo, and sailing over the plains thus laid under water, for which purpose it
was necessary to obtain possession of the counter-dyke of Kowenstyn; but after a partial success, too quickly
abandoned by Hohenlohe andSte. Aldegonde, they were defeated in a desperate battle fought
upon the dyke. Antwerp was now obliged to capitulate; and as Farnese was
anxious to put an end to so long a siege, it obtained more favorable terms than
could have been anticipated (August 17th, 1585). The prosperity of this great
commercial city received, however, a severe blow from its capture by the
Spaniards. A great number of the citizens, as well as of the inhabitants of
Brabant and Flanders, removed to Amsterdam and Middleburg, and so much
augmented the population, as well as the trade, of those cities, that it became
necessary to enlarge their walls. Ste. Aldegonde was
vehemently suspected of having sold himself to the Spaniards, and though he
lived down this calumny, his public career was now brought to an end.
Elizabeth helps
the Hollanders, 1585-6
The Netherlands
seemed at this time in imminent danger, being again brought under the dominion
of Philip II, a fate, however, from which they were rescued partly by the succours afforded to them by Queen Elizabeth and
partly by the impolicy of the Spanish King in diverting his resources
in order to attack England and to help the League in France. After the murder
of the Prince of Orange, Queen Elizabeth resolved no longer to afford the
United Provinces a merely clandestine assistance, but to support them by a public
alliance. She once more declined, indeed, the sovereignty; but she agreed to
send 6,000 troops into the Netherlands, as securities for the repayment of
whose expenses Flushing and Brille, the chief fortresses severally in
Walcheren and Voorne, were to be placed in her
hands; and she published her motives for this step in a declaration dated at
Richmond, October 10th, 1585. They were chiefly grounded on the schemes of
Philip II, who, incited by the Pope, was contemplating an invasion of her
Kingdom, to the Crown of which he laid claim by virtue of his descent from John
of Gaunt. The Queen's reasons for declining the sovereignty of the United
Provinces seem to have been the expenditure it would require and the perpetual
war which it would probably entail. She was anxious that her refusal should not
be ascribed to fear, and at the conclusion of her address to the Dutch envoys,
among whom was John of Olden Barneveld, she said: "Finally, gentlemen, I
beg you to assure the States that I do not decline the sovereignty of your
country from any dread of the King of Spain. For I take God to witness that I
fear him not; and I hope, with the blessing of God, to make such demonstrations
against him, that men shall say the Queen of England does not fear the
Spaniards". But Elizabeth in a great measure marred the benefits which the
Netherlander would otherwise have derived from her assistance by making her
favorite, the Earl of Leicester, commander of the expedition; a man entirely
unfitted for it by his want of military talent, his selfish and intriguing
disposition, and his haughty and overbearing temper. Sir Philip Sidney was
appointed Governor of Flushing, and on the 10th of December the Earl of
Leicester, accompanied by his son-in-law, the Earl of Essex, and a brilliant
staff, landed at that part to assume the command.
After Leicester's
arrival, the States conferred upon him the dignity of Governor and
Captain-General of the United Provinces, which he accepted without consulting
the Queen, and he was solemnly inaugurated at the Hague, January 24th, 1586. As
Elizabeth had refused the sovereignty, she was highly offended by this step.
She threatened to recall him; she signified her will that the dignity conferred
upon him should be revoked, and that he should exercise no more power than he
had originally been invested with as commander-in-chief in the Netherlands,
with a seat in the Council. She sent a special envoy to communicate her
displeasure to the States publicly and in the presence of Leicester himself: an
impolitic step, by which she not only placed her lieutenant in a humiliating
position, and damaged his authority with the Hollanders, but even cast a
suspicion upon her own sincerity.
Philip II
naturally regarded Elizabeth's manifesto as a declaration of war, and ordered
the seizure of all English vessels, as well as English subjects, in his
dominions.
The campaign of
1586 was tolerably active. Farnese, now Duke of Parma through the death of his
father, successfully laid siege to and captured Grave and Venlo on the Meuse.
Norris would have succeeded in relieving the former place had not the
commandant prematurely surrendered. In the western provinces Prince Maurice and
Sir Philip Sidney surprised Axel, but failed at Gravelines;
after which, Sidney joined Leicester at Arnheim.
After the capture of Venlo, Parma took Neuss, on the Rhine, and invested Rheinberg; when, in order to occasion a diversion,
Leicester, who was not strong enough to cope with the Duke in the open field,
seized Duisburg and laid siege to Zutphen. It
was during this siege that the gallant and chivalrous Sidney received his death
wound, while charging at the head of only 200 horse a body of 1,100 of the
enemy's cavalry, who were convoying provisions to the town (September 23rd,
1586). The humanity which he displayed on this occasion towards a wounded
soldier, more conspicuous even than his courage, is well known. He died of his
wound at Arnheim, October 16th. Parma hastened
to Zutphen with all his forces, and
Leicester was compelled to raise the siege; but he afterwards contrived to get
possession of three forts on the opposite side of the Yssel.
Although Leicester
was provided only with very inadequate forces, and those, through the
niggardliness of Elizabeth, miserably paid, his campaign may be said to have
preserved the Northern Netherlands from subjection. But his government was
intolerable to the States. He treated the provinces like a conquered country,
arbitrarily appointed governors of provinces and towns; laid restrictions upon
trade, and tampered with the public money. He made two most injudicious
appointments in giving the government of Deventer to Sir William Stanley, an
English Catholic, and making Roland York, a man of tainted character,
commandant of the principal fort near Zutphen.
Nevertheless, when Leicester arrived at the Hague towards the close of the
year, the States, unwilling to offend Elizabeth, received him with great honor,
though they made a firm but modest remonstrance against his proceedings.
Leicester then pretending that affairs required his presence in England, the
States insisted on his executing a deed by which he transferred during his
absence his authority as Governor to the Council of State; but, with an
unworthy artifice, he secretly executed on the same day another deed, by which
he not only reserved his power, but even intrenched upon that of the
Council. Scarcely had Leicester departed for England, when Deventer and the
fort near Zutphen were betrayed to the
enemy by Stanley and York (February, 1587). Stanley sent for priests to convert
his garrison, consisting of 1,300 English and Irish, in order that they might
form a seminary regiment to serve against the Queen. The States, alarmed by
these treacheries, decreed that, during Leicester's absence, the supreme
authority should be transferred to Prince Maurice; and though in their public
declarations they treated the English with forbearance, they addressed letters
of warm remonstrance both to Elizabeth and Leicester. The Earl, however, who
affected a puritanical behaviour, had a strong
party in Holland, especially among the Calvinist ministers; and by this party
the charges made against him were impugned. Puzzled by these conflicting
representations, Elizabeth dispatched Lord Buckhurst into Holland to inquire
into their truth; but when that nobleman honestly told the Queen that Leicester
was in the wrong, and especially accused him of inciting the people against the
States, in order to render his own authority absolute, he was immediately
arrested, as if he, and not Leicester, had been the guilty party.
These disputes
crippled the power of the States in all the provinces except Holland and
Zealand, where alone Maurice could make his commands obeyed, and were a serious
drawback to the aid afforded by England. Ostend and Sluys were
now the only Flemish towns of much importance which had not been reduced by the
Spaniards, and after a feint on Veluwe the
Duke of Parma laid siege to Sluys early in
June, 1587. Here he pursued the same plan as at Antwerp, by bridging over the
large canal which communicated with the sea. Leicester, who had returned into
the Netherlands with a reinforcement, being joined by Maurice, after some
feeble and ineffectual attempts to relieve Sluys,
retired into Zealand, and the town, which was bravely defended by the
commandant, Arnold de Groenevelt, and by Sir
Roger Williams, Sir Francis Vere, and Captain Nicholas Baskerville, after
sustaining 17,000 rounds of shot and losing half its garrison, was forced to
capitulate (August 4th). During this siege, Geldern was
betrayed to the enemy by Colonel Paton, a Scotchman. Leicester, after an
unsuccessful and inglorious attempt to reduce Hoogstraaten,
went to meet the States assembled at Dort. That body had received secret
intelligence of his designs either to usurp an unlimited power or to abandon
the provinces altogether. He was suspected of an intention to occupy the chief
cities in Holland and Zealand, and to seize and carry off to England Prince
Maurice and Olden Barneveld. Leicester, finding himself the object of
suspicion, became accuser in turn, and attributed his misfortunes partly to the
States, who had neglected to furnish him with the necessary supplies, and partly
to Maurice and Hohenlohe, who had refused to cooperate with him; but perceiving
at length that he was unequal to the task he had undertaken, he returned to
England in December. Queen Elizabeth transferred to Lord Willoughby the command
of the English troops, subject, however, to the control of the States. The
latter appointed Prince Maurice commander-in-chief, who, though inferior to his
father as a statesman, had already given proofs of great military talent.
Death of Gregory
XIII
The schemes of the
Pope and the Catholic King to invade England and dethrone its Queen were at
this time growing to maturity. A new Pontiff now occupied the Chair of Peter.
Gregory XIII, whose long and insidious enmity against Elizabeth had proved
abortive, died April 10th, 1585 : a Pope more generally and more favorably
known to posterity by the reformation of the solar year and the introduction of
the Gregorian calendar, than by his miserable intrigues. He was succeeded by
one of the most extraordinary men that ever wore the tiara.
Felix Peretti, the descendant of an Illyrian fugitive, and the
son of a vinedresser, was born near Fermo, in the March of Ancona,
December 15th, 1521. His early childhood was employed in tending sheep and
swine. At the age of twelve his education was undertaken by the Franciscans,
into whose order he in due time entered; and such was his devotion to study
that, for want of a candle, he was accustomed to read in the church by the
light that burnt before the tabernacle. He subsequently studied at the Universities
of Bologna and Ferrara, where he exhibited much skill in dialectics, and took
his degrees with great honor and applause. Proceeding at length to Rome, Friar
Felix attracted much notice by his sermons, and won the favour of the Grand Inquisitor, Ghislieri, afterwards
Pope Pius V. That Pontiff, who found in Peretti a
congenial nature, made him successively General of the Franciscans, Bishop of
Sta. Agata, and in 1570 a Cardinal and Archbishop of Fermo,
when Peretti returned, clothed in the Roman
purple, and with the title of Cardinal Montalto, to the scene of his
childhood's humble labors. At the death of Gregory XIII, Cardinal Montalto,
then a hale and hearty man of sixty-four, pretending utter feebleness and
hopeless ill health, secured by a pious fraud his election to the Papal throne;
and immediately convicted himself by throwing aside his crutch, holding himself
erect, so as to look a foot taller, and intoning vigorously the Te Deum.
Sixtus V, for that was the title assumed by Montalto, displayed in his
pontificate all the energy and enthusiasm of his patron Ghislieri. Educated like him in a convent, Sixtus V. could but ill distinguish between the practicable
and impracticable. His head was filled with the most fantastic visions; plans
that could hardly have been feasible during the Rome of the Middle Ages. He
dreamt of annihilating the Turkish empire; of conquering Egypt; of opening a
passage between the Red Sea and Mediterranean; of penetrating into Syria,
bringing the Holy Sepulcher to Italy, and erecting it at Montalto in
his native province, already the seat of our Lady of Loreto; which place was
raised by Sixtus to a considerable town. His
administration was strict and vigorous, nay, even cruel, yet in many respects
beneficial. He hanged even venial criminals without remorse, and was zealous in
exterminating the banditti that infested the Roman States. He instituted eight
new congregations of Cardinals, and fixed the number of the College at seventy.
He paid great attention to matters of finance, and accumulated a treasure
whilst most other European States were in debt. Although he had no classical
taste, and cared not for the remains of antiquity at Rome, he enlarged and
adorned the city with new buildings, and again conducted the water to the Roman
hills by means of the Aqua Felice, an aqueduct which feeds seven and
twenty fountains.
Sixtus V felt a sort of respect for Queen Elizabeth, in whom he recognized some
congenial qualities; and he is reported to have said that he and the English
Queen should have married and begotten another Alexander. He actually sent her
an invitation to return to the bosom of the Church, at which Elizabeth of
course only laughed; and Sixtus then said he must
devise some means to deprive her of her Kingdom. There was, however, a
generosity in his nature which spurned the insidious methods of Gregory. He
does not appear to have sanctioned any attempts to murder Elizabeth, though he
renewed against her the bull of excommunication; but he openly proclaimed his
intention of forwarding any military attack upon her dominions, declared that
he would help Philip in such an enterprise, and early in 1587 loudly complained
of the dilatoriness of the Spaniards, to whom he represented the advantages of
the conquest of England with a view to the recovery of the Netherlands. The
zeal of Sixtus was further inflamed by the beheading
of the Queen of Scots (February 8th, 1587), the first idea of which seems to
have been suggested by the massacre of St. Bartholomew.
Execution of Mary,
Queen of Scots, 1587.
When the news of
Mary's death arrived in Rome, Sixtus furiously
declaimed in the Consistory against the English Jezebel, and by way of
retaliation created Dr. William Allen a Cardinal. A formal treaty was soon
afterwards concluded between Sixtus V and Philip II,
by which the Pope promised the King of Spain a subsidy of a million scudi,
to be paid as soon as Philip should be in actual possession of some English
port. England, after its conquest, was to become a fief of the Church. Philip,
however, with masterly dissimulation, appears to have kept the Pope, as well as
everybody else, in the dark, respecting the actual time of the invasion.
The French King
was solicited by Sixtus to join in the enterprise
against Elizabeth, but Henry requested time for deliberation. The destruction
of Elizabeth was not for his interest. He had, indeed, after the condemnation
of Queen Mary, sent De Bellièvre on a
special mission publicly to deprecate her execution, yet with secret
instructions to solicit Elizabeth for her death, as the common enemy of both
through her connection with the Guises. That family did all they could to
forward the Pope's project, and had even recently undertaken on their own
account a conspiracy against Elizabeth. The French ambassador in London, who
belonged to the Guisian faction, had
entered into a plot to blow up Elizabeth in her apartment: and his servant,
Du Trapps, had solicited William Stafford,
brother of the English ambassador at Paris, to join in the deed, promising to
procure for him from the Pope a pension of 10,000 crowns; though it does not
appear that he was authorized to make such a promise. The detection of this
conspiracy in January, 1587, after the Scottish Queen had already been
condemned to death for her participation in Babington's plot, seems to have
been one of the causes which hastened on her execution. Guise and the League
offered the roadstead of Boulogne to Philip for the convenience of his
armament; but Henry III found means to frustrate their intention.
The execution of
the Queen of Scots was an inducement to the King of Spain to strike the blow
which he had long been meditating, not only on account of the indignation which
the event excited in the breasts of all devoted Papists, but also because
Mary's death strengthened the claims which he affected to the English Crown;
and he now pretended, as heir of the House of Lancaster, to be the first
Catholic Prince of the blood-royal of England. He had been several years
preparing for the enterprise. He had been gradually increasing his forces in
the Netherlands; and Leicester stated in November, 1587, that the Duke of Parma
had under his command near 40,000 men. Philip's anxiety had been much increased
by the footing which the English had gained in the Netherlands; and both his
zeal and his hopes were stimulated by the cries for aid and relief addressed to
him by some of the Catholics of England. Parma had obtained a plan of the
English coasts, and Philip was pressing for the immediate accomplishment of the
invasion. So sanguine were his hopes that he was even discussing the future
government of his anticipated conquest; and a scheme was in agitation to marry
the Queen of Scots after her deliverance to one of his nephews, and perhaps to
the Prince of Parma.
Philip's resolution
was further strengthened by the losses and insults which he suffered from the
buccaneering expeditions of Sir Francis Drake and other English navigators. In
the latter part of 1585, Drake, accompanied by Martin Frobisher, had plundered
St. Iago, one of the Cape de Verd islands, the island of St.
Domingo, and Cartagena on the Spanish Main. Sailing thence to Virginia, where a
colony had lately been founded by Sir Walter Raleigh, Drake's fleet returned
home with a large treasure, bringing also the Virginian colonists, who had
begun to despair of their settlement.
Philip's plot
against Protestantism and liberty was extensive and complicated. Its main
outline was, to conquer England as a means of subduing the Dutch; to prevent
France from opposing his designs, and even to gain the aid of the League in
furthering them, by keeping alive the civil war in that country and subsidizing
Guise; and at the same time to lull the English into a fatal security by
entering into negotiations for a pretended peace. Philip's instructions to
Parma for the accomplishment of the last object are worthy of Machiavelli and
of himself. Seated at his desk in the Escorial, this plodding conspirator
against human freedom wrote to his commander in the Netherlands, that he meant
not the negotiations for a peace to have any result; that they were merely a
deception and a snare, and that the preparations for invading England were to
be pushed on with the greatest vigour. Philip
found in Parma an able instrument of his treachery. Negotiations for the
pretended peace were opened at Bourbourg near Gravelines, under the mediation of the King of Denmark, and
were one of the reasons which induced Elizabeth not to lend that efficient help
to the Netherlanders during the year 1587 which she might otherwise have done.
Elizabeth's blindness in the following year, when the negotiations were
continued at Ostend, was still greater, and, but for fortunate accidents, might
have proved the destruction of her realm. After many weeks of fruitless talk, a
ceremonious interview of the commissioners took place on the sands near Ostend,
in May, which of course had no result; except that the Duke of Parma availed
himself of the opportunity to visit Ostend in disguise, and view the
fortifications. He succeeded for two months longer in throwing dust into the
eyes of the English Queen, and it was not till towards the middle of July, on
the very eve of the appearance of the Armada in the Channel, that she at last
awoke from her dream of security.
The Invincible Armada
The preparations
in the Spanish and Portuguese ports had been retarded by the attack of Drake on
the Spanish coasts in 1587. It was an idea of the Spaniards that it would be
easier to conquer England than Holland; but the exploits of Drake must have
somewhat shaken them in this opinion. With a fleet of forty ships Drake burnt
and destroyed, under the guns of Cadiz and Lisbon, about one hundred vessels
laden with provisions and ammunition. He also captured off the Azores a rich
Portuguese carrack. The papers found on board this vessel, by the details which
they afforded of the value of the trade to the East Indies, and of the manner
in which it was conducted, are said to have caused the foundation of the London
East India Company. Drake acquainted Elizabeth with the vast preparations
making in the Spanish harbours. The sailing of
the Invincible Armada from Lisbon in May, 1588, its dispersion by a storm, its
arrival in the English Channel (July 19th), the attacks upon it by Lord Howard
of Effingham and Drake, the alarm and confusion into which it was thrown by
means of fire-ships, when at anchor before Calais, its subsequent dispersion,
its voyage round Great Britain by the Orkneys, the disastrous storms which it
encountered, and finally the return of less than half its number to Spain, are
facts so well known to the English reader that they need not to be here
repeated. The Spaniards had relied so confidently on the conquest of England
that the Armada was crowded with monks of every order destined to re-establish Papistry in
that country.
The first accounts
of the discomfiture of the Armada caused Philip, by his own confession, great
anxiety, and more than a month elapsed before the return of its shattered
remnant to Spain in October at length convinced him of the entire frustration
of his hopes. During this eventful crisis the Dutch fleet contributed very
materially to the safety of England by blockading the Duke of Parma in the
Flemish harbours. This commander had with
great labour constructed a fleet of 340
vessels of various sizes, the materials for which he had to bring from a vast
distance; and he had cantoned near the coast an army of 30,000 foot and 5,000
horse ready for embarkation. The Duke of Guise was also prepared to assist the
invasion with 12,000 men whom he had collected in Normandy.
Campaign of 1589.
In the following
year (1589), in order to divert the Spanish King from another attack on
England, the war was carried into his own dominions. An English armament under
the command of Drake and Norris, accompanied by Dom Antonio, sailed for
Portugal, in the hope that the population would declare in favour of the Prior of Crato on his landing. With
her usual economy Queen Elizabeth conducted this affair on the principle of a
joint-stock speculation. She herself ventured six ships and £60,000; the two
commanders and their friends £50,000; and the remainder of the expedition was
made up by London, the Cinque Ports and other maritime towns. But the
enterprise was ill-conducted. The fleet had not been provided with sufficient
provisions and ammunition; time was lost by an attack upon Coruna, when the
lower town was captured; and though the expedition afterwards effected a
landing near Lisbon, mastered the suburbs of that city, and captured
sixty Hanse vessels freighted with supplies for a second Armada, it
was soon discovered that the people were not inclined to take up Dom Antonio's
cause. After great sufferings the expedition returned in June with their booty,
leaving behind them an indelible impression of English valour.
Meanwhile, after
the defeat of the Armada, the Duke of Parma had resumed his operations in the
Netherlands. In August, 1588, he laid siege to Bergen-op-Zoom; whence he was
obliged to withdraw by the great losses he had suffered through a stratagem of
two English soldiers, and to put his army into winter-quarters. At the same
time he dispatched Count Mansfeld with the German portion of his
forces to attack Wachterdonck, a town in Upper
Gelderland. The siege of this little place, which was bravely defended by the
celebrated Colonel Schenck, possesses no interest, except from the fact
that bombs were first used in it. They were the invention of a citizen of
Venlo. The army of the Duke of Parma had suffered much in these two sieges; its
pay was likewise in arrear, for the expenses of the Armada had emptied Philip's
treasury; but the spirits of the Duke were somewhat revived by the acquisition
of Gertruidenberg in North Brabant, which
was betrayed to him by the seditious and discontented garrison. The campaign of
1589 presents little of importance. Farnese, who had fallen into bad health,
repaired to Spa for the benefit of the waters, and his army was not in a
condition to undertake any considerable enterprise. At the earnest desire of
the Elector of Cologne, the Spaniards made an attempt upon Rheinberg, the conduct of which Parma intrusted to the Marquis of Varanbon.
But that general was completely defeated in a bloody engagement by
Colonel Vere, an English officer of high reputation, who entered Rheinberg and strongly fortified it.
In March, 1590,
Prince Maurice obtained possession of Breda by a singular stratagem. One Adrian
Vandenberg, a barge owner, who was accustomed to supply the garrison of that
place with turf for fuel, undertook to introduce the troops of Maurice in the
following manner. He erected a sort of deck, or flooring, at the height of
several feet from the bottom of his vessel, thus forming a cabin capable of
containing seventy persons, and covered it over carefully with turf. A body of
picked men under an officer named Heraugière were
then placed in this cabin, and after many delays, dangers and hair-breadth
escapes, the barge entered the town as if laden with its usual freight. It
happened that the garrison was at that time much in want of fuel, and a party
of them began to unload the vessel with great alacrity, when Vandenberg invited
them to drink, and amused them till it grew dark. In the night time the men
concealed in the vessel rushed out, overpowered the guard, and admitted Prince
Maurice's troops.
It was in this
year that Philip II, much to the regret and disgust of the Duke of Parma,
abandoning for the present the war in the Netherlands, directed that general to
march with his army to the relief of Paris, besieged by Henry IV. Parma's
operations in France are related in another chapter. He entrusted the command
of the troops which he left for the defence of the
Netherlands to Count Peter Ernest of Mansfeld, whom he directed to
occupy Nymegen. Maurice finding the siege of
that place impracticable, took possession of the tract called " the Bettuwe," or Bettaw,
supposed to be the ancient Batavia, which lies opposite to the town, on the
north bank of the Waal. Across this tract Maurice dug a canal from the Rhine to
the Waal, which not only secured the navigation of this river by rendering it
unnecessary for vessels to pass the town of Nymegen,
but was also of advantage to the surrounding country by lessening the
inundations. Out of gratitude for these benefits, the States of Gelderland
and Overyssel elected Maurice their
Governor. Maurice, in the absence of Parma, subsequently overran Brabant and
Flanders, and by occupying some of the smaller frontier towns paved the way for
future conquest. In 1591 the Duke of Parma was again obliged to resort to Spa
for the benefit of his health, and Maurice pursued the advantages which he had
gained in the previous year. In May and June he besieged and captured the towns
of Zutphen and Deventer, and again united
the county of Zutphen to the Seven
Provinces. Colonel Vere, anxious to wipe out the disgrace of Stanley's
treachery, highly distinguished himself at the siege of Deventer. Maurice
afterwards occupied the district near Antwerp called the Waes, and took Hulst and Nymegen;
and after these exploits he returned to the Hague, where he was received with
every token of joy and gratitude as the deliverer of the Republic of the Seven
Provinces. In this campaign Maurice had displayed some of the highest qualities
of a general. By the celerity of his movements he had surprised Farnese, and
compelled him to retire from the Waal. The quiet student of the art of war was
become one of the most consummate captains of the age.
Death of the Duke
of Parma, 1592.
In 1592 the Duke
of Parma having been again ordered into France to relieve Rouen, Maurice
captured Steenwyk and Coevorden. He had now not only rescued from the Spaniards
the seven northern provinces, with the exception of Groningen, which, however,
being so far separated from the other Spanish provinces, must necessarily fall
in time, but he had also established himself on the left banks of the Meuse and
the Scheld; where he occupied, in the name of
the States-General, the Brabant towns of Breda and Bergen-op-Zoom, and the
Flemish towns of Ostend, Axel, and Hulst.
The career of
Alexander Farnese was now drawing to a close. After his return from France this
year the state of his health became so alarming that he solicited Philip for
his dismissal, but died at Arras without obtaining it, December 3rd, 1592, at
the age of forty-six. It was, perhaps, only a lucky escape. Philip appears to
have been meditating at this time the disgrace, if not the death, of Farnese.
Yet it was to his military genius and his conciliating policy that Spain owed
her retention of the Southern Netherlands. After his death Philip appointed the
Austrian Archduke Ernest, son of the Emperor Maximilian II, to be Governor of
the Netherlands; and in the interval before his arrival Count Peter Ernest
of Mansfeld was entrusted with the administration.
About Spain itself
there is little to relate. In that unhappy country all enterprise had been
crushed by bigotry and tyranny, and its domestic affairs afford therefore but
few materials for history. Philip, according to popular rumour, had become, in 1578, jealous of the intimacy of his
secretary, Antonio Perez, with the Princess of Eboli. It was in the autumn
of 1578 that Escovedo, the friend and confidant
of Don John of Austria, arrived from the Netherlands to solicit Philip for the
return of the Spanish and Italian forces. His designs were opposed by Perez,
who used Escovedo to tempt Don John into
rash statements which were at once communicated to the King. Philip conceived
an implacable resentment against his half-brother; but he was also enraged
against Escovedo, as the tool of Don John's
inordinate ambition, and he determined to involve both in a common destruction.
Perez received the King's written order to effect the assassination of Escovedo; and soon after, by Philip's permission, Perez and
the widowed Princess of Eboli were arrested (July, 1579). The King's
motives are unknown, and after a short time he seemed inclined to a lenient
course, and Perez was even allowed to continue in office, though no longer
admitted to the presence of the King. Philip's resentment, however,
remained unassuaged, and after a lapse of six years the secretary was
accused of malversation, fined heavily and imprisoned. Perez, seeing his
destruction resolved on, contrived to escape into Aragon, his native country;
and to avoid the pursuit of the King's officers he appealed to the Justicia,
who ordered him to be confined in the state prison; but the Viceroy of Aragon
caused it to be broken open and cast Perez into the dungeons of the
Inquisition. The Aragonese, enraged at this
breach of their constitution, rose and liberated Perez, who, after another
narrow escape, succeeded in reaching France, where he gave the King some useful
information respecting Philip's designs. Philip seized this opportunity to
deprive the Aragonese of their ancient ties
of privileges. Alfonso Vargas was ordered to lead to Saragossa a body of troops
that had been destined for the invasion of France; the Aragonese,
at the instance of Don Juan de la Nuza,
the Justicia, flew to arms, but were soon overpowered; Vargas entered
Saragossa, November 12th, 1591, sent the Duke de Villa Hermosa and the Count
of Aranda, two of the principal leaders of the movement, to Madrid, and,
agreeably to the instructions of Philip II, put the Justicia to death
without trial. The palace of the Inquisition at Saragossa was now fortified,
and filled with a garrison of Castilian troops; the royal scaffolds and the
fires of the Inquisition rivalled one another in atrocity; the Cortes
were assembled, and compelled to abrogate their fueros or national
customs and privileges. The Justicia was made removable at the King's
pleasure; his tribunal was subjected to that of the King; the power of the
Cortes was abridged, and they were forbidden to assemble without a royal
mandate; in short, the ancient Aragonese constitution
was entirely destroyed.
CHAPTER XXVICIVIL WARS IN FRANCE |