Jump to content

Adolf of Nassau (1540–1568): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Reverting edit(s) by 199.235.131.251 (talk) to rev. 1217704269 by Векочел: Vandalism (RW 16.1)
 
(32 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Count of Nassau}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2013}}
{{Expand Dutch|Adolf van Nassau (1540-1568)|date=November 2010}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}
[[File:Portret van Adolf (1540-68), graaf van Nassau Rijksmuseum SK-A-522.jpeg|thumb|right|Portrait from the workshop of [[Wybrand de Geest]], c. 1633–1635]]
[[Image:Adolfvannassau.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Adolf van Nassau]]
'''Adolf of Nassau''' ([[Dillenburg]], 11 July 1540 – [[Heiligerlee]], 23 May 1568) was a [[count of Nassau]], also known as Adolphus of Nassau. He was the fourth son and sixth child of [[William I, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg]] and [[Juliana of Stolberg]]. He was the second youngest brother of [[William the Silent]].
'''Adolf of Nassau''' ([[Dillenburg]], 11 July 1540 – [[Heiligerlee]], 23 May 1568) was a [[count of Nassau]], also known as Adolphus of Nassau. He was the fourth son and sixth child of [[William I, Count of Nassau-Siegen]] and [[Juliana of Stolberg]]. He was the second youngest brother of [[William the Silent]].


==Life==
==Life and death ==
He studied at [[Wittenberg]] and in 1566 fought against the Turks, then pushing into Europe. In 1568 his brother William the Silent took up arms against [[Philip II of Spain]] and Adolf fought beside him in [[Duchy of Brabant|Brabant]]. Adolf then joined the force under his brother [[Louis of Nassau]] in the north, where he died at the [[Battle of Heiligerlee (1568)|battle of Heiligerlee]]. The Spanish troops at Heiligerlee were commanded by [[Jan van Ligne|Arenberg]]. Heiligerlee was a Dutch victory, but this was nullified when [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo|Alva]] beheaded counts [[Lamoraal van Egmont|Egmont]] and [[Graaf Horne|Horne]] in Brussels on 5 June 1568.
He studied at [[Wittenberg]] and in 1566 fought against the Turks, then [[Siege of Szigetvár|pushing into Europe]]. In 1568 his brother William the Silent took up arms against [[Philip II of Spain]] and Adolf fought beside him in [[Duchy of Brabant|Brabant]]. Adolf then joined the force under his brother [[Louis of Nassau]] in the north, where he died at the [[Battle of Heiligerlee (1568)|Battle of Heiligerlee]] after his horse bolted and crossed Spanish lines.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=95Lbwsu1EC8C&dq=%22Adolf+of+Nassau%22+1540+heiligerlee+-wikipedia&pg=PA63 Exercise of Arms: Warfare in the Netherlands, 1568-1648 (1997), edited by Marco van der Hoeven], page 63</ref><ref name="trouw">[https://www.trouw.nl/home/eindelijk-lijkt-adolf-terecht~a7d5be5c/ Eindelijk lijkt Adolf terecht], Dagblad Trouw, 20 January 2016. [https://web.archive.org/web/20170816233433/https://www.trouw.nl/home/eindelijk-lijkt-adolf-terecht~a7d5be5c/ Archived] on 16 August 2017.</ref>
The Spanish troops at Heiligerlee were commanded by [[Jan van Ligne|Jan van Ligne, duke of Arenberg (or Aremberg)]], who also died in the battle.

=== Death at Heiligerlee ===


The death of Adolf of Nassau is mentioned in the [[Wilhelmus van Nassouwe|Dutch national anthem]] (4th verse):
The death of Adolf of Nassau is mentioned in the [[Wilhelmus van Nassouwe|Dutch national anthem]] (4th verse):


:''Graef Adolff is ghebleven, In Vriesland in den slaech,''
:''Graef Adolff is ghebleven, In Vriesland in den slaech,''
:"Count Adolf stayed behind, in Friesland, in the battle"
:"Count Adolf has died, in Friesland, in this battle"

==Burial==
There are several accounts about his burial:
* Count Adolf of Nassau and Jean de Ligne, Count of Arenberg, are said to have laid in state together in the monastic church of Mons Sinai. Later, Adolf would have been transferred to [[Midwolda]] and then to the Grote Kerk of [[Emden]].<ref name="grave">
{{cite web |url=https://www.dodenakkers.nl/artikelen-overzicht/algemeen/oranje/adolf.html |title=Het geheim gehouden graf van Graaf Adolf van Nassau |author=René ten Dam |author2=Marten Mulder |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191224085039/https://www.dodenakkers.nl/artikelen-overzicht/algemeen/oranje/adolf.html|archive-date=24 December 2019}}</ref>
*Adolf of Nassau is said to have been laid in state in the monastery church and buried with military honours in the castle in [[Wedde]]. From there he is said to have been transferred to a family castle in [[East Frisia]].<ref name="grave" />
*It is said that Adolf was buried and then exhumed to prevent the Spaniards from dishonouring his grave. He was then reburied in a secret location.<ref name=trouw />
* He may have been buried in the Grote Kerk in [[Emden]], as the castle at Wedde, the ''Wedderborg'', remained a crucial battle field in the Eighty Years' War and the Grote Kerk had become a refuge for the Dutch Protestants.<ref name=grave /><ref>Dr P.J. van Herwerden (Lodewijk van Nassau, Assen 1939) cites p. 115 ''Upstalboomblätter für Ost-Frisische Geschichte I'' (Emden 1911) p. 49 in relation to the addition of Adolf in de ''Fürstengruft'' of the counts of East Frisia in de Grote Kerk in Emden.</ref> However, there is nothing in the city archives about a possible burial of the count and the church was heavily damaged in the Second World War.
* In January 2016, historian Lammert Doedens put forward the theory that Count Adolf is buried in the Sint-Lambertus church in Oldenburg.<ref>[http://www.rug.nl/society-business/university-museum/exhibitions/2016/speurtocht-adolf-van-nassau Exhibition in the university museum Groningen, January 2016]. [https://web.archive.org/web/20160702205411/http://www.rug.nl/society-business/university-museum/exhibitions/2016/speurtocht-adolf-van-nassau Archived] op 2 July 2016.</ref> He had received a grant to investigate a family grave and came across a coffin containing the remains of thirty people. The remains of two people were determined to be non-relatives. Doedens believes that one of the two may be Adolf.


<!---
<!---
{{Link stamboom|stamboom=[[Stamboom Adolf van Nassau-Dietz (1540-1568)|Stamboom]]}}
{{Link stamboom|stamboom=[[Stamboom Adolf van Nassau-Dietz (1540-1568)|Stamboom]]}}
Adolf stierf in de [[slag bij Heiligerlee]], die door zijn broer Lodewijk werd gewonnen. Nadat de staatse troepen de Spanjaarden hadden ingesloten sloeg het paard van Adolf op hol. Hij kwam midden tussen de Spaanse troepen terecht en de Graaf van Aremberg stortte zich persoonlijk op Adolf en doodde hem en twee ruiters die hem te hulp schoten. Kort daarna wordt de Graaf van Aremberg zelf neergeschoten en sterft ook. Het is niet bekend of graaf Adolf terug gevonden is. Er zijn verschillende verhalen bekend:

*Graaf Adolf van Nassau en Johan de Ligne, graaf van Aremberg zouden samen zijn opgebaard in de kloosterkerk van Mons Sinaï. Later zou Adolf overgebracht zijn naar [[Midwolda]] en daarna naar de Grote Kerk van [[Emden]].
*Adolf van Nassau zou opgebaard zijn in de kloosterkerk en met militaire eer zijn bijgezet in het kasteel te [[Wedde (Groningen)|Wedde]]. Van daaruit zou hij zijn overgebracht naar een stamslot in [[Oost-Friesland]].

Waarschijnlijk is hij bijgezet in de Grote Kerk in Emden want het kasteel in Wedde, de [[Wedderborg]], bleef een middelpunt van de strijd in de [[Tachtigjarige Oorlog]]. De Grote Kerk in Emden daarentegen was een toevluchtsoord voor de Nederlandse [[protestantisme|protestanten]] geworden. Ook is het zeer waarschijnlijk dat hij hier ligt omdat het [[harnas]] van de graaf nog altijd te zien is in het raadhuis van Emden. Dit lijkt het bewijs dat zijn lichaam wel degelijk is teruggevonden en is vervoerd naar Emden. Het is alleen niet zeker dat Adolf hier is begraven. In de stadsarchieven valt niets terug te vinden over een eventuele begrafenis van de graaf, en de kerk is in de Tweede Wereldoorlog zwaar beschadigd dus is er van het interieur weinig overgebleven. Zijn laatste rustplaats is nog altijd onbekend.
--->
--->


== Memorials ==
== The Graaf Adolfmonument ==
[[Image:Monument Battle of Heiligerlee.jpeg|thumb|Monument to the battle of Heiligerlee]]
[[Image:Monument Battle of Heiligerlee.jpeg|thumb|200px|Monument to the battle of Heiligerlee by Joseph Geefs, from a design by J.H. Egenberger. Its plaque reads: '15 May 1568, the first victory in the [[Dutch Revolt|eighty-years struggle]] for the freedom of the Netherlands']]
The first monument to Adolf was a simple truncated obelisk with an urn, created in 1826. It was poorly maintained and, by 1868, was badly deteriorated. That year, it was torn down and a contest was organized to design a replacement for Adolf's three-hundredth anniversary. The winning design was by the painter [[Johannes Hinderikus Egenberger|J.H. Egenberger]], in conjunction with Pieter Schenkenberg van Mierop (1837-1904), an architect who later emigrated to the United States. The design features a dying Adolf, protected by the [[Dutch Maiden]].
<!---
Bij Heiligerlee is voor Graaf Adolf een monument opgericht. Op deze plek stond eerst een geknotte gedenknaald met daarop een urn. Deze was neergezet in [[1826]], op deze gedenknaald stond de tekst: “Den overwonnen held Graaf Adolf van Nassau hier ten plaatse voor ’s lands vrijheid gesneuveld den 23e Mei 1568”. Het monument werd slecht onderhouden en raakte in verval. In [[1868]] werd er een wedstrijd uitgeschreven om een grootser monument te vervaardigen ter ere van de driehonderdste sterfdag van de Graaf. Het winnende beeld was van de schilder [[Johannes Hinderikus Egenberger|J.H. Egenberger]] en de architect P. Schenkenberg van Mierop. Omdat de schilder bijna geen ervaring had als beeldhouwer werd de hulp van de Belgische Joseph Geels gevraagd. J.H. Egenberger ontwierp een stervende Adolf, ondersteund door de Nederlandse maagd.


The contract for executing the statue was given to the Belgian sculptor, [[Joseph Geefs]]. Originally, Van Mierop wanted the monument to be placed on a stone hill but, after some disagreement, Geefs designed an octagonal pedestal. The first foundation stone was laid on 23 May 1868, by [[William, Prince of Orange]] and [[Prince Henry of the Netherlands (governor)|Prince Henry]]. On the same day, five years later, the monument was unveiled by King [[William III of the Netherlands|William III]].
[[Willem der Nederlanden (1840-1879)|Kroonprins Willem]] en [[Hendrik der Nederlanden|prins Hendrik de Zeevaarder]] legden op [[23 mei]] [[1868]] de eerste steen van het monument. P. Schenkenberg van Mierop wilde het monument op een stenen heuvel laten plaatsen maar dit zorgde voor de nodige meningverschillen. Joseph Geels ontwierp daarom het achtvoetige voetstuk. Op de voorkant van dit voetstuk staat de tekst: “25 mei 1568. De eerste zege in de tachtigjarige worsteling voor vrijheid der Nederlanden”. Op de rechterzijde staat:”Graaf Adolf van Nassau bleef in den roemrijken slag”. Op de linkerzijde staat: “Oranje met Nederland verbonden” en op de achterzijde:”25 mei 1868. Door het nageslacht den vaderen gewijd”. Op 23 mei [[1873]] vond de onthulling plaats door [[Willem III der Nederlanden|koning Willem III]].


==References==
Ook in het vierde couplet van het [[Wilhelmus]] wordt zijn naam nadrukkelijk genoemd. Het luidt als volgt:
{{reflist}}


==External links==
:''Lyf en goet al te samen''
{{commons category-inline}}
:''Heb ick u niet verschoont,''
:''Mijn broeders hooch van Namen''
:''Hebbent u oock vertoont:''
:''Graef Adolff is ghebleven''
:''In Vriesland in den slaech,''
:''Syn Siel int ewich Leven''
:''Verwacht den Jongsten dach''--->


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Adolf of Nassau}}
{{Persondata
|NAME= Adolf Of Nassau
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= Count of Nassau
|DATE OF BIRTH= 11 July 1540
|PLACE OF BIRTH=
|DATE OF DEATH= 23 May 1568
|PLACE OF DEATH=
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Adolf Of Nassau}}
[[Category:1540 births]]
[[Category:1540 births]]
[[Category:1568 deaths]]
[[Category:1568 deaths]]
Line 59: Line 46:
[[Category:Dutch people of the Eighty Years' War (United Provinces)]]
[[Category:Dutch people of the Eighty Years' War (United Provinces)]]
[[Category:People from Dillenburg]]
[[Category:People from Dillenburg]]
[[Category:Sons of counts]]

Latest revision as of 15:39, 14 June 2024

Portrait from the workshop of Wybrand de Geest, c. 1633–1635

Adolf of Nassau (Dillenburg, 11 July 1540 – Heiligerlee, 23 May 1568) was a count of Nassau, also known as Adolphus of Nassau. He was the fourth son and sixth child of William I, Count of Nassau-Siegen and Juliana of Stolberg. He was the second youngest brother of William the Silent.

Life and death

[edit]

He studied at Wittenberg and in 1566 fought against the Turks, then pushing into Europe. In 1568 his brother William the Silent took up arms against Philip II of Spain and Adolf fought beside him in Brabant. Adolf then joined the force under his brother Louis of Nassau in the north, where he died at the Battle of Heiligerlee after his horse bolted and crossed Spanish lines.[1][2] The Spanish troops at Heiligerlee were commanded by Jan van Ligne, duke of Arenberg (or Aremberg), who also died in the battle.

The death of Adolf of Nassau is mentioned in the Dutch national anthem (4th verse):

Graef Adolff is ghebleven, In Vriesland in den slaech,
"Count Adolf has died, in Friesland, in this battle"

Burial

[edit]

There are several accounts about his burial:

  • Count Adolf of Nassau and Jean de Ligne, Count of Arenberg, are said to have laid in state together in the monastic church of Mons Sinai. Later, Adolf would have been transferred to Midwolda and then to the Grote Kerk of Emden.[3]
  • Adolf of Nassau is said to have been laid in state in the monastery church and buried with military honours in the castle in Wedde. From there he is said to have been transferred to a family castle in East Frisia.[3]
  • It is said that Adolf was buried and then exhumed to prevent the Spaniards from dishonouring his grave. He was then reburied in a secret location.[2]
  • He may have been buried in the Grote Kerk in Emden, as the castle at Wedde, the Wedderborg, remained a crucial battle field in the Eighty Years' War and the Grote Kerk had become a refuge for the Dutch Protestants.[3][4] However, there is nothing in the city archives about a possible burial of the count and the church was heavily damaged in the Second World War.
  • In January 2016, historian Lammert Doedens put forward the theory that Count Adolf is buried in the Sint-Lambertus church in Oldenburg.[5] He had received a grant to investigate a family grave and came across a coffin containing the remains of thirty people. The remains of two people were determined to be non-relatives. Doedens believes that one of the two may be Adolf.


The Graaf Adolfmonument

[edit]
Monument to the battle of Heiligerlee by Joseph Geefs, from a design by J.H. Egenberger. Its plaque reads: '15 May 1568, the first victory in the eighty-years struggle for the freedom of the Netherlands'

The first monument to Adolf was a simple truncated obelisk with an urn, created in 1826. It was poorly maintained and, by 1868, was badly deteriorated. That year, it was torn down and a contest was organized to design a replacement for Adolf's three-hundredth anniversary. The winning design was by the painter J.H. Egenberger, in conjunction with Pieter Schenkenberg van Mierop (1837-1904), an architect who later emigrated to the United States. The design features a dying Adolf, protected by the Dutch Maiden.

The contract for executing the statue was given to the Belgian sculptor, Joseph Geefs. Originally, Van Mierop wanted the monument to be placed on a stone hill but, after some disagreement, Geefs designed an octagonal pedestal. The first foundation stone was laid on 23 May 1868, by William, Prince of Orange and Prince Henry. On the same day, five years later, the monument was unveiled by King William III.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Exercise of Arms: Warfare in the Netherlands, 1568-1648 (1997), edited by Marco van der Hoeven, page 63
  2. ^ a b Eindelijk lijkt Adolf terecht, Dagblad Trouw, 20 January 2016. Archived on 16 August 2017.
  3. ^ a b c René ten Dam; Marten Mulder. "Het geheim gehouden graf van Graaf Adolf van Nassau". Archived from the original on 24 December 2019.
  4. ^ Dr P.J. van Herwerden (Lodewijk van Nassau, Assen 1939) cites p. 115 Upstalboomblätter für Ost-Frisische Geschichte I (Emden 1911) p. 49 in relation to the addition of Adolf in de Fürstengruft of the counts of East Frisia in de Grote Kerk in Emden.
  5. ^ Exhibition in the university museum Groningen, January 2016. Archived op 2 July 2016.
[edit]

Media related to Adolph of Nassau-Siegen (1568) at Wikimedia Commons