| Commerce
was as necessary to Holland as were political and religious freedom, and
it carried on its commerce, not only friendly nations, but even with its
bitterest enemies, and to the last, it stood out resolutely and successfully
for the freedom of its trade. It did not, and it could hardly be expected
to do so, recognize the same rights of freedom of trade for other nations,
and we shall see hereafter that the decline of Dutch commerce was due
to the restrictions which it strove to put on the commercial liberty of
others, as soon as it obtained the mastery in the Indian seas, and the
one-sided commercial treaties which it negotiated with nations whom it
had not the power or the inclination to subdue. But in those days the
interest of nations overbore the passions of princes. Piracy and buccaneering
was practised between the subjects of sovereigns who were nominally at
peace with one another, and trade was carried on between the subjects
of princes who were at war with each other. In no case was this a more
marked and obvious fact than in the trade of the Dutch cities with the
Spanish ports.
After the union of
the kingdom of Portugal to that of Spain, Philip, or his advisers, began
to see that they could cripple the Dutch by interfering with their trade
at the Spanish and Portuguese ports, and efforts were made to stop it.
But these were incomplete and interrupted. There were no manufactures
in Spain from which Spanish navies could be equipped, and Spanish factors
could not buy materials at Amsterdam unless the Government winked at Dutch
trade in Cadiz and Lisbon. Besides the Spaniards wished to sell, and the
only factors whom they could employ in North-western Europe were the Dutch.
Hence for a long time after the Atlantic had been a Spanish lake, and
Holland had been at war with Philip for more than a generation, the Dutch,
though hardy and enterprising sailors, had not ventured on the Cape Passage,
or even across the Atlantic, but had taken up the trade of the East and
West where Spain had found it convenient or safe to fix its locality for
Europe, and permit the distribution of its products. The English, it is
true, had sailed round the world, though no steady trade had been the
result of this venture. It is not till the end of the century that charters
were given to traders in the Levant, and the English East India Company
was chartered, after the monopolies of Alexander the Sixth had endured
for a full century.
The first stimulus
given to maritime enterprise and discovery in Holland was the publication
of Linschotens work on the East. This man was the son of a Frieslander,
who had that passion for travel and foreign experience which, when wisely
directed, has bestowed such benefits on mankind. Linschoten lived for
two years at Lisbon, and then, getting employed among the attendants of
the Archbishop of Goa, thirteen years in Bombay. Here he patiently collected
all the information he could amass as to the country in which he lived,
as well as the character of the voyage to the East, its trade winds, harbours,
islands, and other matters of knowledge to the sailor, accompanying his
work with maps and charts. This was the first information given to the
Dutch, and indeed to the world, for the Spaniards and Portuguese kept
their knowledge of the navigation in these regions a profound secret.
Linschotens voyages was published in English in 1598, and his map
of the Indies is alluded to by Shakespeare in his play of Twelfth
Night. In Holland it excited an intense and lasting interest.
Now, for a very long
time, indeed up to very recent times, it was believed that a passage could
be found by the northern seas to China and India, and should such a discovery
be successfully made and carried forwards, that a journey of several thousand
miles would be saved. There was an ancient belief too, as old as the time
of Herodotus, that if one could once get through the barrier of ice and
snow, the navigator could sail into a new region of perpetual spring,
sunshine, and calm. The age was still uncritical, or at least unscientific,
and the fable of Hyperborean felicity of a race which lived free from
the vicissitudes of climate was still gravely believed. Linschoten, Plancius
the preacher, and Maalzoon, were eager to attempt the North-east Passage,
and Barneveldt lent them his powerful patronage. There were indeed no
maps of the regions lying beyond the White Sea and the port of Archangel
which had been sought for disastrously by Sir Hugh Willoughby, fifty years
before; but there were strong beliefs, which were accepted as certainties
by these enthusiastic Dutchmen, that the voyage would be easy and successful,
and would enable Holland at little risk to herself to take her Spanish
and Portuguese rivals in the rear.
In those days the
appliances of navigation were far behind those of modern experience and
science. The vessels were clumsy and ill-built, the nautical instruments
were rude and few, and the victualling of ships was so imperfect, that
a prolonged voyage turned the best-appointed ship into an hospital within
a few weeks. Men had no experience of an Arctic winter and no expedients
by which to meet or mitigate its rigour and severity. The weapons with
which they might defend themselves from wild animals and fierce enemies
were to be sure the best then known, but awkward to handle, and slow to
use.
On June 5, 1594,
the first expedition to the Polar seas was begun. The voyagers started
in three vessels and a fishing yacht, the vessels being supplied by the
cities of Amsterdam and Enkhuizen, and the province of Zeland. Barendz
was captain of the Amsterdam vessel, Linschoten of the other two. The
former of these visited the islands of Nova Zembla, and accurately mapped
them. Linschoten passed through the Straits of Waigatz, between these
islands and the mainland, and made for the open sea which he was informed
would be found there. After sailing for a hundred and fifty miles, he
was met by violent storms and huge ice-drifts, and saw that it was impossible,
at least on that occasion, to achieve the object of his expedition. On
August 15th he discovered Barendzs ship, and the little fleet reached
Amsterdam by the middle of September. They had strange stories to tell
of the Polar bears, and the seals, and of a new and terrible kind of animal,
the walrus; which half in sport, half in rage tried to sink their boats
with its long protruding tusks.
Linschoten was convinced
that they should reach China by the North-east and next year Barneveldt
and Maurice, as well as many of the States-General, shared his belief.
They resolved to send seven ships in 1595, and to load them with broadcloths,
linen and tapestries for the trade which they were to open up with China.
So long a time did they take in these mercantile arrangements that the
summer was half over before the fleet started. Barendz, Linschoten, and
Jacob Heemskerk were at the head of the expedition. They sailed as before
through the Straits of Waigatz, and landed on Staten Island on September
2nd. Here they were attacked by a white bear, and two of their number
were slain and half-eaten by the beast before they could dispatch him.
They soon were forced to return with the bears skin and a supply
of what they took to be diamonds, and were picking up when the bear attacked
them. They got back to Amsterdam on November 18th, and the States-General,
greatly disappointed, refused to have anything more to do directly with
Arctic navigation, though they offered a prize of 25,000 florins to any
navigator who should discover the passage, and a proportionate sum to
any one who might fail of success, but might make a praiseworthy venture.
Barendz and others
with him determined if possible to assay the North-east Passage again.
They got two ships from Amsterdam, and started on May 18, 1596. On June
19th they reached a latitude, which was within ten degrees of the pole.
To the land which they found here, they gave the name of Spitzbergen.
But in July the ice began to close about them, and they resolved if they
could to avoid it. They got back to Nova Zembla, and after various experiences
with ice and Polar bears, reached the extreme north-eastern part of the
island. Here they found open water, and were full of hope that the end
of their voyage was achieved. But they were soon undeceived, and the growing
masses of ice drove them anew into the harbour. On September 1st the ship
was frozen fast into the bergs, and it was clear that they would have
to pass through an Arctic winter. Fortunately for them the shores of the
island were covered with drift-wood, borne by ocean currents from far
distant places. They built themselves a hut, and gathered stores of fuel
for the long winter that was coming. Part of their provisions was bears
flesh, and indeed the bears would have eaten them, if they had not been
on the alert, and retaliated. On October 2nd they finished their house,
sixteen men being left of the expedition. On November 4th the sun rose
no more.
It was now too cold
for the bears. They disappeared, and white foxes took their place. The
Dutchmen caught them, ate them, and clothed themselves in their skins.
It was time, for their European clothing was frozen stiff. They nearly
in December stifled themselves by lighting a coal fire and stopping up
all the crevices in their hut. Fortunately, and before it was too late,
one of them forced open the door. As often as they could, they constantly
made their nautical and astronomical observations. On January 24th the
sun just reappeared, and on the 27th the whole disk was seen. Soon afterwards
the foxes disappeared, and the bears came back as hungry and ferocious
as ever.
On April 17th they
saw open sea in the distance. In May they determined to start back home.
But there was no hope that they could again use their ship, and they had
only two open boats to make the voyage in. On June 14th they began to
return. On June 20th Barendz, though still full of hope, died of exhaustion.
After many adventures, but without further serious danger, they arrived
at Amsterdam on November 1st. They had been absent for seventeen months,
and for ten of these months they had suffered the extremities of an Arctic
winter. The expedition closed all experiments after a North-east Passage
and the sea of the Hyperboreans. Heemskerk returned to make a great name
for himself elsewhere, and to be as great a terror to Spain as Drake had
been.
In 1595, the Dutch
reached the East Indies by the Cape Passage, and began the establishment
of that great institution, the Dutch East India Company, of which we shall
hear shortly. In 1598 another fleet started for the purpose of passing
through the Straits of Magellan into the Pacific, at that time supposed
to be the only way to the other ocean. Of the fleet which made this voyage
one only returned to Holland. The Dutch had simultaneously explored the
North and the South Poles. |