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 HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
 CHAPTER XIII 
             
             
           WHEN after the
          catastrophe of Nancy the cautious doubts of Louis XI as to the personal fate of
          his adversary had at last been set at rest, many of Charles the Bold’s former
          subjects refused to believe him dead; and from Burgundy to the Flemish communes
          the rumor ran that he but lay concealed in some sure retreat whence sooner or
          later he would issue forth in the full blaze of his accustomed grandeur. Some
          had seen him in Lorraine, others in Germany; others in Portugal, to whose
          nationality he had laid claim as descending to him from his mother, and in
          England, of whose throne he had loved to describe himself as the next heir; yet
          others in Jerusalem, which he and his father had vainly hoped to reach as
          crusaders, and in Rome. Men of business lent out large sums of money to one
          another to be repaid on the day of his return, on which strange to say even
          those fixed their hopes who had previously testified to having seen him dead in
          the snow and ice of his last battlefield. A delusion was upon them all, says
          the chronicler Molinet in his bombastic way, like that possessing the Jews who
          await the coming of the Messiah in Judaea, or the English who expect King
          Arthur back in their island; but what wonder, he asks, since there never was in
          the Burgundian dominions a duke more magnificent, more warlike, more terrible
          than he, the scourge of the rebels, the alarum of Germany, the exterminator of
          the folk of Liege, and the terror of France? Of so strong and splendid a prince
          it might indeed seem hard to understand so great a fall. Yet even more difficult
          to grasp than the fact of his personal overthrow was this other fact, that with
          him had been pulled down suddenly, and to all seeming irrecoverably, the
          mightiest and wealthiest monarchy known to the West in the fifteenth century.
          This vast inheritance, welded together by the policy of his ancestors and above
          all of his father, and augmented by his own ambition, to which Charles had
          allowed so many princes to aspire as suitors for his daughter's hand, he had
          left to her precarious tenure as a mutilated, dislocated, and disorganized heap
          of territories. Furthermore, in those centres of civic life, whose mercantile
          and industrial prosperity had in the Europe of the later Middle Ages been the
          real source of the importance of the Netherlands and of the Burgundian
          monarchy, that prosperity was except in certain specially favored seaports
          helplessly and hopelessly on the wane; and the great communes which had of old
          been its most favored seats, were, in the truthful words of a modern historian,
          smitten to the heart. 
           
           I. 
           The
          Burgundian dominions. Flanders 
             
             
           The territories
          under the dominion of the House of Burgundy, which had formed part of the
          northern division of ancient Lotharingia, and were known to later political
          geography as the provinces of the Netherlands, were for the most part acquired
          by the fortune of marriage and inheritance; but a settled plan of policy had
          from an early date continuously directed and developed the process of
          annexation. The inheritance brought by Margaret of Maele to the French prince,
          who was the founder of the ducal dynasty, included the county of Artois, with
          its capital of Arras, a city of great mercantile prosperity as early as the
          thirteenth century, and the whole of Flanders. To the latter on the eastern
          side Malines (Mechlin) and Antwerp had been yielded by Brabant, and on the
          south certain Walloon districts, long united with France and including Lille
          and Douay, had been restored so as likewise to be left to his daughter by the
          last Count of Flanders of the native line. Without the support of the good
          towns of Flanders-Bruges, Ghent, and Ypres-Philip the Bold could not have
          secured the hand of the richest heiress in Europe; and of the political
          greatness achieved by his dynasty the true foundations are to be sought in the
          resources of the great communes themselves, with whom it was engaged in
          perennial conflict, and, in a less degree, of the other towns around them.
          There is no indication, on the other hand, that even during the Burgundian
          period agriculture, except perhaps pasture, reached a high level in Flanders;
          in a considerable proportion of its villages, the inhabitants gained their
          livelihood by manufacturing industry, the villages aiming at becoming small
          towns, and the small towns at becoming large in their turn. 
           Artois and
          Flanders remained fiefs of the French Crown, although by the Peace of Arras
          (1435) Philip the Good was relieved for his own person of all obligations of
          homage to his French overlord. The great acquisitions, which ensued in the
          course of his long reign, were not altogether due to his own resolution and
          statecraft. He shared the credit of them with his grandfather and namesake who
          had induced Joan, heiress of Brabant and aunt to his wife Margaret of Flanders,
          to designate his second son Anthony as her heir; and who married his daughter,
          another Margaret, to the future Count William VI of Hainault, Holland, Zeeland,
          and Friesland. But they could not have been actually accomplished except by the
          extraordinary strength of will and perseverance displayed by Philip the Good in
          the course of the long and momentous struggle carried on by Jacqueline of
          Bavaria for the maintenance of her rights as William VI’s heiress. 
           Philip began the
          systematic extension of his dominions by the business-like purchase of the
          county of Namur (Namen) (1422), of which he came into actual possession eight
          years later by the death of the last female representative of the House of
          Dampierre. This district was of some consequence by reason of its mining
          industry, whose products the Meuse carried north, after uniting the waters of
          the Sambre to its own at the capital. Brabant fell into his hands in 1430 on
          the death of the young Duke Philip, the brother of Jacqueline's unhappy
          husband. To the duchy of Brabant that of Limburg had been annexed (1288), with
          its chief town of Maastricht, the “higher ford” of the Romans and the residence
          of many Caroling Kings, over which the Bishop of Liege claimed joint rights of
          sovereignty with the Dukes of Brabant. Unlike the Flemish Counts these Dukes
          had consistently remained on friendly terms with their towns, where the
          patriciate (geslachten) vigorously maintained itself throughout the
          fourteenth century. Ample and solid liberties were conceded to his towns and
          nobility by Duke John II in the compact known as the Letter of Cortenberg
          (1312), enlarged by later charters, and above all, when the accession of
          Wenceslas of Luxemburg offered an irresistible opportunity by the famous Joyeuse
            Entrée (blyde inkomste) (1356), which remained the chief pillar of the
          liberties of the two united duchies down to the tempestuous times of Philip II
          of Spain. At the beginning of this century Louvain (Leuven) had still regarded
          herself as the foremost city of Brabant, mindful of the day when she had
          numbered a hundred thousand inhabitants, and the cloth-industry and the
          linen-trade had alike flourished within her walls. Soon, however, though she
          became the seat of the first Netherlands University (1426), a large emigration
          set in to Brussels, whither the Court likewise transferred its seat. Here the
          active lower town, and the residences of the nobility lining the descent from
          the Castle to St Gudule, together contained all the chief elements in the
          Brabançon population, while the French tastes and manners introduced together
          with the use of the French tongue by the new dynasty familiarized its favorite
          residence with an exotic license of life. But, owing to the decay of the cloth
          industry early in the century, the democratic ascendency of the trades was
          short-lived in the capital of Brabant; and, like the great Flemish cities
          themselves, Brussels, though other industries flourished here, was commercially
          distanced by Antwerp. 
           Over Hainault,
          Holland, Zeeland, and (more or less nominally) Friesland, Philip’s sovereignty
          was definitively established in 1433, five years after the resistance of
          Jacqueline had finally collapsed, at the very time when the fury of the
          Kabeljaauws had risen to fever-pitch against her supporters, the Hoeks; their
          last fleet had been annihilated, and he was preparing for a decisive campaign
          against his seemingly indomitable adversary. At that time the recognition of
          Philip as next heir had been voted even in chivalrous Hainault, where
          Jacqueline had always been able to count on ardent loyalty, and where, amidst
          feudal conditions of life, only one or two towns - Valenciennes, and more
          recently Mons - had developed their communal institutions. In Holland and
          Zeeland the towns attained to an advanced condition of prosperity and
          importance later than in Brabant, just as the latter had lagged behind
          Flanders. Yet, though the growth of the towns in the Northern Netherlands was
          relatively slow, neither was their commercial and industrial progress hampered,
          as was the case in Germany, by too close a control on the part of transmitted
          interests, nor was their political life, like that of the Flemish communes,
          handed over to the gusts of the market-place. As a rule, practical
          considerations led them from more to less broadly popular methods of government. 
           In matters of
          trade, on the other hand, the towns of Holland generally favored freedom as
          against privilege and protection, and towards the close of the Middle Ages the
          single port in the Northern Netherlands which retained any staple-rights of
          consequence was Dort, whose ancient monopoly of all goods carried on the main
          rivers of Holland nominally outlasted the Burgundian period. But long before
          this Amsterdam, converted into a seaport by the formation of the Zuiderzee in
          the thirteenth century, had risen into prominence, and by the middle of the
          fifteenth she had left behind all the older towns of importance-Dort, Delft,
          Haarlem, Alkmaar, Middelburg, and Zierikzee -while among the younger Gouda,
          Leiden, Schiedam, and Rotterdam were likewise active centres of industrial and
          mercantile life. Few great noble families remained either in Holland or in
          Zeeland; but in the latter the small nobility was still numerous in the days of
          Jacqueline, and it was from them that the main strength of the Hoeks had been
          recruited in her wars, while that of the Kabeljaauws lay with the ruling
          classes in the towns. The vanquished cause, however, was consecrated in the
          memory of the people as having been that of resistance against the dominion of
          the stranger. 
           In no instance had
          his hand been heavier than in his treatment of the peninsula now known as North
          Holland, stretching out between the North Sea and the Zuiderzee, where dwelt
          the Kennemer, a primitive race of great and tried vigor, who clung to their
          liberties as they held fast to the fragments of land left to them by the
          waters. In Kennemerland proper Alkmaar was the only town; with thriving Haarlem
          on their borders these peasants were constantly engaged in petty warfare, and
          it was from here that Philip proceeded on his expedition of. vengeance which
          reduced them to the condition of overtaxed dependents. A few of the mercantile
          settlements along the western coast of the Zuiderzee came in the Burgundian
          period to rank among the busiest towns of Holland-Hoorn as the chief market in
          the Netherlands for dairy produce and cattle, Enkhuizen as a centre of the
          herring-fishery. Friesland proper, on the north-eastern shore, over which
          Philip asserted his claims as Count of Holland and Zeeland, was not actually
          absorbed by him. Here the party-name of the Schieringers mainly applied to the
          lower population settled round the waters of the ancient Westergao, and that of
          the Vetkoopers to the men of substance in and around Groningen, which town held
          a position so distinctive that it afterwards became eponymous of a whole
          province (officially called stadt en landen). Philip the Good might possibly
          have been acknowledged as Lord of Friesland, like John of Bavaria before him,
          had he been prepared to bind himself to respect the liberties of the
          population. But this he consistently refused, and the remote region was once
          more left to itself. Even the subsequent recognition by Groningen of the
          overlordship of the Bishop of Utrecht was purely nominal; as was the episcopal
          protection claimed by her against the attempt of Charles the Bold to assert the
          ducal authority over all West-Friesland (1469.) From the renewed internal
          party-conflicts in Friesland Groningen discreetly held aloof, intent upon the
          advancement of her commercial prosperity, by whose side that of ancient
          “golden” Stavoren was passing away, while that of Leeuwarden had hardly yet
          begun. 
           Philip’s last
          important territorial acquisition was that of the duchy of Luxemburg, a
          sparsely peopled land of mountains and forests whose capital derived importance
          from the incomparable natural strength of its position. It had been twice
          temporarily united with Brabant-first under Wenceslas, upon whom it had been
          bestowed by his brother, the great Emperor Charles IV, and who was married to
          the heiress Joan; and then under Elizabeth, niece of the second Wenceslas, King
          of the Romans, who had left it very much to itself and the protection of its
          natural outworks, the wild Ardennes. To her (commonly called Elizabeth of
          Görlitz) he had, after her marriage to Duke Anthony of Brabant, Philip’s
          younger brother, made over his rights in Luxemburg; and since both Anthony and
          her second husband, John of Bavaria, formerly Bishop-elect of Liege, left her a
          childless widow, her duchy was plainly marked out for incorporation in the
          Burgundian dominions. In 1445 Philip purchased it from Elizabeth, who, after he
          had averted an extraneous attack and established his authority in every part of
          the duchy, made a formal donation to him of the whole. 
           Of the four great
          dioceses into which the Netherlands were up to the time of Charles V divided,
          Liege and Utrecht retained the character of self-governed ecclesiastical
          principalities beyond the duration of Philip's reign. Liege (Luik) was one of
          the most important sees in the Empire, and the spiritual authority of its
          Bishop extended over parts of Brabant and Hainault, as well as over Namur,
          Limburg, and Upper Gelderland. In the principality the Diets were composed of
          representatives of clergy, nobility, and towns, but these last were in
          enjoyment of liberties resembling those possessed by the Flemish communes. In
          the city of Liege itself the struggle which had long been carried on between
          the old patrician families, relatively few in number but favored by the
          Bishops, and the mass of the Walloon population, had been decided in favor of
          the latter, even before “a city of priests had been changed into one of
          colliers and armorers”. The faction feuds between the Awans and the Waroux had
          ended with the utter extrusion of the patrician element from the city; and
          Liege became a democracy of the most advanced type, with a governing body based
          directly upon the suffrage of all the thirty-two trades. It was as a community
          swayed by leaders who gloried in their rupture with the past (haydroits), that
          Liege, with the support of the other “good towns” of the principality revolted
          against the Bishop-elect, John of Bavaria. The terrible chastisement inflicted
          by this “pitiless” prince, in which his kinsman the “fearless” John of Burgundy
          had hastened to have his share (1408), was followed by a reconstitution of the
          government, from which the trades were absolutely excluded (1414); but some
          concessions were made to them a few years later. 
           Liége. 
           Half a century
          later the Liégeois, instigated by Louis XI of France, waged another struggle
          against another bishop, Louis of Bourbon, a nephew of Duke Philip of Burgundy.
          His son, the future Duke Charles, forced the principality to acknowledge the
          Burgundian Dukes as its hereditary protectors (mambourgs) (1465); but
          another insurrection speedily broke out, nor was the defiant spirit of the
          artisans who were masters of the city broken even by the bloody sack of Dinant,
          hitherto the seat of a flourishing industry in the working of copper and brass.
          In 1467, after defeating the Liegeois in the field, Charles, now Duke in his
          father's place, annihilated their privileges and reestablished the Bishop, but
          at the same time reduced the principality to the condition of a Burgundian
          fief. In the following year, when Louis XI had placed himself in the power of
          Charles at Peronne, and a fresh rising had taken place at Liege, the
          recalcitrant city was overtaken by a fearful doom, at the wreaking of which the
          French King assisted perforce. Leodensium clades et excidium became the
          most flagrant of Charles the Bold's titles to fame; and the pillaged churches,
          in which, formerly, according to Commines, as many masses had been daily said
          as at Rome, were virtually all that, after a seven weeks' sack, was left
          standing of Liege. But the principality, which had never been formally annexed
          by Charles, after his death recovered its political independence; and, with
          characteristic vitality, the great Walloon city rose rapidly from its ruins. 
           At Peronne
          Charles also made use of his strange opportunity to strengthen his hold over
          the series of towns along the line of the Somme, extending from St Quentin to
          St Valery at the mouth of the river. These Picard towns, “the key of France”,
          had been left in pledge by France to Burgundy already in the Treaty of Arras
          (1435), which first impressed upon western Europe a sense of the magnitude of
          the Burgundian power; redeemed by Louis, in 1463, at a time when Philip and his
          heir were on ill terms with one another, they had been recovered in 1465 for
          the Netherlands and the protection of their southern frontier. 
           Utrecht 
           The temporal
          power of the Bishops of Utrecht covered, at least in name, the later provinces
          of Overyssel and Drenthe (called the Upper See), Groningen, and Utrecht (called
          the Lower). Although much restricted by the “five Chapters”, whose deputies
          took the first place in the Diets, the episcopal system of government, as well
          as the institutions of the city of Utrecht, showed considerable lasting power;
          largely because, while the representatives of the trades controlled the civic
          Council, members of the noble families residing at Utrecht had been frequently
          placed on the role of the trades themselves. Conflicts, however, repeatedly
          broke out on the occasion of the filling up of the see, and in Jacqueline's
          times the factions of the Lichtenbergers and the Lockhorsts respectively
          supported the Hoeks and the Kabeljaauws. In 1425 the question of the episcopal
          succession gave rise to a protracted contest, in which Philip took part; and when,
          after this had come to an end on the expulsion of one of the claimants and the
          death of the other, the succession was again disputed, he menaced Utrecht with
          a large armada, and thus managed to secure the see for his illegitimate son
          David, who kept possession of it till the death of Charles the Bold. From 1456
          onwards to that date Utrecht was entirely under Burgundian influence; but
          though, as will be seen, Maximilian in 1483 assumed the administration of the
          principality, and though from 1517-24 another of Philip the Good’s bastards was
          put in possession of the bishopric, it was not till 1529 that the temporal
          government of the Upper and Lower See was definitively assumed by Charles V as
          the sovereign of Brabant and Holland. 
           Gelderland. 
           It was still later
          that Gelderland in its turn acknowledged the authority now established over all
          the rest of the Netherlands. The dynastic broils of the House of Gelders had
          been tragic enough while they merely affected its own dominions and the
          neighboring duchy of Juliers - brother supplanting brother, and sister striving
          against sister. The contending factions in the duchy of Gelders, whose fury
          survived the occasion of their origin, went by the names of the Heckerens and
          the Bronkhorsts. The spheres of English and Burgundian influence in the
          Netherlands were respectively enlarged, when Duke William IX of Juliers and
          Gelders, himself the grandson of an English princess, opposed the efforts of
          Joan of Brabant, the friend of Burgundy, and defied the power of France. His
          reign, which lasted till 1402, marked an important advance in the prosperity of
          the chief Geldrian towns, Nymwegen, Roermonde, Zutphen, and Arnhem, where the
          rise of a considerable cloth industry connects itself with his firm attachment
          to the English alliance. Under his brother and successor, who remained
          childless like himself, the diet of the duchy resolved that no Duke should
          henceforth be acknowledged in Gelderland unless approved by the majority of the
          knightly Order (many of whose members down to the close of the fifteenth
          century were virtually independent), and by the smaller towns, with the
          unanimous assent of the above-mentioned chief towns of the “four quarters”;
          while any partition of the duchy, or alienation of any section of it, was made
          conditional on the sanction of the diet. Thus in 1423, on the death of Duke
          Rainald IV, the towns raised to the ducal dignity his sister’s grandson Arnold
          of Egmond, who was still a boy in years. Although the Emperor Sigismund had
          invested the Duke of Berg with the duchy of Gelders, Arnold retained the
          confidence of the Estates by enlarging their privileges, and enjoyed the
          support of Duke Philip of Burgundy, to whose niece, the daughter of Duke Adolf
          of Cleves, he was betrothed, and afterwards united in marriage. Subsequently,
          however, Duke Arnold fell out with his ally as to the succession to the see of
          Utrecht; whereupon Philip joined with the four chief towns of Gelderland in the
          successful attempt of Arnold's son Adolf to substitute his own for his father's
          authority. But when in 1467 Charles the Bold became Duke of Burgundy, who could
          not bring himself to befriend a friend of the towns, Adolf after rejecting a
          compromise was thrown into prison, and his incapable father, against the will
          of the towns and the law of the land, pledged his duchy to Charles for 300,000
          Rhenish florins (1471). On Arnold’s death two years later, Charles took
          possession of the duchy. Nymwegen, whose stout resistance he had overcome by
          force, was subjected to a heavy fine; and only such of the towns as had
          voluntarily submitted to the Burgundian regime were confirmed in certain of
          their privileges. During the rest of the reign of Charles the Bold Arnold's son
          Charles and his sister were kept at the Burgundian Court, and Gelderland was
          ruled with an iron hand; but the Burgundian system of administration was
          probably to the advantage of the Geldrian population at large, though it had to
          furnish troops for his wars. As will be seen, a long and troublous interval of
          rebellion and war was to ensue, before in 1543, William of Juliers, whom
          Charles of Egmond had named his successor, resigned his claims to Gelders and
          Zutphen, and the entire Netherlands were united in the hands of the Emperor
          Charles V. 
           The extension by
          the Dukes of Burgundy of their territorial dominion over the Netherlands
          necessitated the establishment by them of a strong monarchical authority. A
          number of States, of which each had a history and institutions of its own,
          while the most important of them abounded in large and populous towns, were
          brought under the control of one and the same dynasty. The physical and
          economic conditions of these several provinces varied greatly; while in the
          country at large two very dissimilar races continued to dwell side by side, and
          to employ two forms of speech differing from one another as well as from the
          language spoken at the ducal Court. But the Dukes of Burgundy from the first
          were intent upon something more than securing to themselves a strong control
          over all their Netherlands dominions. They had come into the Low Countries as
          strangers; they had no traditional sympathy with the memories, no inborn
          respect for the rights and liberties, of any section or class of their
          subjects; and the last two of these Dukes in particular were deliberately
          resolved on setting up a centralized system of rule in the face of all claims,
          legal, historical, or other. Herein they followed both the traditions of the
          royal line from which they sprang, and the political instinct which apprised
          them, that, unless their strength was at least equal to that of their
          overlords, the struggle against these could only end in the absorption of their
          own dominions in a united France. 
           While, for
          reasons to be given below, the endeavor of the Dukes of Burgundy to advance and
          consolidate their princely power in the Netherlands met with goodwill and
          cooperation on the part of the nobility and clergy, its chief adversaries were
          the great communes of Flanders, and in a less degree those of Brabant. This
          conflict was in itself inevitable; for the political and social development of
          the chief Flemish towns only typified on a large scale what had taken or was
          taking place in other Provinces. The terrible blow inflicted at Roosebeke with
          the aid of France upon the communes, and upon Ghent in particular, was not
          absolutely mortal; and although their prosperity in the fifteenth century never
          again reached the height to which it had previously attained, yet their
          importance in the whole body politic was still paramount. As early as the
          thirteenth century Bruges, practically a port by means of its control of Sluys,
          had become a world's fair, and Ghent in Eastern and Ypres in Western Flanders
          had grown with amazing rapidity into great industrial centres of population
          surrounded by many other flourishing towns of which the names are now in part
          forgotten. With their activity and wealth had grown a sense of power and an
          impatience of external control for which in the Middle Ages no complete
          parallel could have been found on the hither side of the Alps. The civic
          governments which in this earlier period asserted their authority against that
          of the Counts were purely oligarchic; and it was only gradually that the
          artisans, since the organization of the trades as guilds had been elaborated and
          was for a long time controlled by the patriciates, came to essay a trial of
          strength with them. The determining factor is to be sought in the irresistible
          ascendency of the trade of the weavers and of the minor trades connected with
          it, when the cloth industry of Flanders was at its height. When the patricians
          in their turn had thrown themselves upon the support of the French Crown, the
          massacres known as the mette (matines) of Bruges began the great democratic
          revolution which triumphed in the utter overthrow of the chivalry of France on
          the field of Courtray (1302). The honors of that day belonged to the trades of
          Bruges, assisted by those of Ypres and Ghent in defiance of the prohibitions
          issued by their patrician authorities. And during the entire epoch of the
          political ascendency of the communes, their self-government was striving to
          establish itself on broad popular foundations. The elder Artevelde was the
          Pericles of Ghent, whose extraordinary self-confidence was mainly due to the
          hope of an effective political alliance with England, based on free commercial
          intercourse with her, as the chief provider of the raw material of Flemish
          industry. After his death evil times began for Ghent, which had become the
          chief of “the three members of Flanders” (de dry leden), and had charged itself
          with the executive on behalf of the towns and other districts of the country at
          large. The visitations of Heaven seemed to descend upon the land in the form of
          tempests and inundations and the Black Death. The Anglo-Flemish alliance was a
          thing of the past. Bruges, whose jealousy of Ghent was ineradicable, was
          inclined to support the manoeuvres of the territorial prince; and in many of
          the communes a reaction set in towards oligarchical government. But Ghent stood
          firm, and when the banners of her crafts had been unfurled for the critical
          struggle, and the Whitehoods once more streamed forth from her gates, Bruges,
          Ypres, Courtray, and all the other Flemish towns once more fell into line for
          the final struggle. With their overthrow at Hoosebeke (1382) the political greatness of the communes came to an end; but the resistance of Ghent was only
          slowly extinguished. 
           Yet to Philip the
          Good, as to his father (notwithstanding the part which he played at Paris) and
          to his grandfather before him, and his son after him, the Flemish communes
          were, as Commines says of Ghent in especial, a thorn in the flesh. Not that he
          was unaware of the fact that his European position depended upon the prosperity
          of the Flemish towns even more than upon that of the Dutch, who always regarded
          the ally of the Kabeljaauws as their friend, or upon that of Brussels, his
          favorite place of residence. He sought to arrest the decay of Ypres, and his
          commercial policy towards England was dictated by the interests of Flanders.
          But he was resolute in asserting his political supremacy at any cost; and the
          first occasion, on which he showed himself conscious of the fact that the
          destruction of his subjects was his own loss, was when he had crushed the last
          resistance of the Ghenters at Gavre (1453). Until the Peace of Arras he mainly
          (though not entirely, as Ypres learnt to its cost) confined himself to sowing
          discord between the towns; but afterwards, when the communal militia had
          deserted him at the siege of Calais, the conflict first broke out between him
          and Bruges (14-36). Patched up by the grant of two new charters, it burst forth
          again in the insurrection known as the Terrible Whit-Wednesday (1438); and
          after meeting the Duke's forces in the open field, the city, which was
          suffering from the devastations of a pestilence, was in the end forced to give
          way. Bruges was only saved from destruction by the intervention of the foreign
          merchants; but, while the new charters were revoked or modified, the trades
          were deprived of their cherished right of unfurling their banners without
          waiting for the display of the Duke’s -in other words of the right of taking up
          arms without his summons- and the sinews of future resistance were cut by the
          abolition of the communal contribution to the trades (moendtgelt). 
           The turn of Ghent
          came a little later. On her refusal to pay a salt-tax to which Bruges and Ypres
          had submitted, a conflict began which lasted for four years (1449). After the
          Duke had twice stopped the ordinary administration of justice, the whole body
          of the people took the power into its hands, appointed three captains (hooftmannen),
          and at the sound of the bell assembled under arms on the Vrydags-markt. The
          Duke retorted by a decree of blockade and outlawry against Ghent. Bruges and
          the other towns jealously held aloof; and, though the Ghenters appealed both to
          the French suzerain and to the government of Henry VI of England, they had to
          fight out the contest virtually alone. In the city a ruthless terrorism
          maintained an unreasoning enthusiasm, till a long and sanguinary campaign
          ended, within sight of her towers, by the carnage of Gavre (1453). The
          settlement which ensued established the ducal authority as paramount in every
          important function of the administration of the city, abolished the most
          cherished guarantees of its previous independence, and among other humiliations
          inflicted on its representatives that of confessing the guilt of the suppressed
          rebellion in the French tongue. Some of the privileges of the prostrate city
          were indeed renewed in a new charter, the powers of the royal bailiff were
          restricted, and no mention was made of the obnoxious salt-tax. But the victory
          was not the less complete, and was followed by the revocation of the charters
          of other towns, although they had abstained from supporting Ghent. 
           The overthrow of
          the greatness of the Flemish communes was due in part to the anarchical spirit
          which more and more took possession of them as their public life passed into
          the ochlocratic stage, and which could not but impair their military discipline
          and defensive strength. What had here - and the state of things was not very
          different in Brabant - remained of the authority of the territorial prince was
          confined to the influence exercised by his bailli upon the administration of
          justice, and when possible upon the choice of magistrates and upon legislation.
          The patriciate - the poorters at Bruges and Ghent, to which the lignages
          corresponded in Brabant - still ordinarily determined the choice of the magistrates
          or aldermen; but in any season of agitation this power was sure to be swept out
          of their hands with all the judicial, financial, and other functions of
          government. Not unfrequently such outbursts of popular fury were provoked by
          the venality of the ruling classes, and the fear of their recurrence naturally
          inclined the patricians towards the ducal authority, unless when their advances
          were blindly repelled by the harshness of the sovereign, as in the later days
          of Charles the Bold. The real holders of power in the Flemish communes were now
          the working population at large, divided on a system varying in the several
          towns into trades or handicrafts (ambachten); in Brabant these trades
          had before the accession of Philip effected a compromise with the lignages; in
          Holland and Utrecht their authority was great but not overwhelming; in Liege,
          as has been seen, it was paramount. In the three great Flemish towns, the great
          mass of the trades ordinarily asserted their power by the votes of their
          representatives, and on critical occasions by the organized resort to arms
          under their banners in the market-place (wapeninghe). By itself each
          trade formed not only a military, but also a social and religious unit, with
          its common purse for purposes of business, pleasure and charity, and often with
          a chapel and a hospital of its own. In the course of the fourteenth century the
          great craft of the Weavers had effected its predominance in each of the three
          cities, and became omnipotent at Ghent. Next to them came the Fullers, with
          whom they had many a sanguinary conflict. At Ghent there were besides these two
          great crafts 52 smaller crafts; and in one of them even the poorters, who
          constituted a guild without political power, had to inscribe themselves if
          desirous of becoming eligible for a magisterial office. At Bruges there were
          four great crafts - Weavers, Fullers, Shearers and Dyers - and the famous
          muster of October 10, 1436, included 48 smaller, from the butchers and bakers
          to the paternoster-makers; all these were combined into eight “members”, with a
          ninth consisting of the four “free trades”' of merchants, while the Ghent
          trades made up three “members” only. Each “member” (elsewhere called “nation”)
          was presided over by a Grand Dean; and these officers were always, however its
          composition might from time to time vary, included in the representative
          committee (called collatie at Ghent) of the entire commune. The approval
          of this committee was doubtless asked by the commune, when in moments of
          supreme excitement hooftmannen or captains were chosen by or for it- a term
          which seems in the first instance to have meant merely the heads of a poorters1
          guild. 
           The absence of
          any durable league or alliance between the several communes was due to the
          narrow jealousy which they cherished towards one another and which has already
          been illustrated in the case of the relations between Bruges and Ghent. In 1423
          Ghent successfully thwarted the attempt of Ypres to divert to herself the
          water-transport of wine and cereals; half a century later the Yprois joined the
          Ghenters in ignoring the apprehensions of Bruges as to the sanding-up of the
          Zwyn. To this pernicious jealousy was added the ill-will of the large against
          the smalle steden, and the tyrannous arrogance of the towns towards the rural
          districts; nor was it till 1438 that Duke Philip restored the rights of the
          Vrije (le Franc) of Bruges as a “fourth member” of Flanders. 
           The economic
          decline of Flanders in the fifteenth century has been obscured by the glowing
          descriptions of luxurious life in which the Court chroniclers of Philip and
          Charles abound. The great industry which had filled the famous Cloth-hall of
          Ypres steadily declined; till about the time of the death of Mary a city
          population which had formerly amounted to something like 100,000 had fallen to
          about one-twentieth of that total. Ypres, like some other of the Flemish towns,
          had suffered from special causes, but there was one which fundamentally
          affected them all. The fabrication of cloth in England had endangered the chief
          industry of Flanders already at the close of the fourteenth century; and,
          profiting alike by the instruction derived from the Flemish immigration which
          the troubles of the fifteenth century had superadded to earlier immigrations in
          the twelfth and fourteenth, and by the facilities of export offered by the
          Hanseatic merchants, she gradually drove Flemish cloth from the staple at
          Calais. The crucial question whether it were better to attract to the Flemish
          market the sale of this exported English cloth, or to exclude it altogether
          from competition with the native industry, was settled by a sort of compromise
          in favor of protection. But the repeated prohibitions of the importation of
          English cloth (1436-64) remained ineffectual, and the cloth industry was paralyzed
          in the Flemish cities; though it maintained itself for a considerable time in
          the open country. Ghent was able to some extent to fall back upon its resources
          as a staple of corn; and at Bruges, where the banking business of Europe was in
          the hands of foreign merchants, a busy traffic continued to be carried on. In
          the struggle pertinaciously maintained by the latter city, from the close of
          the thirteenth century onwards, against the transference of her foreign trade
          to Antwerp, interest in the end prevailed over habit. The English Merchant
          Adventurers, who had set up a house at Antwerp early in the fifteenth century,
          by the middle of it had transferred themselves thither in a body. While the
          great transmarine trade was thus drawn away from Flanders proper to Brabant,
          and the depopulation of the former, which assumed alarming proportions under
          Charles the Bold, had begun already in the last years of his predecessor, the
          prosperity of the Northern Netherlands continued to increase. Navigation, with
          the great fishing and other industries, flourished; and little troubled by the
          remote wars of Charles the Bold, the Hollanders and their neighbors took
          consolation for his exactions in the cheapness of comforts which they came to
          reckon among the necessaries of life. 
           In the struggles
          of the Dukes with the communes the nobles ranged themselves readily on the side
          of the former down to the close of Philip’s reign, notably in Flanders, where
          Courtray had never been forgotten. Only very gradually under him, though more
          abruptly under his successor, the modern notion of the sovereign throned in
          majestic isolation superseded the feudal conception of the prince among his
          peers. To a large extent the change was doubtless due to the influence of the
          most splendid of contemporary Western courts. The pictures of its magnificence
          and luxury drawn by Jacques du Clercq and the elaborate episodes of feast and
          tournament, with which Olivier de la Marche loves to intersperse his narrative,
          bear out the assertion of Commines, that in the prodigality of enticements it
          surpassed any other Court known to his experience. In the Court guide composed
          by Olivier during the siege of Neuss where Charles displayed in the midst of
          war the stately ceremonial in which his pride delighted, he details the
          official system, and the elaborate etiquette which became the model of many
          generations. But the completeness of the external machinery furnished no
          safeguard against the venality and corruption inseparable from despotic rule,
          or against a dissoluteness of manners usually fostered by formal restraint. The
          lasciviousness, that pervaded the Court of Charles VII of France and made that
          of Edward IV a seminary of pleasant vice, readily found its way into the
          surroundings of Philip the Good, who had a large family of bastards, and
          mistresses by the score. The extravagant delights in which the nobles might
          share when not engaged in warlike service impoverished many and ruined some;
          and Charles the Bold's relations with his nobility were strained to the utmost
          by the military burdens which he imposed on them. Numerous defections followed,
          and suspicions of treason on the unfortunate field of Morat; only a handful of
          his nobles fought by his side at Nancy, and hardly any held out by his daughter
          in her hour of distress. 
           Of the relations
          between the Dukes and the clergy it must suffice to say that they were largely
          determined by considerations of interest, and drawn closer by the unpopularity
          of both prince and priesthood in the towns. Duke Philip contrived to place his
          illegitimate brother John in the see of Cambray, while two of his own bastards
          held the great ecclesiastical principality of Liege. Notwithstanding the
          Church’s acquisitions of landed property, which here as elsewhere legislation
          sought to stay, the secular arm occasionally appealed to the spiritual for its
          aid against civic recalcitrance, and now and then supported the clergy when at
          issue with the towns. Yet such was the perversity of Charles the Bold, which
          left no section of his subjects ,to lament his downfall, that he, who at the
          beginning of his reign had protected the churches of Liege from sharing in the
          general doom of the city, was at its close generally hated by the Netherlands
          clergy, for having overtaxed them as he had their flocks. 
           The principles
          and policy of the Burgundian dynasty found their most skillful agents in the
          highly-trained lawyers who, after studying in France, at Louvain, or in the
          University founded by Philip in Franche Comté, held high judicial office in the
          Netherlands. The ground had been in some measure prepared for them, at all
          events in Flanders, though it was precisely here that the judicial innovations
          of this period met with the most stubborn resistance. The so-called Audiences
          of the Count, based to some extent on the ancient usage of conveying “quiet
          truths” to him, led the way to the establishment of the Count's Council, which
          in 1385 Philip the Bold transformed into the Chamber of the Duke’s Council in
          Flanders, subdividing it into a judicial and a financial Chamber. The latter
          remained at Lille, whence Philip the Good extended its operations to Namur,
          Hainault, and the towns on the Somme, while the two financial chambers of
          Holland and Zeeland, and of Brabant, were united by him at Brussels in 1463. The
          judicial Chamber on the other hand, which came to be generally known as the
          Council of Flanders, was, after many shiftings of place, finally brought back
          to Ghent in 1452; the Council of the Counts of Holland, and that of the Dukes
          of Brabant, having been alike reformed on the acknowledgment of Philip's
          sovereignty. In each case the substance of the reform lay in the introduction,
          by the side of the great lords and officials previously composing the Council,
          of trained lawyers, devoted to the maintenance of the ducal authority, and
          inclined to stimulate its self-consciousness. In order, however, to make this
          authority really supreme, and to avoid the possibility of any appeal to the
          Parliament of Paris, Philip in 1446, without putting an end to the Privy Council
          which ordinarily attended him, established a Grand Council, attached to his own
          person and entrusted with supreme judicial as well as political and financial
          functions. The centralising process was carried to its final stage by Charles
          the Bold's settlement of 1473, which maintained the Grand Council as a Council
          of State for the whole of his dominions, but transferred its financial
          functions to a Chamber finally fixed at Malines, absorbing into this the
          Brussels Chamber of Accounts. Charles also established a central judicial Court
          at Malines, which he sought to surround with all possible external dignity,
          frequently presiding in person at his sittings. But it remained unpopular, by
          reason of its slow Roman procedure, and the use of the French language to which
          it adhered; nor did it survive his fall. 
           As a matter of
          course, both Philip and Charles had from time to time to summon the States of
          the several lands; for there was no other way of obtaining the extraordinary
          aids required more especially for their wars. In the meetings of these States
          the attendance of the nobles gradually slackened, and (notably in Holland) only
          the larger towns were regularly represented. For the rest, no town or State was
          bound except by its own vote. It was again no innovation when, in 1428, Philip
          caused his settlement with Jacqueline to be confirmed by a meeting of
          representatives of all the lands whose allegiance she had formerly claimed. And
          it was only a step further when, after two previous meetings in 1463-4 he in 1465
          formally called upon all the States of the Low Countries assembled at Brussels
          to recognize his son as his successor and Lieutenant général, and at the same
          time obtained from them a supply enabling him to carry on effective war against
          Louis XI. Charles the Bold thrice assembled these States-General; but they do
          not appear to have regularly comprised representatives of the whole of his
          Netherlands dominions. Thus this all-important institution never passed beyond
          an initial stage under either of the last two Burgundian Dukes; though Philip
          had faithful servants who advised him to trust those trusted by his subjects.
          Indeed, an outline of the constitutional system to which the occasional
          convocation of the States-General pointed has actually been preserved, dating
          from an early period of his reign. 
           After Philip had,
          like his father before him, found the communal militia of the Flemish towns
          untrustworthy in foreign war, he had for his military needs fallen back on the
          feudal services upon which the first two Burgundian Dukes had placed a
          precarious dependence; but the forces which he employed for the overthrow of
          the liberties of Ghent, and which his heir led forth against Louis XI on behalf
          of the League of the Common Good, already comprised a considerable element of
          mercenary soldiers-Picards and English in particular. The bandes d’ordonnance
          of Charles the Bold, a modified imitation of the new French model, were partly
          recruited among the nobility, partly made up of Italian heavy infantry and the
          indispensable English archers; and a select body-guard was formed on a similar
          basis. In 1471 he raised a permanent force of 10,000 men. The towns had to
          equip contingents at their own expense, but under officers named by the Duke.
          He improved his artillery, and paid attention to the fighting qualities of his
          navy. Though Charles was both an unskillful and an unfortunate commander, he
          was the creator of the standing army which proved so formidable under the rule
          of his descendants; much of his military expenditure was unavoidable, since the
          superiority of regular troops over feudal levies was already proved; and he
          deserves credit for his consistent maintenance of discipline, more especially
          as it only increased his unpopularity. 
            
           Art
          and literature under the Burgundian Dukes. 
            
           It has frequently
          been assumed that the progress of art and literature in the Netherlands must
          have benefited by the patronage of an open-handed dynasty and a sumptuous
          Court. But, although the Renaissance owed not a little to the goodwill of
          Philip the Good and his family, they either used its culture as a political
          expedient or (in Voltaire's phrase) treated it as a passe-temps. The
          triumphs of a late and rich variety of the Gothic style attested by so many
          municipal and ecclesiastical edifices of the fifteenth century are due to the
          towns, although in so many instances their decadence had already set in. The
          case was different with the sister-art, which in Flanders was emancipated from
          Byzantine models (introduced by the Crusades) by the great painters to whom the
          miniaturists had formed a characteristic transition. When Hubert van Eyck died
          in 1420, he bequeathed the completion of the masterpiece of the school of
          Bruges to his younger brother John. Within fourteen further years the latter,
          who was soon made a member of Duke Philip's household, perfected a form of art
          that clothed its simple ideals of faith and devotion in the golden splendor of
          the age of its origin. Its latest great master, Memling, carried far beyond the
          borders of his native land the purest and profoundest pictorial expression of
          the mystic depth of religious sentiment. 
           Leaving aside
          other forms of art-among which something might be said of the attention paid by
          both Flemings and Walloons to that of music, we find that already under the
          House of Dampierre, the French literature patronized by the Counts, and the
          Flemish that was dear to the people, had gone far asunder. In the latter part
          of the fourteenth century, French historic prose as it were annexed the
          Netherlands as part of its proper domain. Froissart, the chief prophet of the
          last phase of chivalry radiating from the Court of the Burgundian Dukes and the
          exemplar of a whole line of chroniclers devoted to their dynasty, was himself a
          native of Hainault and spent the last quarter of a century of his life in
          retirement in Flanders. After him it became indispensable that every important
          Court or great noble household should possess its indiciaire or
          historiographer, and the House of Burgundy fostered a series of such literary
          officials, who placed on record every step in its advance, inflated its pride,
          and enhanced its fame. The list includes, besides Enguerrand de Monstrelet, on
          the whole a fairly candid writer, Jacques Lefevre de Saint-Remy, who in the
          main borrowed or abridged from him, the graphic Jacques du Clercq, Georges
          Chastellain, by his literary gifts as well as by his masculine outspokenness
          the most notable of Froissart's successors, and Jean Molinet, whose turgid
          artificiality and Euphuistic affectations render him a fit narrator of the
          decay and downfall of Burgundian greatness. All these (except Monstrelet) were
          officials of the ducal House, which was abandoned by Commines, the one narrator
          of the great struggle who writes in the spirit of practical statesmanship.
          Edmond of Dynter, who came into the service of Philip the Good from that of the
          Dukes of Brabant, furnished a long pragmatic history of the Jacqueline troubles
          and the complicated course of events in Gelderland. 
           The
          Bederijkers. 
           Against the influences
          of a French-speaking Court and its literary mouthpieces, the native language
          and literature had to rely upon a power of resistance strengthened by movements
          springing from the heart of the people. Thus, though the so-called Chambers of
          Rhetoric, whose members went by the name of Rederijkers, derived their
          title from France, the institution itself was clearly a continuation or renewal
          of the old confraternities or guilds devoted to the performance of religious
          plays which flourished in various parts of the Netherlands in the fourteenth
          and fifteenth centuries. The Rederijkers, whose activity , cannot safely
          be asserted to have begun much before the fifteenth century, abandoned the
          domain of ecclesiastical tradition, thereby rendering collision with the Church
          inevitable sooner or later, and, as at the same time the critical spirit
          asserted itself and the influence of the Renaissance enlarged the choice of
          materials, in their dramatic allegories or moralities paid increasing attention
          to the treatment of their subjects and the form of their plays. Connecting
          their performances with the festivals that formed so material a part of the
          popular life of the Netherlands, they at the same time more and more acquired
          the character of literary associations whose activity extended to a wide
          variety of forms of composition. The most ancient of the Belgian Chambers, the
          Alpha et Omega of Ypres, seems to date from a time rather before the beginning
          of the fifteenth century; the famous In liefde bloeyende of Amsterdam
          was not instituted till 1517. Their number ultimately grew to an extraordinary
          extent, more especially in the Southern Netherlands; and the elaborate
          arrangements for establishing an organic union among them culminated in the
          meeting of deputies of all the Chambers at Malines in 1493 on the summons of
          Philip the Fair, and the setting-up in 1503 of a supreme Chamber at Ghent. But
          this late effort of a centralizing policy was vehemently opposed, and its
          practical result was small. The Reformation found the Chambers instinctively
          sensitive to impulses moving the heart of the people-with what consequences is
          well known. 
           The
          Brethren of the Common Life. 
           The popular
          religious movements noticeable in the Netherlands up to the close of the
          fourteenth century had on the whole remained ominously out of touch with the
          organization of the Church. On the other hand, the Béguines and Beghards and
          Lollards had little or nothing to say against the doctrines of the Church of
          Rome; and neither the Wicliffites nor afterwards the followers of Hus seem to
          have attempted any propaganda in the Low Countries. The beginnings there of
          mystical speculation, of which the revered Johannes Rusbroek, born near
          Brussels in 1283, can in his age hardly have been a solitary representative,
          may possibly be traceable to the teachings of the "Master" Eckhart at
          Cologne. To Ruysbroek’s teachings both Tauler and Gerard Groote were listeners;
          they became a profound source of personal inspiration to many generations; nor
          has their echo died out to this day. To Geert (Gerard) Groote and his friend
          Florentius Radevynszoon, unlike him an ecclesiastic by profession, was due the
          establishment of the frater-huis at his native town of Deventer, which
          became the model of a series of similar foundations, intended as the homes of
          pious followers of God resolved to lead a common life of prayer and labor,
          unencumbered by any hierarchical organization and free from any system of
          irrevocable vows. A happy accident suggested that some of the young members of
          the Deventer settlement should contribute towards its support by clubbing
          together their earnings as copyists of manuscripts of the Scriptures and the
          Church Fathers, to which work they had as pupils of the Latin school in the
          town been encouraged by Groote. Hereby he had from the very outset of his
          endeavors blended the pursuit of learning and the furtherance of education with
          a life of piety and devotion. While extending and consolidating the system of frater-huizen,
          Florentius also carried out a cherished earlier design of his friend by the
          foundation, at Windesem near Zwolle, of a convent of canons regular. The
          half-century of the reigns of Philip and Charles witnessed a continuous
          extension in almost every part of the Netherlands, as well as in many districts
          of Northern Germany, both of the Houses of the Brethren of the Common Life and
          of the convents called the Windesem Congregations. The Church had come to
          recognize the agency of the Brethren as useful and praiseworthy; among those
          who extolled their labors was the Minorite Johannes Brugmann, the greatest
          popular preacher of his age in the Netherlands, and they were favored by Duke
          Philip's brother, Bishop David of Utrecht. 
           The value of the
          Brethren’s labors in the transcription of manuscripts has not been
          overestimated; but these labors belonged to a period that was passing away, and
          were only slightly supplemented by use of the new invention of the
          printing-press. On the other hand the work of education had always formed a
          chief purpose and essential part of the existence of the fraternity. The very
          large numbers of scholars attending its schools signally contributed throughout
          the Netherlands to lay the foundations of an enduring literary culture, and the
          fact that the teaching and training of these scholars was everywhere
          impregnated with the spirit of religious devotion determined the significance,
          to the most illustrious as well as to the humblest of them, of the advance of
          the New Learning. They met it less in the spirit of an enthusiastic humanism than
          in that of a steady demand for serviceable lore, such as already gives so much
          substance to the writings of Cardinal Cusanus, a pupil of Deventer in its
          earlier days. 
           But a new
          educational epoch began with Alexander Hegius, who in 1474 was appointed head
          of the school at Deventer, and died near the close of the century, leaving
          behind him nothing but his clothes and his books, and a name which may fairly
          be called that of one of the great schoolmasters of the world. The list of the
          scholars trained at Deventer by him, or in his time, and that of his Paris
          fellow-student Badius Ascensius (Bade of Asche), includes, besides its chief
          and incomparable glory, the name of Erasmus, those of Conrad Mutianus, the
          pride of Erfurt in her brightest days, and Hermann von dem Busche, whom Strauss
          calls “the missionary of humanism”. Johannes Sintius (Sintheim), who taught
          with Hegius at Deventer and was himself a member of the Brotherhood, rendered a
          signal service to education in the Netherlands and in Germany by the successful
          revision of the Latin grammar which had held its own for centuries. But the
          schools of the Brethren were not seminaries of that narrower humanism which
          made the study of the classical tongues the sole method and all but the supreme
          object of education. They encouraged the reading of the Bible and the use of
          the service-books in the vulgar tongue, cherished the careful use and even the
          study of the vernacular, and thus brought about the beginning of a new
          educational movement which on the Upper Rhine was to lead to results such as it
          could hardly expect to command on the Lower. Many links connect the labors of
          the Brethren and the great movement which in the fifteenth century strove to
          quicken the religious life of the German people by bringing learning and
          education, and literature and art, into living harmony with it. Such a link may
          be found in the life of Rudolf Agricola, who died in 1485, and, although
          apparently not a pupil of the Brethren, was a native of the neighborhood of
          Groningen, where one of their seminaries was placed. The last years of his life
          were spent at Heidelberg and Worms. He was a man of three tongues; but it was
          in theological rather than in philological study that he found the crown of his
          labors. 
           The
          University of Louvain. 
           Of a very
          different character were the relations, in the Netherlands, between the
          Renaissance and University studies. The complete separation of academical from
          municipal government at Louvain, and the special attention devoted there to
          legal studies intended to prepare for the service of the central government,
          went some way towards estranging that University from popular and provincial
          interests; but the part which she was long to play in the history of the
          intellectual culture of the country was determined by the identification of her
          interests with those of Church and Clergy. The most illustrious of the earlier
          students and teachers of Louvain, Pope Adrian VI, in a sense typifies both her
          influence and that of the Brethren's school in which he had been previously
          trained. In matters concerning the Church he thought with vigour and honesty;
          but for "poetry" he had scant sympathy to spare. Especially in
          consequence of the influence exercised by the monastic orders, Louvain’s
          academical character was even more conservative than that of Cologne. For the
          rest, the relations between Church and people in the fifteenth century were in
          the Netherlands affected by the general causes in operation throughout western
          Europe. The deep religious feeling of the people remained proof against the
          excesses alike and the shortcomings of the clergy; against a corruption which
          led even Philip the Good to approve of the attempt to divert the administration
          of charity into lay hands, and a license of life on the part of both seculars
          and regulars which defied repeated attempts at reform. Few protests against the
          doctrines and usages of the Church are noticeable in the course of the
          fifteenth century. 
           A more lasting
          influence was however being quietly exercised by a school of religious
          thinkers, to which in the latter half of the century two notable Netherlander
          belonged. The theology of John (Pupper) of Goch in the duchy of Cleves, who is
          believed to have been educated in one of the Brethren's schools, and who for
          nearly a quarter of a century presided over a priory of Austin canonesses
          founded by him at Malines in 1451, rejected the pretensions of mere outward
          piety and dead formalism. There is no proof that his writings which were read
          by few were known to Luther; but they must have come under the notice of
          Erasmus. The step to the assertion of the universal priesthood of Christian
          believers was taken by a bolder thinker, John Wessel (Goesevort), who, born at
          Groningen about the year 1420, was educated in the school of the Brotherhood at
          Zwolle, but afterwards studied in most of the chief universities of Europe. He
          was honored by both Luther and Melanchthon, but he never took Orders, and his
          academic distinction is his chief title to fame (magister contradictionum).
          He enjoyed the patronage of Bishop David of Utrecht; but his favorite residence
          seems to have been the Frisian convent of Adwert, to which a species of high
          school was attached. Lover of truth as he was, and in one respect at least
          (viz. as to the doctrine of the Eucharist) even further advanced than Luther,
          he disliked any appeal to the passions of the people, and had as little thought
          as Bishop David himself of an open rupture with the Church. 
             
           II 
             
           When the death of
          Charles the Bold at Nancy was ascertained, Louis prepared to seize those parts
          of the ducal dominions which were nearest to his hand and indispensable for the
          future of the French monarchy, while keeping in view the ultimate acquisition
          of them all. He proclaimed his anxiety for the interest of Charles’ daughter
          and heiress whom he had held at the font; but the project of a marriage between
          Mary, now close upon her twenty-first year, and the Dauphin, a boy of eight,
          was full of difficulty, more especially as the suit of Maximilian had already
          reached an advanced point. This prince's father was naturally not less anxious
          to preserve the cohesion of the Burgundian inheritance than Louis XI had been
          prompt to impair it; and from him no revival was to be apprehended of those
          questions as to male or female fiefs which had of old divided the Netherlands.
          All the more important was the attitude of the country itself towards the
          French intervention. 
           Almost
          simultaneously with the prompt mission of the Count of Craon into Burgundy,
          Louis had dispatched to Picardy and Artois the High Admiral of France (the
          Bastard of Bourbon), accompanied by Commines, to demand the surrender of all
          fiefs of the French Crown, and in the first instance of the towns on the Somme.
          His plans were vast, but according to Commines the reverse of vague. Namur,
          Hainault, and other parts near his borders were to be made over to some of his
          French vassals, and Brabant and Holland to German princes whom he would thus
          bind to his alliance. The French fief of Flanders he must have intended to secure
          for his Crown, of which it would still have been one of the brightest jewels.
          The towns on the Somme were one after the other - some by golden keys - opened
          to him; and the defection of Philip de Crèvecoeur placed him in possession of
          the Boulonnais. Mary's letter of January 23 to the ducal council at Dijon,
          protesting against French encroachments in the duchy of Burgundy and the
          Franche Comté, held out no prospect of armed resistance on her own part; and
          indeed any attempt of the kind was out of the question. At Ghent, where she was
          detained whether she would or not, and in the other towns of Flanders and
          Brabant, the confirmation of the tidings of her father's death had been
          received with general feelings of relief and joy, and throughout the Netherlands
          it was resolved to make the most of the opportunity. 
           By the beginning
          of February, the Four Members of Flanders, the three Estates of Brabant and
          Hainault, and the deputies of the States of Holland were assembled at Ghent. In
          the hands of these representatives of the vier landen, who explicitly
          took it upon themselves to act on behalf of the country at large, the executive
          remained till the Austrian marriage, and their united action imposed upon the
          lady of Burgundy the grant of the great charter of Netherlands liberties, and
          of the special charters which supplemented it. The importance of the promises
          comprised in the Groote Privilegie of February 10, 1477, lies not so
          much in its sweeping invalidation of all previous ducal ordinances antagonistic
          to communal privileges, or even in the assertion of principles more or less
          indigenous to all the Low Countries under Burgundian rule, as in the
          announcement of a definite machinery for their future government. It was, no
          doubt, of moment to provide that no war could be declared and no marriage
          concluded by the ducal sovereign without the consent of the States; to
          establish the necessity of their approval for fresh taxes, to confine the
          tenure of office to natives, to insist on the use of the national tongue in all
          public documents, to secure to the several provinces the control of the
          government’s commercial policy and a check upon the use of its military force.
          But the chief political significance of the new constitution was directly
          constructive. While abolishing the central judicial Court or Parliament of
          Malines, it reorganized the Grand Council, attached to the person of the
          sovereign, on a broad representative basis. It was to consist, in addition to
          the princes of the dynasty, of the Chancellor and twenty-three other members
          named for life by the sovereign, nobles and trained lawyers in equal
          proportions, and assigned on a fixed scale to each of the provinces of the
          land. Every precaution was used for ensuring a paramount regard on the part of
          the Council for the privileges and usages of provinces and towns, and every
          facility provided for the assembling on their own motion of the States of the
          whole of the ducal dominions-the States-General. 
           The Great
          Privilege was supplemented by several special applications of its principles to
          the needs of particular provinces. These were the Flemish Privilege, obtained
          on the same day by the Four Members of Flanders, upon whose unanimous consent
          it made any future constitutional change depend, while no Flemish business was
          to be transacted except on Flemish soil and in the Flemish tongue; the Great
          Privilege of Holland and Zeeland (February 17), which contained similar
          provisions and granted full liberty to the towns to hold Parliaments of their
          own, in conjunction with the other States of the Netherlands or not; the Great
          Privilege of Namur (May), and the Joyeuse Entrée granted to Mary on the
          occasion of her being acknowledged at Leuven as Duchess of Brabant (May 29),
          which, while returning to the usages confirmed at the accession of Philip the
          Good, added new liberties and doubled the measure of restrictions upon the
          ducal, power. 
           That fear of
          France rather than any affection for the Burgundian dynasty, or even any warmth
          of feeling towards Mary herself, had induced the representatives of the vier
            landen to come to terms with her, was shown by the military preparations
          upon which they simultaneously agreed. In place of the ducal army which had
          ceased to exist, 100,000 men were to be levied, of whom Flanders contributed
          more than one-third, and the rest in proportion. Raised by means of
          half-obsolete feudal obligations, or as communal or rural militia, this army,
          though its numbers were helped out by a system of substitutes, proved
          inadequate to its purpose; but the fact of its levy not the less shows that the
          mind of the Netherlands had been made up to resist the French advance. 
           Meanwhile Mary,
          still uncertain in which direction to turn for preservation, had sent an
          embassy to Louis XI, apparently just before her relations with the Flemish
          towns had been settled. She had little personal advice to depend upon. Her
          step-mother, the high-spirited Duchess Dowager Margaret, still relied on
          delusive hopes of English support. Mary’s kinsman, Adolf, Lord zum Ravenstein
          and brother of the Duke of Cleves, was both loyal to her and popular with her
          subjects, but as yet chiefly intent upon securing her hand for his own son. The
          time for taking the matronly advice of her former governess, Jeanne de
          Commines, Dame de Hallewin, had not yet come. Very naturally, therefore, she
          fell back upon the counsel of the men who had been faithful to his father's
          interests in his last and worst days, and who still sat in her Privy Council,
          though differing in their policy from the majority of its members. The
          Chancellor Hugonet (to leave out his other titles) and the Sire d'Himbercourt,
          Count of Meghem - the former a Burgundian, the latter a Picard by birth -
          persuaded the youthful Duchess to allow them to negotiate with France. They
          were animated by the spirit common to lawyers and nobles in the heyday of the
          Burgundian rule, and shared by the Church (William de Clugny, protonotary of
          the Holy See, was afterwards arraigned for complicity with them). Towards
          France they were, attracted by a sympathy which needed no stimulus of sordid
          interests, whether or not they had from the first resolved that the end must be
          the acceptance of Louis XI's marriage-scheme and the reabsorption of the
          Burgundian in the French dynasty; while they detested a policy of concessions
          to the several portions of the crumbling monarchy of Charles the Bold. 
           Louis, on his
          side, was resolved to secure a party in Flanders. The agent whom he had first,
          in spite of Commines' warning, sent to Ghent for the purpose - no other than
          the notorious Olivier le Dain - had indeed been obliged to depart discomfited,
          and had only partially redeemed his credit by cleverly bringing into his
          master's power the city of Tournay, always well disposed towards France. Louis,
          however, when Mary's embassy reached him at Peronne, was at particular pains to
          show courtesy towards the Flemish towns in the person of the distinguished hooftman of Bruges, a member of the great patrician family of Gruuthuse. Little
          importance attached to the ambassadors' offers of the cession of all the
          possessions given up by Louis in the Treaty of Peronne, and the recognition of
          his suzerainty in Artois and Flanders; and as to the real nodus of the
          transaction, the question of a marriage engagement between Mary and the
          Dauphin, they declared themselves to be without instructions. While, therefore,
          the embassy returned to Flanders to report, Louis seems to have, by private
          communications with Hugonet and d'Himbercourt, secured their adherence to the
          marriage-scheme. At Arras, of which he took possession in March, 1477, he
          received a deputation from Ghent, and - playing the kind of double game which
          his soul loved - revealed to them the confidence reposed by Mary in the privy
          councilors detested by the city. 
           Thus, on the
          return of the civic deputies to Ghent, the storm broke out. The city was
          already in a condition of ferment; some of the partisans of the old regime had
          been put to death; and the agitation, which had spread to Ypres and as far as
          Mons, was increased by the claims put forward at Ghent on behalf of the
          restoration of Liégeois independence by the Bishop of Liége, urged on by
          William of Aremberg, Sire de la Marck, the “Boar of the Ardennes”, and the
          terror of all who respected the ordinances of either God or man. Distracted by
          her fears, Mary seems actually to have countenanced Hugonet's final proposal
          that she should quit Flanders and place herself under the protection of the
          French King, when at the last moment Ravenstein induced her to reveal the
          design. He immediately informed the representatives of the vier landen,
          and the deans of the trades of Ghent, and on the same night (March 4) Hugonet,
          d'Himbercourt and de Clugny were placed under arrest. A rumor having been
          spread that their liberation was to be attempted, and news having arrived of
          the resolute advance of the French forces, new disturbances followed; and Mary
          issued an ordinance naming a mixed commission of nobles and civic officials to
          try the accused with all due expedition (March 28). She afterwards interceded
          in favor of one or both of the lay prisoners (for de Clugny was saved by his
          benefit of clergy), and at a later date expressed her sympathy with the widow
          and orphans of d'Himbercourt, the extent of whose share in the Chancellor's
          schemes remains unknown. After being subjected to torture, both were executed
          on April 3. They met with short shrift at the hands of their judges; but they
          cannot be said to have been sacrificed to a mere gust of democratic passion;
          and Mary and her Council, and the other Estates of the Netherlands assembled at
          Ghent, were with the city itself and the sister Flemish towns one and all
          involved in the responsibility of the deed. 
           There was now no
          solution left but war, and at Eastertide Louis XI advanced from Artois into
          Hainault. At the same time no doubt could remain as to the way in which the
          question of Mary's marriage must be settled. An English engagement such as the
          Duchess Dowager desired was hopelessly impeded by the disagreement between the
          factions at Edward's Court, one of which favored the claims of the Duke of
          Clarence, while the other supported Earl Rivers, the brother of Queen
          Elizabeth. At Ghent there was for a time a strong wish that Mary would bestow
          her hand upon Adolf of Gelders, the friend of the towns, who had been liberated
          from prison on Charles’ death, and proclaimed Duke notwithstanding Mary’s
          protest. He had entered himself as a member of one of the trades of Ghent, and
          had been named commander of the Flemish levies against France. But, instead of
          gaining Mary’s hand, he was destined to fall fighting in her service before
          Tournay (June), leaving his children Charles and Philippa as hostages in her
          hands, though the former had been proclaimed Duke in Gelderland. Of Mary s
          kinsmen of the Cleves family two were still talked of for her hand -the Duke’s
          son and subsequent successor, John, and Philip, the son of his brother Adolf
          zum Ravenstein. Philip had been brought up with Mary, whose father was said to
          have at one time favored the idea of their future union, agreeably it was
          rumored to Mary’s own wishes. But after the English project had come to naught
          the Duchess Dowager transferred all her influence to the only remaining suitor,
          the selection of whom promised high political advantage; and the choice
          actually fell upon Archduke Maximilian of Austria. 
           The vigilance of
          the Emperor Frederick III had long prepared this match, and even the
          catastrophe of Nancy had been unable to baulk his purpose. Now, while at Bruges
          Mary was seeking to satisfy a clamorous demand for a suppression of the
          pretensions of le Franc, the imperial envoys arrived to urge upon her the
          acceptance of the Austrian suit (April 18); and Mary formally accorded it. On
          May 21 Maximilian, who had been delayed by the slackness of the response made
          by the Estates to the imperial appeal for support of his enterprise (the
          Wittelsbachs were jealous about Hainault and Holland, while the King of Bohemia
          remembered the Luxemburg connection), at last started on his expedition; and
          after passing through Louvain and Brussels, where he was well received, at the
          head of a body of near 8000 horsemen, arrived at Ghent. At six o'clock on the
          following morning his marriage with Mary was solemnized by the Bishop of
          Tournay, in the presence of the Count of Chimay and the hooftman of Bruges,
          “min jonker” of Gelders and his sister bearing the tapers before the bride. He
          had not come a day too soon. Part of Hainault was already in Louis' hands, and
          Brabant and Flanders were alike threatened; but, now that the political situation
          had so decisively altered to his disadvantage, he paused. Mary, in securing the
          protection of which she stood in need against the contending influences around,
          and the popular bodies confronting her, had at the same time gained for the
          Netherlands the alliance of a House not less resolved upon withstanding the
          encroachments of France in the West of the Empire, than it was upon resisting
          Hungarian ambition and the Turkish danger in the East. On no other conditions
          could the House of Austria command support from the princes of the Empire, or
          continue to hold authority there. With England also the Austrian marriage at
          once placed the Netherlands government on close terms of friendship. 
           At first things
          went smoothly with Archduke Maximilian in the Netherlands. Born in 1459, he was
          but a boy in years and little else than a boy in mind, notwithstanding the
          completeness of the education which he afterwards professed to have received
          through the care of the old Weisskunig, and the solemn purposes which he
          ascribed to himself as the “dear hero” Tewrdanck. But at no time of his life
          was he wanting either in courage or in elasticity of disposition. On September
          18 Louis was found ready to conclude a favorable truce at Lens, having enough
          on his hands in consequence of the reconciliation of the Swiss to the House of
          Austria, and the menace of an English as well as an Aragonese invasion. And
          though in 1478 the campaign recommenced with much show of ardor, it only ended
          in another truce (July). The Flemish army under Maximilian's command,
          reinforced by Swiss mercenaries and English archers, had driven the French back
          upon Arras; Tournay had been retaken; and Louis promised to restore all towns
          taken by him in Hainault. 
           But already there
          were signs of impatience in Flanders. Maximilian had immediately on his
          marriage sworn to respect the privileges of Ghent and Bruges; and loud
          complaints were now heard of the misconduct of the German and other foreign
          soldiery, while Ghent was wroth at the imposition of a war-duty on small-beer.
          This led to an outbreak, in which three of the trades were involved and which,
          if Molinet is to be believed, had some curiously Catilinarian characteristics.
          It was quenched, chiefly through the exertions of Jan van Dadizeele, a loyal
          Flemish noble who now or afterwards was named Bailli of Ghent, and who in the
          following year (1479) so effectively reorganized the Flemish forces, of which
          he was named captain-general, that Olivier de la Marche describes these
          well-disciplined levies as the largest army he ever saw put into the field by
          Flanders. Town and country had combined to furnish it forth; and not less than
          five hundred nobles served with it on foot. With this truly national force the
          young Archduke gained his first victory at Guinegaste near Térouanne (August,
          1479); but it could not be followed up, and the capture of the Holland
          herring-fleet caused renewed discouragement. Though in 1480 Maximilian gained
          possession of Luxemburg and in 1481, mainly through his general Count Adolf of
          Nassau, reduced Gelderland, where the insurgents had actually entered into
          alliance with France, the principal struggle made no progress, and the Archduke
          refused to be led away by the daring schemes of the Duchess Dowager for an
          Anglo-Burgundian invasion and partition of France. 
           His position was
          already growing difficult, and though the popularity of Mary, who in June,
          1478, after the death of their first infant, had borne him a son, seems to have
          been on the increase, ill-will accumulated against her German consort. Maximilian’s,
          doubtless reluctant, consent to place himself up to a certain point under the
          guidance of the Members of Flanders, and to allow the communal authorities of
          Ghent to interfere as to appointments in his household, had no conciliatory
          effect. In October, 1481, a grievous catastrophe occurred in the murder of Jan
          van Dadizeele, whose services to the House of Burgundy had not ended at
          Guinegaste. The arrest by Maximilian’s orders of persons unsuspected of
          complicity with this dark crime, while others actually suspected of it were
          left untouched, led to an open quarrel between the ducal government and the
          Ghent magistrature. Such had been the jealousy of the Archduke excited in the
          Ghenters that after the birth of his third child Margaret (February, 1480) they
          had attempted to secure the control of both her and her brother Philip; and
          though it had finally been arranged that the children were to reside in the
          several chief provinces in succession, the Ghenters refused to give them up to
          Brabant when the first term of four months was at an end. In September, 1481, a
          third son was born; but he survived for a few months only. His mother's death
          soon followed. On March 27, 1482, the results of a neglected fall from her
          horse proved fatal to the Duchess Mary. Pitiable as was the decease of one so
          young, and so full of life and happiness, from a political point of view it
          threatened to prove disastrous to those whom she left behind her. 
           In accordance
          with the declaration put forth immediately before their marriage, Maximilian's
          authority in the Netherlands had come to an end with the life of his consort;
          and his claims to its continuance must be based on his parentage of their two
          surviving children, and Philip the young heir in particular. But these children
          were in the power of Ghent, where, as throughout Flanders, Maximilian was
          profoundly unpopular. Moreover, the feeling was widespread that apart from his
          personal prowess the advantages looked for from his union with the Duchess Mary
          had proved illusory. Neither the Emperor nor England had come forward as allies
          against the French invasion; and at home all was disturbance and disorder.
          Holland and Zeeland were once more torn by the old faction-feuds; in Gelderland
          Arnhem was ready to give the signal for renewed revolt; Utrecht had driven out
          its Burgundian Bishop. Meanwhile Flanders was exposed to the full force of the
          French advance; her trade and industry were at a standstill. Ghent and her
          sister-towns had no desire for annexation to France; but neither did they wish
          to bear the burden of a war which must end either thus or by covering the hated
          German prince with glory. They therefore resolved to force him into a peace
          with France which would leave them free, under the nominal rule of his youthful
          son. In the three years' struggle which ensued before Ghent lay at Maximilian’s
          mercy, he was obliged to all intents and purposes to rely upon himself. Lower
          Austria, with parts of Styria and the adjoining duchies, were in the grasp of
          King Matthias Corvinus, and the Emperor had to depend upon the scant sympathy
          and goodwill which he could find among the electors at Frankfort. A loud cry
          arose in the Austrian dominions for the presence of the valiant and vigorous
          Archduke; but instead of giving way, as so often afterwards, to his natural
          impetuosity, he resolved so far as his hereditary interests were concerned to
          bide his time. 
           While in Holland
          and Zeeland as well as in Hainault Maximilian was at once acknowledged as
          guardian of his son and regent on his behalf (mambourg), Flanders and Brabant
          refused to concede this position to him, except under the control in each case
          of a Council named by the province. Yet on every side faction was raging. At
          Liége William de la Marck savagely murdered the Bishop and thrust his own son
          into his place, defying Maximilian and the nobles of Brabant and Namur so long
          as he knew himself supported by France; nor was it till 1485 that after new
          outrages he fell into the Archduke's hands and was righteously put to death at
          Maestricht. New troubles had begun at Utrecht; in Holland the leaders of the
          government set up at Hoorn by the Hoeks were put to death by the Kabeljaauws
          and the town pillaged; and Haarlem only escaped similar treatment by payment of
          an onerous fine. In the midst of this confusion, Maximilian had to allow the
          States of the Netherlands, assembled at Alost with the exception of Luxemburg
          and Gelders, to open a formal negotiation with Louis XI (November), with whom
          they had been for some time in secret communication. Nor was he able to refuse
          his assent to the basis on which, in December, 1482, the Peace of Arras was
          actually concluded, viz. the marriage of his daughter Margaret to the Dauphin,
          with Artois and Burgundy for her dowry. It was further settled by this peace that
          Philip should do homage to Louis for Flanders, so that the old relation of
          vassalage against which Charles the Bold and his father had so long struggled
          was restored, and a pretext for fresh intervention established. But the Flemish
          communes, satisfied with the restoration of free commercial intercourse with
          France, would probably have been prepared to sacrifice Namur and Hainault into
          the bargain, and Louis, now near his end, seemed to have lived long enough to
          master the House of Burgundy. Maximilian, who had been left out of the Council
          of four, appointed, with Ravenstein at its head, to carry on the government of
          Flanders with the Estates on behalf of Philip, was powerless, and unable to
          obtain the annual pension granted to him about this time except by compliance.
          In March, 1483, he finally accepted the Peace of Arras, and without any
          interposition on his part, his daughter was transferred into the guardianship
          of the French King, and on June 23 solemnly betrothed to the Dauphin. 
           Soon after this
          Maximilian was able to strengthen his personal position by a successful
          intervention against the Hoek revolt at Utrecht. On returning to his capital
          Bishop David had been brutally insulted and imprisoned at Amersfoort, and
          Engelbert of Cleves had been set up in his place. At the head of a force of
          12000 men, commanded by a staff of celebrated captains, the Archduke laid siege
          to Utrecht, which capitulated in September and was condemned to pay a heavy
          fine. Bishop David once more held his entry into the prostrate city as the
          spiritual ruler of his see (he died peacefully as such at Wyk in 1496); but
          Maximilian was acknowledged as the administrator of its temporalities. It was
          in the course of this successful campaign that he received the news of the
          death of Louis XI. Though this event could hardly lead to the undoing of the
          Peace of Arras, it could not but reassure him as to the future relations
          between France and the Flemings, for he was not aware how much of her father’s
          spirit survived in Anne de Beaujeu, under whose control the government of
          Charles VIII was carried on during the first eight years of his reign. He now
          declared the powers of the Council of Flanders to have determined, and a storm
          of protests and charges ensued, in the course of which the Flemings invoked the
          authority of Charles VIII, which Maximilian refused to acknowledge. Towards the
          end of 1483, after the French government had ingratiated itself with the great
          Flemish towns by renouncing for ten years the appellate jurisdiction claimed by
          the Parliament of Paris, negotiations for an alliance ensued between the States
          of Flanders and Brabant and the assembly which, under the name of
          States-General, met at Tours in 1484. But the popular entente of earlier days
          was not to be renewed between the decaying communes and a people over which the
          power of the monarchy was already paramount. 
           Meanwhile the
          quarrel between Maximilian and the Flemings became more acute. The Knights of
          the Golden Fleece at Termonde declared his headship of their Order at an end,
          though he might still preside over its meetings during his son's minority.
          Bruges refused him admission if attended by more than a dozen companions, and
          sent to the block several persons who had laid a plot on his behalf. Humours of
          a similar plot were rife at Ghent; and Maximilian had clearly accepted the
          challenge of a people resolved upon completely throwing off his authority. He
          began by sending the faithful Olivier de la Marche to lodge complaints with the
          French government against the communes, and succeeded in provoking so much
          distrust in Flanders that, though a French as well as a Flemish army took the
          field in 1484, no decisive blow was struck. The Flemings however flooded
          Brabant, where the Archduke's appeal for support of the dynasty was very coolly
          received, and Count de Romont, the commander of the Flemish levies, proclaimed
          himself lieutenant-general of Duke Philip against his father. In January, 1485,
          Maximilian by taking Oudenarde snowed his determination to make himself master
          of Ghent. But after defeating the Ghenters under their own walls, and capturing
          their great banner, he was obliged by a mutiny for pay among his troops to
          retreat, while the French under Crèvecoeur (des Querdes) entered the city. Soon
          nothing remained to the Archduke but Brabant and Hainault. Fortunately,
          however, for him with the Ghenters the powers that were could never be in the
          right; and such a storm of popular indignation was raised by the misconduct of
          the French soldiery, that Crèvecoeur in his turn retired upon Tournay. 
           The French
          faction were now at the mercy of their adversaries. On June 21 Maximilian held
          his entry into Bruges, which had set the example of recognizing him as mambourg.
          At Ghent, William Rin and another leader of the French faction were decapitated,
          while Coppenole (said to be in actual enjoyment of a pension as a member of the
          royal household) and the rest only saved themselves by flight. On June 28
          Maximilian, while confirming the privileges of Ghent and Bruges, was by the
          former also recognized as mambourg, and declared a general amnesty, with
          however some important exceptions. On July 6 Duke Philip was delivered into his
          father’s hands at a village near Ghent, which they hereupon entered at the head
          of 5000 men, instead of the stipulated 500. Before night the trades were under
          arms on the Vrydagsmarkt, and in the morning a terrible conflict must have
          ensued, had not Maximilian listened to counsels of moderation and delay.
          Sending his son out of Ghent, he returned for a final settlement; and the end
          was the complete submission of the city, which was carried out on July 22.
          Thirty-three ringleaders were executed, many more sent into banishment, and a
          heavy fine was inflicted. Many of the old charters were destroyed, and the
          entire constitution of the city was subjected to revision by a commission.
          After taking Philip to Malines, there to be educated under the superintendence
          of the Duchess Dowager, and judiciously declining an offer of the Liégeois to
          put him in possession of their city, Maximilian at last departed to Germany. He
          left the Netherlands under the military guardianship of Philip of Cleves and
          his other captains. 
           When, in the
          summer of 1486, Maximilian returned to the Netherlands as Roman King, the
          glamour of this new dignity ensured him a good reception in Brabant and the
          other provinces through which, as mambourg, he accompanied Duke Philip
          on a sort of progress; and he was more than ever intent upon taking vengeance
          on France. But, though he openly broke the Peace of Arras by occupying Omer,
          which was again taken by Crèvecoeur with Terouanne in the following year, these
          campaigns were of no real importance; his chief designs were concerned with the
          future of Britanny - a vital question for France. It was the fear of a war no longer
          defensive and of measurable proportions which, together with the slow rate of
          his military progress in the Low Countries, notwithstanding the oppressive
          presence of his large bodies of alien troops - German and Swiss mercenaries in
          particular - led to the renewal of agitation in Flanders against the Austrian
          régime. Of what advantage had it proved to the economic interests of the good
          towns? In 1478 the Intercursus had indeed been concluded which placed
          commerce and navigation between England and the Netherlands on a new footing of
          security, and King Richard III had granted to the Netherlands merchants in
          England the lower tariff of duties enjoyed by their German competitors (a
          privilege taken away again by his successor). But, for reasons already stated,
          the English trade had more and more passed to Brabant and Holland, and Flanders
          found her industry and commerce increasingly dependent upon her relations with
          France. 
           Stirred up by the
          return of Adrian Vilain, Lord of Rasenghien, who had fled from the city at the
          time of the execution of William Rin, the mordans laingages at Ghent, as
          Molinet calls them, complained more loudly than ever of imposts and military
          oppression, and Maximilian was fain to summon the States of the chief provinces
          to Ypres, while at the same time he met the deans of the trades in person at
          Bruges and promised - sincerely or not - to enter into peace negotiations with
          France. But the Ghent democracy, brooking no delay, sent forth a force which
          seized Courtray, obliging it to take the oath to Duke Philip and Ghent, and
          holding it against Philip of Cleves. On February 1, 1488, the trades of Bruges
          in their turn took up arms, and the Carpenters occupied the gate towards Ghent.
          Then ensued the strangest and most humiliating episode in the whole history of
          Maximilian's experiences in the Netherlands. The market-place was turned into a
          fortified camp, and for the better part of four months the Roman King was
          detained, first in his own lodging; then, as an actual prisoner in the
          Cranenburg, a house by the market; afterwards, when his soldiery had been
          driven out of the city, in the fortified mansion of Ravenstein. Bruges itself,
          afraid of Antwerp and plied with advice by Ghent (whence at one time several
          thousands arrived before the gates, and later Coppenole appeared to proclaim
          the Peace of Arras), passed gradually into a state of terrorism, during which a
          series of executions of the King’s followers took place under his very eyes. In
          the midst of these proceedings the Brughelins sent forth their levies against
          Maximilian's garrisons in other towns, seizing Middelburg and putting several
          nobles of his party to death; while the Ghenters on their own account committed
          similar excesses. Maximilian, although he at first gave fair words to the trades
          and afterwards made a pathetic appeal for consideration, bore himself
          throughout with courage and dignity. 
           At last, after
          Pope Innocent VIII had issued his censures at Bruges, it became known there
          that the Emperor in person was marching upon Flanders for the delivery of his
          son. Hitherto the States assembled round Duke Philip at Malines had transacted
          in a very business-like way with the other States at Ghent; but by the middle
          of May it was understood that now or never an arrangement must be made with the
          captive King. He was liberated on condition that he would withdraw from
          Flanders within four days of his deliverance, and that he approved, as did his
          son-in-law the King of France, the solemn League and Union entered into on May
          1 by the States of several of the provinces for the sake of peace and good
          government, and for the maintenance of the Treaty of Arras. 
           He had thus
          yielded everything. But, though he had sworn a solemn oath and accepted a heavy
          pecuniary payment, it was felt that the nodus materiae lay in the question of
          hostages; nor was it till Philip of Cleves had arrived at Bruges in this
          capacity that the King was at last allowed to depart. On May 24 the Emperor
          arrived at Louvain at the head of a well-appointed army, and Maximilian, as a
          prince of the Empire (not "for his own quarrel"), felt himself
          compelled to take part in the punitive campaign against Flanders. On both sides
          the necessity was put forward of protecting the rights of Duke Philip; and,
          after the Germans and Walloons had seized Deinze, Ravenstein protested that he
          must take up arms in defense of his liege lord even against the Emperor.
          Henceforth the hostage became the guiding spirit of Flemish resistance to
          Maximilian. In September, 1488, he was received with acclamation at Brussels;
          soon Louvain and the smaller towns of Brabant fell into his hands. Flanders had
          likewise remained unreduced, while Maximilian was operating on the Lys and in
          Zeeland; Ypres was occupied by French troops, and the siege of Ghent, begun by
          the Emperor in person, had been abandoned. By October Frederick III had
          returned to Germany, and in the last days of the year Maximilian followed. In
          vain he had assembled the loyal States at Malines for the time his field
          of action lay elsewhere. The Duke of Britanny had died in September, and the
          struggle with France would have to be resumed on a perhaps more favorable
          field. But his present task was to reconquer Austria. 
           1488-91]
          The Jonker-Franzen war 
           Maximilian left
          behind him as governor-general, with full powers, Duke Albert of Saxony
          (Albertus Animosus, founder of the Albertine line), who in the organization and
          conduct of armies was unsurpassed by any German commander of his age. With
          resources inferior to those which had been at Maximilian's disposal, Albert had
          in the first instance to suppress a fresh outbreak of the Hoeks in Holland,
          who, under the leadership of young Francis van Brederode, after surprising
          Rotterdam, organized a petty warfare in the style of the gueux of later days.
          But the States of Holland resolved on putting an end to this Jonker-Franzen
          war, and the rebel fleet was finally all but annihilated at Brouwershaven
          (July, 1490), Brederode himself dying soon afterwards of his wounds. Several of
          the other Hoek leaders died a violent death at Delft; but one of them threw
          himself into Sluys, which was in the hands of Philip of Cleves. In 1489 Albert
          restored the authority of Maximilian in Brabant, where the Peace of Frankfort,
          concluded for temporary purposes with France by the Roman King, was eagerly
          welcomed, for Bruges and Louvain had suffered unspeakably from war and
          pestilence. But it was some time before, at Montils-les-Tours, Maximilian’s
          mambournie over Flanders was likewise acknowledged, and Ghent, Bruges, and
          Ypres undertook to sue to him for pardon, a commission being appointed to
          ascertain and restore the privileges enjoyed by them under Philip the Good and
          his successor. 
           The ink, however,
          was hardly dry upon the so-called Treaty of Flanders when, during Albert’s
          temporary absence in Germany, the communal insurrection broke out afresh. At
          Bruges George Picquanet, elected hooftman, held out for a time against famine
          and Engelbert of Nassau, by whose soldiery he was ultimately killed. At Ghent,
          in May, 1491, a cordwainer named Remieulx, after admitting some of Philip of
          Cleves' adherents, slew the Grand Dean, and Coppenole was put in his place. A
          strange conflict ensued between this demagogue and one Arnoul Leclercq, a
          labourer who had been named hooftman by a body of 5000 peasants previously
          organized under arms by Coppenole and his brother, both of whom were in the end
          put to death. Then a deputation of notables waited upon Duke Philip at Malines;
          the usual penalties were once more inflicted, the wearing of white hoods was
          prohibited forever, and a Peace of Ghent was once more proclaimed (June, 1492).
          Meanwhile, Albert had on his return been occupied with a rising in
          Kennemerland, Friesland, and the Texel, stirred up by emissaries from Alkmaar,
          where followers of Brederode had seized the power. The insurgent peasants bore
          banners of our Lady and certain saints of local repute, together with a strange
          ensign consisting of a loaf of rye-bread and a large lump of green cheese.
          (Arnoul Leclercq at Ghent had borne a plough in his banner, and we remember the
          Bundschuh.) After much debate they were admitted into Haarlem, which had itself
          been disaffected; but on the approach of Albert the peasant host, left to
          itself, was massacred at Hemskerke. Haarlem, Alkmaar, and the smaller towns all
          humbled themselves before him; and the Landsknechte, with the art-treasures of
          Haarlem stuck in their hats, prefigured their comrades of the sacco di Roma
          (May). It remained for Albert to finish his task by the reduction of Sluys,
          where Philip of Cleves, whom the death of his father during the siege made Lord
          zum Ravenstein, still held out. The slow progress of the siege, even after in
          July English vessels, sent by Henry VII, had arrived to take part in it, finds
          its explanation in the tenderness invariably shown by the House of Burgundy,
          and by Maximilian, to his wife's kinsman. In October Ravenstein very leisurely
          surrendered Sluys, and three years later he was formally acquitted of any
          imputation against his honour. 
           Meanwhile,
          Maximilian had (towards the end of 1490) made the great cast, and married by
          proxy Anne, the heiress of Britanny. Shortly before this he had concluded a
          close alliance with Henry VII, mediated by Ferdinand of Aragon. (For Flanders
          this was all the more important, since in 1486 Bruges had sought to gain
          English support by granting free importation of English cloths and in 1488 had
          entreated the new King to aid her against the Emperor and concluded a new
          commercial treaty with this object.) Although this had been a fortunate year
          for Maximilian, he could not expect that his successes would be crowned by the
          tame submission of France to such a provocation. In November, 1491, Anne of
          Britanny surrendered Rennes, and in the following month she gave her hand to
          Charles VIII. But Margaret of Burgundy was still detained in France, and
          nothing had been said as to the restitution of her dowry. Yet in the
          Netherlands there was little sympathy with the insulted Regent; and early in
          1492 the French Court provided him with a new difficulty in the shape of a
          pretender in Gelderland. Charles of Egmond had in 1487 been taken prisoner at
          Bethune and carried off to France. The Geldrian towns eagerly came forward to
          pay the ransom demanded by the French government; but without its support they
          had not sufficient resources to place Charles in the seat of his ancestors. His
          struggle against the Burgundian authority accordingly proved long and arduous.
          At first Maximilian showed himself willing to take the unusual course of
          referring the question of the government of Gelderland to the arbitration of
          the Empire; then a truce was concluded in 1497, with a view to a partition of
          the duchy; but soon afterwards war broke out again, Maximilian taking the field
          in person. In 1503 Philip, now King of Castile, consented to a compromise at
          Rosendal, which left Charles in possession of the Nymwegen and Roermonde
          districts. But he played fast and loose with the treaty, and as the ally of
          France by 1514 at last succeeded in possessing himself of the entire duchy. His
          later struggles which only terminated with his death in 1538, and in the course
          of which he actually sought to make over his duchy to France, must be left
          unnoticed here. 
           The recovery of
          Artois, whose capital Arras was surprised by the Landsknechte after the fall of
          Sluys, would, together with his reconquest of Franche Comté, have encouraged
          Maximilian to attempt to secure the whole of his daughter's dowry,
          notwithstanding the pacifications concluded by Charles VIII's government with
          the Kings of England and Aragon (November, 1492-January, 1493). But the
          unwillingness of the Netherlands to continue the War, added to his other cares,
          induced him to accept Swiss mediation for the conclusion of a truce with
          France, followed in May, 1493, by the Peace of Senlis. The territorial question
          was settled as nearly as possible on the uti possidetis basis; so that Artois
          (and the Franche Comté) remained with the House of Burgundy, though Arras was
          ultimately to revert to France in exchange for certain towns now occupied by
          her. Margaret, all obligations between her and King Charles having been
          cancelled by the treaty, returned home joyously, calling out Vive Bourgogne to
          the people who flocked round her at St Quentin, and receiving at Valenciennes a
          popular welcome. After narrowly escaping a design of the Landsknechte to seize
          her in pledge for outstanding pay, she took up her residence at Namur. 
            
           Commercial
          relations under Philip with England. [1494-1506 
            
           In 1494, the year
          after that of his father’s death, Maximilian returned to the Netherlands. His
          immediate purpose was to superintend the transfer of their government to
          Philip, now fifteen years of age, and also to settle affairs in Gelderland; but
          the Eastern Question was now uppermost in his mind, as was shown by his solemn assumption
          at Antwerp of the insignia of the crusading Order of St George, and by his
          appeal to all Christian potentates to follow his example (October- November).
          Flanders was tranquil; Crèvecoeur lay dead; Ravenstein was among those who paid
          their respects to the young Duke on his solemn entry into the great mercantile
          city. The presence there of another visitor - the pretended Richard Duke of
          York - which gave rise to an unseemly fracas, reflected little credit on the
          discretion of the House of Burgundy. He was the protégé of the Duchess Dowager,
          and Maximilian was quite ready to risk a quarrel with England on the chance of
          the dethronement of the faithless Tudor. Henry VII replied by removing the
          staple for English wool, tin, and other products to Calais, stopping all
          intercourse between his subjects and the Netherlands, and expelling all
          Flemings from England. The Burgundian government retorted (April, 1494, and
          January, 1495) by prohibiting the importation of English cloth; and for two
          years there was a complete cessation of commercial dealings between the two
          countries. Finally, Duke Philip was prevailed upon to promise not to admit any
          enemy of England into his dominions; and in February, 1496, the Magnus
            Intercursus proclaimed on both sides freedom of trade, i.e. the right of
          trading without special license or pass, and that of fishery. Though there was
          nothing novel in this famous treaty, it offered a solid foundation for the
          establishment of satisfactory mercantile relations; but time could hardly fail
          to be on the side of the English, to the sale of whose cloth the Netherlands
          were now open-with the important exception however of Flanders, where
          restrictions were still maintained. Even here it soon became difficult to
          confine this sale to the staples of Antwerp and Bruges - or from 1501 to Bruges
          alone - to limit it to large pieces, and to prevent the wearing of it by
          natives. And Philip's well-meant endeavors to revive the sunken prosperity of
          Bruges were seen to be hopelessly out of date. After in 1502 the Magnus
            Intercursus had been solemnly renewed, Henry VII, angered by the refusal of
          the Netherlands government to assist him in laying hands on the fugitive Earl
          of Suffolk (Edmund de la Pole), brought about a fresh stoppage of trade between
          the two countries, which lasted till 1506. 
           It was not only
          in commercial matters that Duke Philip and his advisers showed a disposition to
          emancipate themselves from his father's control. Maximilian had placed at the
          head of the Privy Council, composed of fourteen members, Count Engelbert of
          Nassau, the faithful servant of three generations of the House of Burgundy, but
          the leading voice in it was that of William de Croy, Seigneur de Chièvres. He
          and those who thought with him resented as strongly as the Flemish and
          Brabançon towns the continuance in the land of the German soldiery, to whose
          chief commander Albert of Saxony the ducal treasury had pledged Haarlem and
          several other important places pending the payment of a heavy debt. The
          influence of de Chièvres and the great nobles in general was accordingly in
          favor of maintaining peace with France, although in the Gelders difficulty
          above all she showed so little regard for Netherlands interests; and Philip on
          the whole inclined to follow these pacific counsels. 
           In May, 1494,
          Maximilian had at Kempten intervened in a dispute between Groningen and the
          rural districts of West-Friesland encroached upon by the city. His decision had
          been in favor of Groningen; and though he was anxious to keep the peace,
          further encroachments on her part induced the Schieringers of the Westergao in
          their straits to invite the redoubtable Albert of Saxony to assume authority as
          governor. The end came three years later when Albert was once more offered the
          governorship by the terrified towns of Sneek and Franeker, and his lieutenants
          subjugated the land by a series of maneuvers, crafty and cruel like those of a
          campaign against savages, and ending with a battle of artillery against pikes,
          and the capture of Leeuwarden (June-July, 1498). Maximilian now bestowed the
          whole of Friesland, including Groningen, upon Albert with the title of
          hereditary governor (potestat), reserving to himself the right of redeeming
          West-Friesland on the payment of 100,000 florins. The greater part of his own debt
          to Albert, which amounted to more than treble this sum, had been taken over by
          Philip; but an ugly suspicion remains as to Maximilian’s motives in the
          transaction. After Albert, who had been detained by the Gelders War, had
          himself arrived in Friesland, the rough insolence of one of his sons drove the
          country into rising once more against his yoke; and he was laying siege to
          Groningen, which this time had joined hands with its former adversaries, when
          death overtook him at Emden (September, 1500). Edzard of East-Friesland, to
          whom Groningen and the Ommelande now did homage, summoned Charles of Egmond to
          his aid and was supported by a native rising under a peasant known as the Great
          Pier, who afterwards rejoiced in the title of “Admiral of the Zuiderzee”. At
          last, in 1515, Duke George of Saxony agreed to dismiss the “Black Band” of
          soldiery, formerly in Egmond’s service, which had carried fire and sword
          through the land, and to accept the redemption of the country on payment of the
          sum agreed upon between his father and the Roman King. Charles, who in this
          very year assumed the government of the Netherlands, at last solved the Frisian
          problem by the reduction of the country, followed by the submission of
          Groningen to the imperial authority. 
           Slight indeed had
          been the importance of that problem on the horizon of Maximilian's
          speculations. The great matrimonial plan, which he seems to have devised in
          part as early as 1491, was fully carried out within six years. In August, 1496,
          the infanta Juana was wedded at Antwerp to Duke Philip, and on Palm Sunday of
          the following year his sister Margaret, after intrepidly encountering many
          dangers on the way, gave her hand at Burgos to the infante Don John. Soon
          however a tragic succession of deaths-those of Don John, his posthumous child,
          Juana's elder sister Queen Isabel of Portugal, and her son Don Miguel, left
          Juana heiress-apparent of the united kingdoms of Castile and Aragon (1500). In
          the same year her eldest son Charles was born at Ghent; and the city, with no
          foreknowledge of what she was afterwards to suffer at his hands, was loud in
          her rejoicings. But vast as was the prospect now opened before Philip, he was,
          so far as the conduct of Netherlands affairs was concerned, brought little
          nearer to the schemes of Maximilian's foreign policy. An interview between
          father and son arranged by Ravenstein and others in May, 1496, seems indeed for
          a time to have made Philip swerve from his policy of friendliness towards
          France, and soon afterwards he dismissed from his council Francis van
          Busleyden, Provost of Liege, supposed to be an active adversary of the Austrian
          influence. But already in 1497 he helped to thwart the exertions of Maximilian
          in Gelderland, and, on the accession of Louis XII in 1498, crossed the
          endeavors of his father, who had actually invaded Burgundy, by opening
          negotiations with the new French King. In the Treaty of Brussels Philip
          promised homage for Artois and Flanders (performed in 1499), and personally
          renounced all claims on the duchy of Burgundy, in return for the restoration of
          the Picard towns reserved at Senlis; while Maximilian, after taking Franche
          Comté, gradually became inclined to treat in his turn for peace with France. 
           Thus it was that
          during the first years of the new century father and son came to cooperate in
          the scheme for a marriage between Philip's son Charles (Duke of Luxemburg) and
          Claude, the elder daughter of Louis XII, which was to transfer both Britanny
          and Burgundy to Philip as the dowry of his future daughter-in-law. The purposes
          of this extraordinary design being purely dynastic, except that Maximilian
          seems honestly to have counted on its success for French aid against the Turks,
          it could not find much favor in the Netherlands, where in February, 1505, the
          States-General at Malines showed little willingness to grant a large bede
          demanded for the Turkish War by the Roman King in the absence of his son.
          Involved in a network of maneuvers, besides being obliged to nurse his Spanish
          expectations, Philip was in these years constantly away from the Low
          Countries-in 1501 with his consort in Spain, where their succession was assured
          in Castile and, should King Ferdinand die without a male heir, in Aragon, and
          negotiating on his way out and home with King Louis in France; in 1503 in the Empire.
          It was on their second voyage to Spain that King Philip and his Queen - once
          more on kindly terms with one another - were obliged by a fearful storm
          (January, 1506) to land at Southampton, and placed for a time in the power of
          Henry VII. The goodwill of that prince-highly important to Philip by reason of
          his desire to arrive at a permanent understanding with Ferdinand of Aragon -
          had, together with his personal liberty, to be purchased by a commercial
          treaty. Philip had a heart for the Flemings, and for Bruges in particular; and
          in the negotiations which followed her interests were eagerly pressed; but so
          also were the divergent interests of Antwerp. The so-called Malus
            Intercursus was inevitably to the advantage of English trade, which it
          freed from oppressive tolls on the way to Antwerp or Bruges, Middelburg or
          Mons, while it left the sale and use of English cloth absolutely free except to
          a certain extent in Flanders. The unpopularity of the compact there was no
          secret to Philip, and notwithstanding the representations of de Chièvres he had
          not yet ratified it, when the news arrived of his death at Burgos (September
          25, 1506). Evil rumors accompanied the tidings; for the young King's light and
          profuse ways were odious to the Castilians, agreeing better with the
          preferences of the Low Countries, and the traditional habits of the Burgundian
          House. Philip le Fair had something of his mother's docility in council and of
          his father's high spirit in the field, and was not wholly without the popular
          fibre which commended each of them to the respective lands of their birth; but,
          so far as can be judged from his short career, he gave no proof of the profound
          conscientiousness and high aspirings that make it difficult to deny the epithet
          of great to his eldest son, notwithstanding all his failures. 
            
           1506-18]
          Regency of Margaret. 
            
           Five months after
          Philip’s death the unhappy Juana gave birth to a third daughter, and then sank
          into hopeless insanity. Maximilian showed himself from the first perfectly
          prepared to enter on a second course of regency, this time on behalf of his
          elder grandson, now a boy of six years of age. Personally he was as unpopular
          as ever in the Netherlands, where it was perceived that neither his authority
          in the Empire nor his influence in European affairs corresponded to his still
          expanding ambition; and where a strong feeling survived in favor of maintaining
          friendly relations with France. It was therefore a judicious as well as a
          necessary step on his part, when, after accepting the offer made to him by the
          States-General on the motion of the States of Holland and Brabant (October,
          1506), he empowered his daughter Margaret to receive in his stead the oaths due
          to him as Guardian of his grandchildren and Regent; and on her being proclaimed
          as such by the States-General at Leuven (April, 1507), he appointed her his
          sole governor-general in the Netherlands. 
           The office which
          Margaret had originally been intended by her father to hold only temporarily
          she filled with honor and credit during eight eventful years (1507-15). After
          her troubled experiences in France she had in 1501 bravely gone forth to serve
          the imperial interest by becoming the bride of Duke Philibert (called the Fair)
          of Savoy, and, once more a widow, had escaped the doom of being united to Henry
          VII of England. She was now, though saddened by her sufferings, prepared to
          devote her remarkable talents and even higher gifts of character to the service
          of her House. Her correspondence with her father, occasionally grotesque in form,
          since neither had really mastered the language of the other, proves her candor
          and courage, her moderation more especially in the earlier years of her
          government, and her spirit of self-sacrifice throughout its course. She began
          by promptly declaring the so-called Malus Intercursus invalid, thus
          putting pressure on Henry VII, who had no mind for the stoppage of commercial
          relations, besides being desirous of influencing the political action of
          Margaret's government and at this moment himself posing as a candidate for her
          hand. A commercial treaty, drafted on the lines of the Intercursus of
          1496, but with the English cloth-trade clauses left out, was at once returned
          with her signature; and on these terms trade was carried on between the two
          countries during the remainder of Henry VII’s reign. 
           Maximilian might
          therefore look forward hopefully to the explanation of his relations with
          England which he invited Margaret to lay before the States-General early in
          1508, when notifying to them the proposed marriage between Charles and Mary
          Tudor. Not long before this he had enquired of her whether the Netherlands were
          to be regarded as included in his present war with France. Margaret knew how
          even the Gelderland trouble was insufficient to counteract the desire of the
          States for peace with France, and therefore persuaded her father by concluding
          a truce with Charles of Egmond, which left Gelderland provisionally in his
          hands, to conciliate his French ally, whose cooperation he needed for his
          project of vengeance upon Venice. The ill-omened League of Cambray, concluded
          in December, 1508, was as a matter of fact in a large measure Margaret's work.
          Soon Maximilian was wrapped up in its progress; but in the ensuing four years
          he by no means left his daughter to carry on her government without his
          supervision. Not only was he extremely sensitive of any supposed want of
          deference by her to his supreme authority, but he was constantly intervening in
          the matter of appointments in Church and State - from the bishopric of Cambray
          to the aldermanship of le Franc. And through all goes the call for money,
          culminating in July, 1510, with a demand for an annual pension of 50,000 crowns
          for which Margaret was obliged to tell him the time had not yet come. Her task
          of mediating between the States and the requirements of Maximilian's
          complicated Italian policy was a very arduous one. 
           With the advent
          on the scene of Henry VIII a new chapter may be said to begin in the political
          activity of Margaret, to whom the alliance between him and her father was
          mainly due. The variations of Maximilian’s European policy in these years of
          surprises were little to the taste of the Netherlanders, and occasionally ran a
          risk of conflicting with their interests. Thus when he had been tardily induced
          to take the side of the Head of the Hansa in her quarrel with John, King of
          Denmark, the latter (in 1507 or rather later) sought to strike a blow at
          Lübeck’s commercial supremacy in the Baltic by inviting the Holland merchants
          to make the Sound one of their trade-routes. The Lübeckers insisted on the
          Holland and Friesland vessels confining themselves to the passage of the Great
          Belt, as leading more directly to their own city. Hence the outbreak of
          hostilities between the Hansa and the Netherlands, many of whose ships were
          taken up the Trave as prizes, and in 1511 the capture of the entire Dutch
          Baltic fleet by the Lübeckers and Wismarers. Strong pressure was put by the
          States upon Margaret to induce the Emperor to equip a fleet for the protection
          of the interests of Holland in the Baltic; in the end, though the Peace of
          Malmoe (1512) maintained Lubeck’s ascendency there, it secured free navigation
          for Netherlands vessels, except when carrying contraband of war. But to the
          schemes of the Emperor-Elect (as he now called himself) against France, with
          which was curiously mixed up a project for a marriage between Charles and Louis
          XII's second daughter Renee, the provinces turned a deaf ear. Not even against
          Charles of Egmond, though Holland and Brabant were dreading his approach, would
          they grant aids, unless assured of a general peace. With the exception of
          Antwerp, Malines, and Hertogenbosch, Margaret wrote, the States were d’une
            si mauvaise nature that nothing short of the Emperor's own presence could
          manage the business. But even this expedient seems to have failed; and when in
          April, 1513, he concluded an offensive alliance with Henry VIII against France,
          the Netherlands were declared neutral. They took advantage of their neutrality
          to supply the French with arms and ammunition, but at the same time allowed
          Henry after he had commenced the siege of Térouanne (June, 1513) to levy both
          foot and horse in the country. Maximilian approved, but he held no independent
          command, and the capture of Tournay following on the brilliant victory of
          Guinegaste was treated by Henry as an English acquisition. But though for a
          time it seemed as if Margaret’s programme of a close alliance against France of
          England, Spain, and the Austro-Burgundian interest would carry everything before
          it, Henry was at last estranged by the delay of the marriage between his sister
          and Prince Charles, due in part at least to the de Chièvres influence, and
          finally entered into an alliance with Louis XII, to whom the English Princess
          was now wedded. As the project of marriage between the French King and Charles’
          sister Eleanor was now likewise abandoned, Charles was in his turn left in a
          humiliating position, and, though the Netherlands were ex post facto admitted
          to the new French alliance, all cordiality between the English and Burgundian
          Courts was at an end. The commercial relations between the two countries had
          meanwhile made but little advance; the duties levied upon English trade,
          especially in Zeeland, had again been raised; and a commission summoned to
          Bruges in 1512 had effected nothing. 
           Thus Margaret’s
          foreign policy had proved unsuccessful before (January, 1515) Charles assumed
          the government of the Netherlands; and in the course of the year she found
          herself virtually excluded from the more intimate counsels of the nephew over
          whose interests she had so tenderly watched in his younger days, and for whom
          to the last she was ready to make any personal sacrifice. Charles, who in 1520
          fitly recognized her services by assigning to her as her own domain the loyal
          city of Malines and the adjoining territory, was during the first years of his
          government still entirely under the influence of de Chièvres, who, in the
          course of this very year, contrived to send away Adrian of Utrecht to Spain in
          the interests of the Prince's succession. The death of Louis XII on January 1,
          1515, and the accession of Francis I had offered an opening for the advancement
          of those friendly relations with France which de Chièvres and the Netherlands
          statesmen were so anxious to cultivate; and even after the death of Ferdinand
          of Aragon a year later had left to Charles the inheritance of the Spanish
          monarchy and its Italian dependencies, he continued in spite of Margaret's
          action to follow the same policy. Nor was it till the imperial succession
          loomed largely on the horizon that the three generations, Maximilian, Margaret
          and Charles were reunited in their efforts for a common end. 
           A heavy price was
          paid by the Netherlands for the preservation of the greater part of the
          monarchy of Charles the Bold. Like the House of Burgundy into which he had
          married, Maximilian (so popular at Nürnberg and Augsburg) showed scant regard
          for the rights and usages of provinces or towns in its dominions, though it was
          only exceptionally that he ventured on such an act as the decapitation of the
          burgomaster of Dort, who had upheld a meeting of the States on their own
          motion, as allowed by the Groote Privilegie. Philip the Fair went the
          logical length of limiting his renewal of this famous Charter by a reservation
          which rendered his acceptance nugatory. That these sentiments had descended to
          Charles V was shown by the chastisement inflicted by him in 1540 upon his
          native city of Ghent - the most far-reaching, though not the most sanguinary of
          any to which in the course of her history she was subjected. In the face of
          these experiences the gradual growth of the practice of summoning the
          States-General, long resisted by Charles, but resumed during the
          governor-generalship (from 1531) of his sister Maria, Queen Dowager of Hungary,
          seemed of little account. The sufferings of the country - of Holland in
          particular - in the period preceding that of the rule of Philip the Fair were
          unforgotten by the next generation. In 1494 a new valuation of income (verponding)
          was made throughout the Netherlands, in order to rectify the modus under which
          the contributions to the bedes had hitherto been assessed on the several towns
          and villages; and this had to be again revised in 1514. A most distressful
          state of things was hereby revealed in many parts of the country - more
          especially south of Utrecht and Gelderland, where there had hardly been a break
          in the presence of the German soldiery. The number of the homesteads here had
          dwindled, the cattle had on many pastures diminished by half; along the coasts
          navigation and fisheries had declined. In some of the Zuiderzee ports the
          stillness was beginning to set in from which, owing to natural causes, there
          was to be no later awakening. What wonder that under Philip and afterwards during
          Margaret's governorship all classes in the Netherlands should have been
          practically unanimous in their desire for peace, and that even the Gelders War,
          upon a successful termination of which the achievement of political unity
          depended, was held a burden? And what favor could the endeavors expect to find
          which, set on foot by Maximilian, were carried out by Charles V for
          establishing in a new form an organic connection between the whole of the
          provinces and the Empire at large? The States took very coolly the inclusion in
          1512 of the so-called Burgundian Circle (Gelderland and Utrecht were afterwards
          added to the Westphalian) in the system of Circles established as it were
          incidentally twelve years earlier, and persistently declined to acknowledge the
          right claimed by the Emperor of taxing the provinces for imperial purposes. On
          the other hand the imperial Diet held fast to the pretension, as was shown at
          Nürnberg in 1543; and in 1548-just a century before the political bond between
          the United Provinces and the Empire was finally severed-the entire group of the
          “Burgundian hereditary lands” was included as the Burgundian Circle in the
          nexus of the Empire. It was in this shape that, with the proper safeguard of a
          reservation of the privileges and liberties of the several provinces, the
          undivided Netherlands were by the Pragmatic Sanction of 1549 settled upon
          Philip, then intended by Charles to succeed him on the Imperial as well as on
          the Spanish throne. 
           Although,
          notwithstanding the Gelders War, the Netherlands recovered something of their
          prosperity during the governorship of Margaret, the downfall of the trade and
          industry of Flanders was irremediable. Public feeling in England continued to
          favor the Netherlands, just as of old the Flemish towns had upheld the English
          alliance; but no substantial change took place for many a long year in the
          mercantile relations between the two peoples. In consequence of the decline of
          the Venetian and Genoese trade after the discovery of the Cape route to India,
          Antwerp, where the Portuguese and Spaniards found the facilities and the
          security they required, and whither they were followed by the other foreign
          "nations" from Bruges, gradually became the chief commercial port of
          Europe; while not a rivulet from the current of trade could be turned back into
          the sands of the Zwyn. Before the middle of the century the proportion of the
          total exports of the Netherlands, estimated at between six and six and a half
          million of pounds Flemish, assignable to Antwerp was reckoned at eighty per
          cent., that to Bruges at one-half per cent. While Antwerp had supplanted
          Bruges, the advance of Amsterdam was beginning to emulate that of the great
          Belgian city, and the mariners of Holland and Zeeland were in the North Sea and
          the Baltic learning to play their destined part of carriers on the ocean. 
           The great
          religious movement the eve of which this summary has reached, found the
          intellectual life of the Netherlands in a condition of stillness sufficiently
          accounted for by its political experiences. But the stillness was not
          stagnation. University studies were in fetters; but in the schools education
          was largely in the hands of men anxious to prevent any divorce between
          theological and grammatical teaching. Among the people at large publications against
          the sale of indulgences - an abuse with which the Netherlands had been
          familiarized during the previous half century - circulated before the date of
          Luther's theses; and the book of appeal, the Bible, had spread very notably in
          its Latin form, even before (some time after a version of the body of the Old
          Testament) the first Dutch New Testament appeared in 1523. The activity of the
          Windeshem convents continued till the advent of the Reformation, when the
          Fraterhuizen themselves, many of whose members adopted the doctrines of the
          reformers, fell into disuse. For the rest, although Erasmus had reason enough
          for remembering the monks of his native land, the monasticism denounced by him
          is not so much of a local as of a general type; so too was the disregard by the
          secular priesthood of one at least of the laws most conspicuously imposed upon
          their lives by the Church. Yet in the Netherlands, formerly a seedplot of
          attempts to purify life and morals which too often took a fanatical form and
          thus came to be branded as heresies, the Reformation had few immediate
          precursors. John Wessel, as has been seen, died in a convent. The Austin friars
          at Dort had been influenced by Hendrik of Zutphen, appointed their prior in
          1515 after being a pupil of Staupitz and a fellow-student of Luther. Nor do we
          meet with many enquirers upon whom the Free Spirit, which had formerly likewise
          had its Brotherhood and Sisterhood, might be thought to have descended. The
          only heretic of this sort whom Jacob van Hoogstraten, himself of Brabancon
          origin, tracked to his death in the Netherlands before the Reformation was
          Hermann of Ryswyk, burnt in 1512. 
           The share of the
          Netherlands in the history of the Renaissance, on the other hand, is, insofar
          as it has not already come under notice here, comprehended in a single name -
          Erasmus. The ducal Court, as has been seen, was not indifferent to intellectual
          abilities of many sorts and kinds; the examples of his father and half-brother
          were in a sense bettered by Bishop David of Utrecht, and a fresh impulse was
          given to the patronage of learning and its appliances by the English consort of
          Charles the Bold. The relations between Maximilian and the Renaissance were
          neither perfunctory nor casual, and justify the warmth of feeling towards him
          on the part of scholars, poets, and artists which was one of the truest
          foundations of his popularity; but no traces remain of his having found leisure
          to encourage a similar devotion in the Burgundian lands, except that among the
          statues for his own mausoleum (originally meant to be erected at Vienna) he
          gave orders for two-one of them very likely his own-to be cast in the
          Netherlands. What he left undone was not supplied either by his son Philip,
          careless of most of the graver interests of life, or by his daughter Margaret
          who, poetess as she was, needed all her strength for the business of her life.
          Thus amidst depressing influences the care of learning and letters, arts and
          science, was in the main left to the population itself, and chiefly of course
          to the towns; and from the midst of one of these, trained under influences
          which more than any other strengthened popular and civic life, came forth
          Erasmus, a born citizen of the world of letters of which he became the glory. 
           His early
          education, as has been seen, he received at Deventer under Alexander Hegius;
          but after this he had to learn by bitter experience how evil is the corruption
          of that which is good. For it may be taken as proved that the Collationary
          Brethren, in whose House he and his brother were placed to be prepared for the
          assumption of monastic vows, and whom in his celebrated letter he describes as
          so many decoys for the monastic orders proper, were Brethren of the Common Life
          under another name. A few years after he had been liberated from the cloister,
          he began his cosmopolitan career, and the Netherlands could no longer more than
          transitorily claim him as their own; and when at the height of his fame, he had
          by the Emperor's desire fixed his residence at Louvain, there was probably no
          place in the world which swarmed so thickly with his enemies, who hated him at
          least as bitterly for his actual learning as for his supposed heresy. But
          cosmopolite as he was, more especially in the years preceding this date, he was
          such rather in the sense that all countries were after a fashion alike to him,
          than that, notwithstanding occasional rhetorical flights, he identified himself
          with any. His position towards peoples as well as princes was a European one,
          and has not inaptly been compared to that of Voltaire in the eighteenth
          century; and though the Renaissance was not his movement, nor that of any one
          other man, yet his influence over its course was incomparable - even in Germany
          by the side of Reuchlin, and in England as developing the work of Colet. His
          earlier publications were mainly linguistic and literary; but it would not be
          difficult to show that in all, or nearly all of them, the educational purpose
          proper to the Renaissance movement in his native land maintained itself. In his
          Education of a Christian Prince, designed primarily for the use of the future
          Emperor Charles V, he advances political doctrines in harmony with the progress
          of the constitutional life of his own native land, and effaces the futile
          distinction between political and Christian morality. Thus, too, there is a
          real continuity between the whole of these writings and his great biblical and
          patristic labors-from which of course his one late excursion into the field of
          dogmatic controversy stands apart. It was not by chance that he was led to
          theological enquiry, as he had of his own choice addressed himself to ethical
          problems. He believed that a new era was dawning for the Church and the
          Christian religion, and that to hasten its advent was eminently a concern of
          his. But he had made up his mind that a calm and reasonable progress, in which
          scholar and statesman should go hand in hand, was the only way by which victory
          could be secured and a real and enduring reformation accomplished. Had he
          thought differently of his task, he would probably in many ways have proved
          ill-suited for the leadership of a great popular movement. But in truth, he had
          no desire in his heart to be reckoned on either side. He was content to stand
          by himself-herein a true representative of the Renaissance, whose supreme
          purpose it was after all to vindicate to every man the right of remaining true
          to his individuality by means of self-education and self-development. Whether
          or not, from this point of view also, he was in some respects a typical product
          of his native land, the Reformation as it presented itself to the Netherlands,
          and as they gave admittance to it with consequences so vital for their future
          history, was not the Reformation of Erasmus. 
           
           
           CHAPTER XIV 
           
 
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