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THE STORY OF HOLLAND.
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XXVI.
THE THIRTY YEARS WAR, AND THE RENEWAL OF HOSTILITIES.
THE
twelve years truce expired in August, 1621, and hostilities recommenced.
There was, however, another war of far greater significance going on,
to which the Dutch war was only an episode. No war ever waged had more
lasting results than the so-called Thirty Years War, which began
with the revolt of Bohemia, and was concluded by what is variously called
the Treaty of Westphalia and the Peace of Munster. The Treaty of Westphalia
was held to have established the balance of power in Europe, and was always
appealed to afterwards when war took place and disputes were settled.
Wars, as the Greek
philosopher said, are set in motion by trivial causee, but owe their existence
to great causes. The trivial causes of the Thirty Years War were
the succession to the duchies of Cleves and Juliers, and the revolt of
Bohemia from the Austrian succession. The real or great causes were, the
hostility of Catholic and Protestant, the determination of the Emperor
to make himself the real master of Germany, and the determination of the
French Government so to weaken the German Empire that Flanders and the
frontier of the Rhine might eventually fall into its hands. This has been
the policy of France for centuries, and it was its policy in 1870. In
1610 just before he was assassinated, Henry IV. of France had resolved
to humiliate the house of Austria. His sons minister never forgot
that object.
The mad Duke of Cleves
and Juliers, a district situated on the border of Holland, died in 1609,
and the succession fell to two of his nieces, the Countesses of Brandenburg
and Neuburg. The Dutch interfered to prevent the duchies from being confiscated
by the Emperor, and put the two countesses in possession as tenants in
common. But from interested motives the latter of these in 1614 became
a Roman Catholic, and hoped to enlist the Emperor and the Duke of Bavaria,
who afterwards got possession of the Palatinate on her side. Shortly afterwards
the Evangelical Union and the Catholic League came to blows over the election
of the head of the former association to the crown of Bohemia, on the
death of the Emperor Matthias. It was the old story, the determination
of the Catholics to root out the Protestants, and of the Protestants to
defend themselves.
The Dutch were unwilling
to break the truce, and the Lutheran princes were indisposed to assist
the Elector Palatine. But the Catholic princes were active enough. The
Elector was stripped of his hereditary dominions, and very speedily, at
the battle of the White Mountain, was constrained to relinquish Bohemia.
But I am only indirectly concerned with the horrible Thirty Years
War, which was continued for interested motives, and threw Germany back
for two centuries. In 1621, the twelve years truce being expired,
the King of Spain and the Archdukes offered to renew it, on the condition
that the States would acknowledge their ancient sovereigns, one of whom,
the Archduke Albert, died this year. Even if the States had been inclined
to negotiate, the will of Maurice was in the ascendant, and the war was
renewed. The Dutch, it is true, were now entirely insulated. James of
England was making overtures to Spain, and being cajoled. France, who
had wished to save Barneveldt, was unfriendly in consequence of the manner
in which her intercession had been treated. The Dutch party which was
opposed to Maurice was exasperated, and the great counsellor was no more
there to advise his country in its emergencies. The safety of Holland
lay in the fact that the wars of religion were being waged on a wider
and more distant field, for a larger stake, and with larger armies. Not
content with murdering Barneveldt, Maurice took care to ruin his family.
But at last, and just before his death in 1625, Maurice, in the bitterness
of disappointment, said, As long as the old rascal was alive, we
had counsels and money; now we can find neither one nor the other.
Maurice had irreconcilably injured those who alone could supply him with
both. The memory of Barneveldt was avenged, even though his reputation
has not been rehabilitated.
Frederic Henry, half-brother
of Maurice, was at once made Captain and Admiral-General of the States,
and soon after Stadtholder. In military capacity, Frederic was reputed
to be his brothers equal, and in all that was required for civil
administration to be his superior. The new Stadtholder was much more disposed
to subordinate his ambition to the constitution than his predecessor was,
and apart from the fact that he rather inclined to the Arminian or Remonstrant
party, he was not the man who would lend the powers of government to a
theological wrangle. Besides, in a free constitution, it is a difficult
thing to perpetuate a polemical war. Unless an attempt is made to identify
a religious opinion with a political one, as, for example, happened for
a century and a half in Scotland, the fires of controversy are soon exhausted.
In Holland the two sects were equally devoted to the good of their country,
equally resolute in defending it against the common foe, equally resolved
to maintain the liberties which they had won after a forty years
war. The house of Orange, too, in the person of its existing head, was
counselling moderation, and very speedily the controversy which had threatened
to tear Holland asunder was silenced by mutual consent, except in synods
and presbyteries. In a few years, Holland became, as far as the government
was concerned, the most tolerant country in the world, the asylum of those
whom bigotry hunted from their native land. Hence it became the favourite
abode of those wealthy and enterprising Jews, who greatly increased its
wealth by aiding its external and internal commerce. |

FREDERIC, PRINCE OF ORANGE.
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military activity of Frederic Henry was assisted by the growing weakness
of Spain, and by the diversion of the wars of religion into a wider field.
But it was especially on sea that the Hollanders were triumphant. In 1628
they captured the entire silver fleet of the Spaniards, on the punctual
arrival of which all Spanish finance depended, and in the next year, almost
annihilated the pirates of Dunkirk. And though the differences between
England and the States on the one hand, and France on the other, led the
Spanish party to offer another truce, the Dutch were disinclined to forego
the advantages which, in their opinion, they were obtaining and consolidating
by the continuance of hostilities, for every year made the Dutch East
India Company more powerful, its trade more lucrative, and its influence
more secure.
It was not, however,
in the Eastern seas only that the maritime power of the Dutch was conspicuous.
They began to attack Spain and Portugal in the New World, and to establish
forts and factories on the eastern coast of North and South America, from
the Hudson to the La Plata rivers. The Dutch West India Company was as
energetic and successful as the East India, though its trade was not so
important, and its conquests not so durable. Meanwhile the military abilities,
the constitutional policy, and the generally wise administration of the
Stadtholder, induced the States, in a fit of unthinking gratitude, to
make the office which he held hereditary, for they gave the reversion
or succession of his office to his son William, then only five years old.
This was the beginning of that discord between the States and their chief
magistrate, which, more than anything else caused the downfall of Holland.
The victories of
Gustavus Adolphus materially strengthened the Dutch, and enabled them
not only to protect their own frontier, but to enlarge it at the expense
of the Archduchess, who died in 1633, when the Netherlands reverted to
the Spanish monarchy. Under these circumstances, the States entered into
still closer relations with France. Richelieu, the minister of the French
king, wished to continue the war with the double object of weakening the
house of Austria in Germany, and after expelling the Spanish from the
Netherlands, of securing a paramount influence in that part of the Low
Countries. Hence, though reluctantly, the States agreed to make no peace
or truce except in concert with France; and stipulated for the partition
of the Spanish Netherlands whenever the conquest was effected, unless
these provinces should achieve their own independence, when the States
and France were to protect them. It is probable that the Dutch foresaw
that this compact, so dangerous to them, would never be carried out. It
is certain that it rather hindered than promoted the accord between France
and Holland.
It was in the year
1637, that the extraordinary mania for speculating in tulip roots took
possession of the Dutch. Millions of guilders were staked on these roots,
and large fortunes were made and lost in the traffic. It is, of course,
nothing strange in the history of commerce that wild speculations, which,
in ordinary times would have had no chance of existence, have overturned
the reason and bewildered the judgment of the most sober traders. The
English had their South Sea Bubble; the French their Mississippi Scheme.
But the curious thing in the Dutch tulip mania is that it sprang out of
that passion for horticulture in which the Dutch were pre-eminent, and
from which they conferred lasting benefits on civilization, and that it
occurred at a time when Holland was engaged in a peculiarly costly war,
when the country was under the delusion that public wealth could be secured
by foreign conquests, and when, though some men grew rich, the general
burden of taxation was almost intolerable. If one searches through history,
one can never find a single case in which public opulence can he traced
to foreign conquest, in which the cost to the public of occupying and
maintaining such conquests has not been greatly in excess of all the profit
which private interests have secured from them. This is clearly discernible
in the conquests of Spain, France, and even England. The trading companies
of the Dutch effected the financial ruin of Holland.
In 1639, another
Spanish fleet was annihilated by Tromp in a naval battle off the English
Downs. The place of combat was off the English coast, and Charles would
have resented it, if he could, or if the relations in which he stood to
his people had permitted it. After this victory the States assumed the
title of High Mightinesses, or high and mighty lords. This apparent departure
from Republican simplicity was, in the opinion of the States, essential,
in order that they might take their proper place among European Powers.
Perhaps in no time has the assumption or bestowal of pompous titles been
more conspicuous or ludicrous than at present, when the princes of half-savage
states are decorated with the titles of Majesty. But in the seventeenth
century these absurd distinctions had a meaning, as the Dutch discerned
at the time when they were negotiating the truce of 1609.
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ADMIRAL TROMP.
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1641, the son of the Stadtholder was married to the eldest daughter of
Charles I, the first occasion on which any of the house of Orange had
formed an alliance with the reigning families of Europe. The English king
was reconciled to the marriage, because he thought that he would be able
to secure a powerful ally against the Scotch malcontents, who were at
that time the only open enemies of the Government. This marriage was the
beginning of great misfortunes to the Dutch, and Holland eventually suffered
nearly as seriously by matrimonial alliances with the Stewart and Hanoverian
kings, as the old Netherlands had by the marriages of the houses of Burgundy
and Austria. In the same year, Spain was further enfeebled by the revolt
of Portugal, under John of Braganza, and the reconciliation of Holland
with the rulers of that part of the empire of Philip II. Spain could not,
since Portugal reclaimed its possessions in the East Indies, pretend to
exclude Holland from what was no longer, under any colour, theirs.
It would be tedious
and unprofitable to deal with the last events of the long war which came
to an end with the peace of Munster. In this peace, the negotiations of
which were exceedingly protracted, owing to the difficulty of reconciling
the claims of conquest with the claims of original authority, Holland
gained all which it had demanded in 1609. The Spanish Government absolutely
relinquished all claims and titles, and acknowledged the complete independence
of the Dutch. They were allowed to remain the lords of all which they
had acquired during the course of their protracted wars. The Scheldt was
to be closed by the Dutch, and Antwerp to be ruined as a commercial city.
Peace was proclaimed on June 5, 1648, the day on which Horn and Egmont
had been executed eighty years before. The Stadtholder had died on March
14, 1647, and his son William had succeeded him.
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