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{{Short description|First phase of the Eighty Years' War}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}{{Use British English|date=July 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}{{Use British English|date=July 2022}}
[[File:Dirck van Delen - Beeldenstorm in een kerk.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|The ''[[Beeldenstorm]]'' or [[Iconoclasm|Iconoclastic Fury]] was a more or less organised destruction of Catholic sacred objects which swept through the Habsburg Netherlands' churches in 1566. 1630 painting by [[Dirck van Delen]]]]
Draft for a synthesis of the 1566 – April 1572 period in the [[Eighty Years' War]] (see [[Talk:Eighty_Years%27_War#Merger_proposal]] for motivation), taken from
* [[Eighty_Years%27_War#Insurrection,_repression_and_invasion_(1566–1572))]]
* [[Eighty_Years%27_War_(1566–1609)#Insurrection,_repression_and_invasion_(1566–1572)]]
* [[Dutch_Revolt#1566 — Iconoclasm and repression]]
* [[Causes_of_the_Dutch_Revolt#Unrest_and_Spanish_military_reaction]] and [[Causes_of_the_Dutch_Revolt#Opposition_in_exile]]
{{Campaignbox Dutch Revolt}}
{{Campaignbox Dutch Revolt}}
The period between the start of the [[Beeldenstorm]] in August 1566 until early 1572 (before the [[Capture of Brielle]] on 1 April 1572) contained the first events of a series that would later be known as the [[Eighty Years' War]] between the [[Spanish Empire]] and disparate groups of rebels in the [[Habsburg Netherlands]].{{efn|"...the starting phase of the Revolt in Zeeland. We label the 1566–1572 period as the ''strike up'' to the Revolt: years in which the resistance against central authority, grown out to a rebellion, began to powerfully manifest itself."{{sfn|Rooze-Stouthamer|2009|p=11–12}}}} Some of the first pitched battles and sieges between radical [[Calvinist]]s and Habsburg governmental forces took place in the years 1566–1567, followed by the arrival and government takeover by [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba]] (simply known as "Alba" or "Alva") with an army of 10,000 Spanish and Italian soldiers. Next, an ill-fated invasion by the most powerful nobleman of the Low Countries, the exiled but still-Catholic [[William the Silent|William "the Silent" of Orange]], failed to inspire a general anti-government revolt. Although the war seemed over before it got underway, in the years 1569–1571, Alba's repression grew severe, and opposition against his regime mounted to new heights and became susceptible to rebellion.

Although virtually all historians place the start of the war somewhere in this period, there is no [[Historiography of the Eighty Years' War#Name and periodisation|historical consensus]] on which exact event should be considered to have begun the war. Consequently, there is no agreement whether the war really lasted exactly eighty years. For this and other reasons, some historians have endeavoured to replace the name "Eighty Years' War" with "Dutch Revolt", but there is also no consensus either to which period the term "Dutch Revolt" should apply (be it the prelude to the war, the initial stage(s) of the war, or the entire war).<ref name="Encarta problematiek">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Tachtigjarige Oorlog §1. Historische problematiek |encyclopedia=[[Encarta]] Encyclopedie [[Winkler Prins]] |date=1993–2002 |publisher=Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum |language=nl}}</ref>

== Origins ==
{{excerpt|Origins of the Eighty Years' War}}

== Events and developments ==
== Events and developments ==
=== ''Beeldenstorm'' (August – November 1566) ===
=== ''Beeldenstorm'' (August–November 1566) ===
[[File:UtrechtIconoclasm.jpg|thumb|[[Relief]] statues in [[St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht]], attacked in [[Reformation]] iconoclasm in the 16th century.<ref>[http://www.domkerk.nl/domchurch/history.html "The birth and growth of Utrecht"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214132418/http://www.domkerk.nl/domchurch/history.html |date=14 December 2013 }}</ref>]]
[[File:Dirck van Delen - Beeldenstorm in een kerk.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|The ''[[Beeldenstorm]]'' or [[Iconoclasm|Iconoclastic Fury]] was a more or less organised destruction of Catholic sacred objects which swept through the Habsburg Netherlands' churches in 1566. 1630 painting by [[Dirk van Delen]]]]
{{Main|Beeldenstorm}}
{{Main|Beeldenstorm}}
The atmosphere in the Netherlands was tense due to preaching of [[Calvinism|Calvinist]] leaders, hunger after the bad harvest of 1565, and economic difficulties due to the [[Northern Seven Years' War]].{{sfn|Parker|1985|p=74–75}} The [[Compromise of Nobles]] led to the lesser nobility of the Habsburg Netherlands offering a petition to governor-general [[Margaret of Parma]] on 5 April 1566 to moderate the ''placards'' against heresy which were used for persecuting Protestants.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=69–71}} One of her aides supposedly insulted the nobles by calling them ''gueux'', French for "beggars"; this word evolved to Dutch ''[[geuzen]]'' which the nobles and other dissidents would soon [[Reappropriation|reappropriate as a badge of pride]].{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} On 9 April, the duchess decided to temporarily suspend them and await further instructions from king [[Philip II of Spain]] on what to do,{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} but suspension of the ''placards'' emboldened the Protestants.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} Some returned from exile.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} Calvinists started to organise open-air sermons ({{langx|nl|hagepreken}}, "hedge-sermons") outside the city walls of many cities.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} Though these meetings were peaceful, their size alone caused anxiety for the authorities, especially as some of the people attending bore arms.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} Then, the situation deteriorated rapidly. On 1 August 1566, 2000 armed Calvinists tried to force entry to the walled town of [[Veurne]], but they failed.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} They were led by {{ill|Sebastiaan Matte|nl|Sebastiaan Matte}}, who was a hatmaker by trade, but turned into a Calvinist preacher.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} He and other Calvinist weavers from the industrial area around [[Ypres]] such as {{ill|Jacob de Buzere|nl|Jacob de Buzere}} then started attacking churches and destroying religious statuary in western Flanders.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} On 10 August 1566, their first target was a monastery church at [[Steenvoorde]] in Flanders (now in Northern France), which was sacked by a mob led by Sebastiaan Matte.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}}<ref>{{cite book |last1=Parker |first1=Geoffrey |title=The Dutch revolt |date=1985 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=London, England |oclc=39920102 |isbn=9780140137125 |edition=Rev. |pages=74–75}}</ref> This incident was followed by similar riots elsewhere in Flanders, and before long the Netherlands had become the scene of the [[Beeldenstorm]]. This [[iconoclasm|iconoclastic]] movement was planned and organised by prominent Calvinists,{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} who supervised the actions of men (who had no property themselves{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}}) in storming churches and other religious buildings to desecrate and destroy church art and all kinds of decorative fittings over most of the country.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} The number of actual statue-breakers appears to have been relatively small,<ref>Limm (1989) notes that "there were few cases of more than 200 people being involved at any one time", even in the northern provinces, where large crowds often attended the iconoclasm (p. 25). In the case of the southern provinces, he speaks of a relatively small, orderly group moving along the country.</ref> and the exact backgrounds of the movement are debated,<ref>See Spaans (1999), 152 ff., where she argues that iconoclasm was actually organised by local elites for political reasons (Spaans, J. "Catholicism and Resistance to the Reformation in the Northern Netherlands". In: Benedict, Ph., and others (eds), ''Reformation, Revolt and Civil War in France and the Netherlands, 1555–1585'' (Amsterdam 1999), pp. 149–163).</ref> but in general local authorities did not rein in the [[vandalism]]. The actions of the iconoclasts drove the nobility into two camps, with Orange and other [[grandee]]s opposing the movement and others, notably [[Hendrick van Brederode]], supporting it.<ref name="Horst134"/>
[[File:UtrechtIconoclasm.jpg|thumb|[[Relief]] statues in the [[Cathedral of Saint Martin, Utrecht]], attacked in [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]] iconoclasm in the 16th century.<ref>[http://www.domkerk.nl/domchurch/history.html "The birth and growth of Utrecht"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214132418/http://www.domkerk.nl/domchurch/history.html |date=14 December 2013 }}</ref>]]
The atmosphere in the Netherlands was tense due to preaching of [[Calvinism|Calvinist]] leaders, hunger after the bad harvest of 1565, and economic difficulties due to the [[Northern Seven Years' War]].{{sfn|Parker|1985|p=74–75}} The [[Compromise of Nobles]] led to the lesser nobility of the Habsburg Netherlands offering a petition to governor-general [[Margaret of Parma]] on 5 April 1566 to moderate the ''placards'' against heresy which were used for persecuting Protestants.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=69–71}} On 9 April, the duchess decided to temporarily suspend them and await further instructions from king [[Philip II of Spain]] on what to do,{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} but suspension of the ''placards'' emboldened the Protestants.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} Some returned from exile.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} Calvinists started to organise open-air sermons ({{lang-nl|hagepreken}}, "hedge-sermons") outside the city walls of many cities.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} Though these meetings were peaceful, their size alone caused anxiety for the authorities, especially as some of the people attending bore arms.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=70}} Then, the situation deteriorated rapidly. On 1 August 1566, 2000 armed Calvinists tried to force entry to the walled town of [[Veurne]], but they failed.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} They were led by {{ill|Sebastiaan Matte|nl|Sebastiaan Matte}}, who was a hatmaker by trade, but turned into a Calvinist preacher.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} He and other Calvinist weavers from the industrial area around [[Ypres]] such as {{ill|Jacob de Buzere|nl|Jacob de Buzere}} then started attacking churches and destroying religious statuary in western Flanders.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} On 10 August 1566, their first target was a monastery church at [[Steenvoorde]] in Flanders (now in Northern France), which was sacked by a mob led by Sebastiaan Matte.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}}<ref>G. Parker, ''The Dutch Revolt''. Revised edition (1985), pp. 74–75.</ref> This incident was followed by similar riots elsewhere in Flanders, and before long the Netherlands had become the scene of the [[Beeldenstorm]]. This [[iconoclasm|iconoclastic]] movement was planned and organised by prominent Calvinists,{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} who supervised the actions of men (who had no property themselves{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}}) in storming churches and other religious buildings to desecrate and destroy church art and all kinds of decorative fittings over most of the country.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71}} The number of actual statue-breakers appears to have been relatively small,<ref>Limm (1989) notes that "there were few cases of more than 200 people being involved at any one time", even in the northern provinces, where large crowds often attended the iconoclasm (p. 25). In the case of the southern provinces, he speaks of a relatively small, orderly group moving along the country.</ref> and the exact backgrounds of the movement are debated,<ref>See Spaans (1999), 152 ff., where she argues that iconoclasm was actually organised by local elites for political reasons (Spaans, J. "Catholicism and Resistance to the Reformation in the Northern Netherlands". In: Benedict, Ph., and others (eds), ''Reformation, Revolt and Civil War in France and the Netherlands, 1555–1585'' (Amsterdam 1999), pp. 149–163).</ref> but in general local authorities did not rein in the [[vandalism]]. The actions of the iconoclasts drove the nobility into two camps, with Orange and other [[grandee]]s opposing the movement and others, notably [[Hendrik van Brederode|Henry of Brederode]], supporting it.<ref name="Horst134"/>


=== First battles and repression (December 1566 – March 1567) ===
=== First battles and repression (December 1566 – March 1567) ===
[[File:Famien Strada Histoire-Taking of Valenciennes-ppn087811480 MG 8902T2p025.tif|thumb|350px|left|The [[Siege of Valenciennes (1567)]] portrayed in [[Famiano Strada]]'s ''De bello belgico decades duae'' (reprint 1727)]]
The authorities at first did not react. The central government was especially disturbed by the fact that in many cases the civic militias refused to intervene. This seemed to portend insurrection. Margaret, and also authorities at lower levels, feared insurrection and made further concessions to the Calvinists, such as designating certain churches for Calvinist worship.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Some provincial [[stadtholder]]s used force to confront the unrest, foremost [[Philip of Noircarmes]] of [[County of Hainaut|Hainaut]], who suppressed the revolt of the Calvinists led by [[Guido de Bres]] during the [[Siege of Valenciennes (1567)|Siege of Valenciennes (6 December 1566 – 24 March 1567)]]. Rebel attempts to relieve Valenciennes were crushed in the [[Battle of Wattrelos]] (27 December 1566) and the [[Battle of Lannoy]] (29 December 1566). For his part as stadtholder of [[County of Holland|Holland]] and [[County of Zeeland|Zeeland]], [[William the Silent|William of Orange]] took decisive action to quell the disturbances.<ref>Israel (1995), pp. 137-153</ref>
The authorities at first did not react. The central government was especially disturbed by the fact that in many cases the civic militias refused to intervene. This seemed to portend insurrection. Margaret, and also authorities at lower levels, feared insurrection and made further concessions to the Calvinists, such as designating certain churches for Calvinist worship.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Some provincial [[stadtholder]]s used force to confront the unrest, foremost [[Philip of Noircarmes]] of [[County of Hainaut|Hainaut]], who suppressed the revolt of the Calvinists led by [[Guido de Bres]] during the [[Siege of Valenciennes (1567)|Siege of Valenciennes (6 December 1566 – 23 March 1567)]].<ref name="Van der Lem Bres">{{Cite web |url=https://dutchrevolt.leiden.edu/dutch/personen/B/pages/bres.aspx |title=Brès, Guido de |author=Anton van der Lem |work=dutchrevolt.leiden.edu |publisher=Leiden University |date= |access-date=30 July 2022 |language=nl}}</ref> After the parties could not reach a compromise, and Valenciennes refused to accept a royal garrison, the city was declared in a state of rebellion on 14 December 1566.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://dutchrevolt.leiden.edu/dutch/geografie/V/Pages/valenciennes.aspx |title=Valenciennes / Valencijn |author=Yves Junot |work=dutchrevolt.leiden.edu |publisher=Leiden University |date= |access-date=30 July 2022 |language=fr}}</ref> Rebel attempts to relieve Valenciennes were crushed in the [[Battle of Wattrelos]] (27 December 1566) and the [[Battle of Lannoy]] (29 December 1566). For his part as stadtholder of [[County of Holland|Holland]] and [[County of Zeeland|Zeeland]], [[William the Silent|William of Orange]] took decisive action to quell the disturbances.{{sfn|Israel|1995|p=137–153}}


Other noblemen attempted a more conciliatory approach. After the Beeldenstorm reached the city of [[Tournai]] on 23 August 1566, the Calvinists (who claimed to constitute three fourths of Tournai's population<ref>{{aut|W.J.F. Nuyens}}, [http://books.google.com/books?id=PYw6AAAAcAAJ&printsec=frontcover&hl=nl#v=onepage&q&f=false ''Geschiedenis der nederlandsche beroerten in de XVIe eeuw: Geschiedenis van den oorsprong en het begin der nederlandsche beroerten: (1559 - 1567)''] (1866) 163.</ref>) demanded their own church buildings. Margaret of Parma dispatched [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn]]e to restore order, and he sought to achieve this through a kind of religious peace, including allowing the Calvinists to build their own churches. Margaret of Parma and king Philip resented him for this, and they recalled Horne.<ref>Encarta-encyclopedie Winkler Prins (1993-2002) s.v. ''Horne''. Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.</ref> On 2 January 1567, Philip of Noircarmes reconquered Tournai without a fight, and disarmed the civilians.<ref>{{aut|J.L. Motley & R.C. Bakhuizen-van den Brink}}, [http://books.google.nl/books?id=9F1bAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false ''De opkomst van de Nederlandsche Republiek, Volume 2''] (1860) 165.</ref>
Other noblemen attempted a more conciliatory approach. After the Beeldenstorm reached the city of [[Tournai]] on 23 August 1566, the Calvinists (who claimed to constitute three fourths of Tournai's population<ref>{{aut|W.J.F. Nuyens}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=PYw6AAAAcAAJ ''Geschiedenis der nederlandsche beroerten in de XVIe eeuw: Geschiedenis van den oorsprong en het begin der nederlandsche beroerten: (1559 - 1567)''] (1866) 163.</ref>) demanded their own church buildings. Margaret of Parma dispatched [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn]] to restore order, and he sought to achieve this through a kind of religious peace, including allowing the Calvinists to build their own churches. Margaret of Parma and king Philip resented him for this, and they recalled Horne.<ref>Encarta-encyclopedie Winkler Prins (1993-2002) s.v. ''Horne''. Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.</ref> In January 1567, Philip of Noircarmes retook Tournai.<ref name="Van der Lem Bres"/>


On 13 March 1567 at the [[Battle of Oosterweel]], Calvinists under John of St. Aldegonde were defeated by a royalist army and all rebels summarily executed.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Orange prevented the citizens of nearby Antwerp to come to the rebels' aid.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Margaret of Parma sent [[Lamoral, Count of Egmont]] and [[Philippe III de Croÿ]], Duke of Aarschot with a final ultimatum to Valenciennes. Negotiations between these grandees and commissioners from the city remained without result, and the ultimatum was rejected.<ref>Motley, pp. 74–76</ref> On 20 March a cannonade of the city started that lasted for 36 hours.<ref>Motley, pp. 78</ref> With no hope for relief left, on 23 March ([[Palm Sunday]]) the Calvinists surrendered the city of Valenciennes on condition that it would not be [[Looting|sacked]] and that half the inhabitants would be spared.<ref>Motley, pp. 78</ref> Noircarmes almost instantly broke his promise, arresting the most important citizens. Protestant leaders Peregrin de la Grange and [[Guido de Bres]] initially escaped, but were soon captured, and were both hanged on 31 May 1567, followed by many other citizens in the coming months.<ref>Motley, pp. 79–80</ref> Noircarmes wrote with satisfaction to Cardinal [[Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle]]: 'The capture of Valenciennes has worked a miracle. The other cities come all forth to meet me, putting a rope around their own necks.'<ref>Motley, p. 81</ref>
On 13 March 1567 at the [[Battle of Oosterweel]], Calvinists under John of St. Aldegonde were defeated by a royalist army and all rebels summarily executed.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Orange prevented the citizens of nearby Antwerp to come to the rebels' aid.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} Margaret of Parma sent [[Lamoral, Count of Egmont]] and [[Philippe III de Croÿ]], Duke of Aarschot to Valenciennes to negotiate with the rebels, but the talks broke down.<ref name="Van der Lem Bres"/> A cannonade of the city forced the Calvinist rebels to surrender, and on 23 March ([[Palm Sunday]]) Noircarmes entered Valenciennes.<ref name="Van der Lem Bres"/> Protestant leaders Peregrin de la Grange and [[Guido de Bres]] initially escaped, but were soon captured, and were both hanged on 31 May 1567.<ref name="Van der Lem Bres"/> Due to Valenciennes' capitulation, other Calvinist strongholds quickly surrendered.{{sfn|DuPlessis|2002|p=230}}


=== Arrival and takeover of Alba (April 1567 – June 1568) ===
=== Arrival and takeover of Alba (April 1567 – June 1568) ===
[[File:Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, III Duque de Alba, por Willem Key.jpg|thumb|upright=1.25|The [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba|Duke of Alba]], painted by [[Antonis Mor]] in 1549]]
In April 1567, Margaret reported to her brother [[Philip II of Spain|Philip II]] that order had been restored.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} However, news travelled slowly and the court in Madrid had received a rather exaggerated impression of the severity of the situation.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=72}} Even before he answered the petition by the nobles, Philip believed he had lost control in the troublesome Netherlands, and came to the conclusion that there was no other option than to send [[Army of Flanders|an army]] to suppress the rebellion.<ref name="Horst134"/> In September 1566, Philip had decided to travel himself to the Netherlands to restore order, but debate among the two factions at the Spanish court, led by the [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba|Duke of Alba]] and the [[Ruy Gomez de Silva, Prince of Eboli|Prince of Eboli]], about the advisability of this journey grew fierce. Eventually it was decided to send an army from Italy under the command of Alba. Margaret's emissary arrived at the court on 17 April 1567, the same day that Alba and his army departed on their mission from [[Cartagena, Spain]] by ship, too late to prevent the fateful intervention.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=72}}
In April 1567, Margaret reported to her brother [[Philip II of Spain|Philip II]] that order had been restored.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=71–72}} However, news travelled slowly and the court in Madrid had received a rather exaggerated impression of the severity of the situation.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=72}} Even before he answered the petition by the nobles, Philip believed he had lost control in the troublesome Netherlands, and came to the conclusion that there was no other option than to send [[Army of Flanders|an army]] to suppress the rebellion.<ref name="Horst134"/> In September 1566, Philip had decided to travel himself to the Netherlands to restore order, but debate among the two factions at the Spanish court, led by the [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba|Duke of Alba]] and the [[Ruy Gómez de Silva, 1st Prince of Éboli|Prince of Éboli]], about the advisability of this journey grew fierce. Eventually it was decided to send an army from Italy under the command of Alba. Margaret's emissary arrived at the court on 17 April 1567, the same day that Alba and his army departed on their mission from [[Cartagena, Spain]] by ship, too late to prevent the fateful intervention.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=72}}


Alba's army of Spanish and Italian mercenaries reached the Netherlands by way of the [[Spanish Road]], passing [[Thionville]] in [[Duchy of Luxemburg|Luxemburg]] on 3 August 1567.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} On 22 August 1567, [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba]], marched into Brussels at the head of 10,000 troops.<ref name="Horst134">{{cite book|last=Van der Horst|first=Han|year=2000|title=Nederland, de vaderlandse geschiedenis van de prehistorie tot nu (in Dutch)|edition=3rd|publisher=Bert Bakker|isbn=90-351-2722-6}}</ref>{{sfn|Mulder|Doedens|Kortlever|2008|p=117}} Over the course of six years, the army grew to 67,000 men.{{sfn|Mulder|Doedens|Kortlever|2008|p=117}} Alba was supposed to act as military captain-general, while Margaret would remain in office as civil governor-general.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} Alba took harsh measures, and rapidly established a special court (''Raad van Beroerten'' or [[Council of Troubles]]) on 5 September 1567 to put anyone who opposed the king in some way on trial.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} The Council conducted a campaign of repression of suspected heretics and people deemed guilty of the (already extinguished) insurrection.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} The Council used its power to override the civilian authorities in arresting suspects.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} Alba considered himself the direct representative of Philip in the Netherlands and therefore frequently bypassed [[Margaret of Parma]], the king's half-sister who had been appointed governor of the Netherlands.<ref name="Limm"/> He made use of her to lure back some of the fugitive nobles, notably the counts of [[Count of Egmont|Egmont]] and [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Hoorn|Horne]], causing her to resign office in September 1567.<ref name="Limm">{{cite book|last=Limm|first=Peter|year=1989|title=The Dutch Revolt, 1559–1648|edition=1st|publisher=Longman|location=London, UK|page=30}}</ref> Rather than working with Margaret, Alba took over command and Margaret resigned in protest.<ref>Israel 1995, p. 156</ref>
Alba's army of Spanish and Italian mercenaries reached the Netherlands by way of the [[Spanish Road]], passing [[Thionville]] in [[Duchy of Luxemburg|Luxemburg]] on 3 August 1567.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} On 22 August 1567, [[Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba]], marched into Brussels at the head of 10,000 troops.<ref name="Horst134">{{cite book|last=Van der Horst|first=Han|year=2000|title=Nederland, de vaderlandse geschiedenis van de prehistorie tot nu (in Dutch)|edition=3rd|publisher=Bert Bakker|isbn=90-351-2722-6}}</ref>{{sfn|Mulder|Doedens|Kortlever|2008|p=117}} Over the course of six years, the army grew to 67,000 men.{{sfn|Mulder|Doedens|Kortlever|2008|p=117}} Alba was supposed to act as military captain-general, while Margaret would remain in office as civil governor-general.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} Alba took harsh measures, and rapidly established a special court (''Raad van Beroerten'' or [[Council of Troubles]]) on 5 September 1567 to put anyone who opposed the king in some way on trial.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} The Council conducted a campaign of repression of suspected heretics and people deemed guilty of the (already extinguished) insurrection.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} The Council used its power to override the civilian authorities in arresting suspects.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77}} Alba considered himself the direct representative of Philip in the Netherlands and therefore frequently bypassed [[Margaret of Parma]], the king's half-sister who had been appointed governor of the Netherlands.<ref name="Limm"/> He made use of her to lure back some of the fugitive nobles, notably the counts of [[Lamoral, Count of Egmont|Egmont]] and [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn|Horn]], causing her to resign office in September 1567.<ref name="Limm">{{cite book|last=Limm|first=Peter|year=1989|title=The Dutch Revolt, 1559–1648|edition=1st|publisher=Longman|location=London, UK|page=30}}</ref> Rather than working with Margaret, Alba took over command and Margaret resigned in protest.{{sfn|Israel|1995|p=156}}


Alba thereafter was in sole command. Many high-ranking officials were arrested on various pretexts, among whom the Counts of [[Lamoral, Count of Egmont|Egmont]] and [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn|Horne]]. The victims of the repression were found in all social strata. A total of about 9,000 people were eventually convicted by the council, though only 1,000 were actually executed, as many managed to go into exile. One of the latter was Orange, who forfeited his extensive possessions in the Netherlands, like most of the people being [[Proscription|proscribed]].{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77–78}} The victims were not necessarily only Protestants. For instance, the Counts of Egmont and Horne, executed for treason on 5 June 1568, protested their Catholic orthodoxy on the scaffold.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77–78}}
Alba thereafter was in sole command. Many high-ranking officials were arrested on various pretexts, among whom the Counts of [[Lamoral, Count of Egmont|Egmont]] and [[Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn|Horn]]. The victims of the repression were found in all social strata. A total of about 9,000 people were eventually convicted by the council, though only 1,000 were actually executed, as many managed to go into exile. One of the latter was Orange, who forfeited his extensive possessions in the Netherlands, like most of the people being [[Proscription|proscribed]].{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77–78}} The victims were not necessarily only Protestants. For instance, the Counts of Egmont and Horne, executed for treason on 5 June 1568, protested their Catholic orthodoxy on the scaffold.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=77–78}}


Egmont and Horne were arrested for high treason, condemned, and a year later [[decapitation|beheaded]] on the [[Grand Place]] in Brussels. Egmont and Horne had been Catholic nobles, loyal to the King of Spain until their deaths. The reason for their execution was that Alba considered they had been treasonous to the king in their tolerance to Protestantism. Their executions, ordered by a Spanish noble, provoked outrage. More than one thousand people were [[Capital punishment|executed]] in the following months.{{sfn|Kamen|2005}} The large number of executions led the court to be nicknamed the "Blood Court" in the Netherlands, and Alba to be called the "Iron Duke". Rather than pacifying the Netherlands, these measures helped to fuel the unrest.{{cn|date=July 2022}}
Egmont and Horne were arrested for high treason, condemned, and a year later [[decapitation|beheaded]] on the [[Grand-Place]] in Brussels. Egmont and Horne had been Catholic nobles, loyal to the King of Spain until their deaths. The reason for their execution was that Alba considered they had been treasonous to the king in their tolerance to Protestantism. Their executions, ordered by a Spanish noble, provoked outrage. More than one thousand people were [[Capital punishment|executed]] in the following months.{{sfn|Kamen|2005}} The large number of executions led the court to be nicknamed the "Blood Court" in the Netherlands, and Alba to be called the "Iron Duke".{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} Rather than pacifying the Netherlands, these measures helped to fuel the unrest.{{cn|date=July 2022}}


=== Opposition in exile (April 1567 – April 1568) ===
=== Opposition in exile (April 1567 – April 1568) ===
[[File:Antonio Moro - Willem I van Nassau.jpg|thumb|upright=1.25|[[William the Silent|William of Orange]] painted by [[Anthonis Mor]] around 1554]]
The many exiles found asylum in the few areas in neighboring countries that welcomed Calvinists, like the [[Huguenot]] areas in France, England, and [[Emden]] or [[Wesel]] in Germany. Many were ready to join an armed fight, but the fate of the rebels at Oosterweel had shown that irregular forces did not stand a chance against well-disciplined troops. A better organised effort was needed to lead such an effort, and Orange was uniquely well-placed. As a sovereign prince of the Holy Roman Empire<ref>The [[principality of Orange]] in present-day France at the time was an independent [[fief]] of the Empire.</ref> Orange was in a sense the equal of Philip, in his capacity of Count of Holland, for instance. Orange was therefore entirely within his rights to make war on Philip (or, as he for the moment preferred, on Philip's "bad advisor" Alba). This was important in a diplomatic context as it legitimised Orange's efforts to hire mercenaries in the principalities of his German "colleagues," and enabled him to issue [[Letter of marque|letters of marque]] to the many Calvinist seamen who had embarked on a career of piracy from economic desperation. Such letters elevated the latter, the so-called [[Geuzen|Sea Beggars]], to the status of [[privateer]]s, which enabled the authorities in neutral countries, like the England of [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]], to accommodate them without legal embarrassment.<ref>As a matter of fact, the English probably welcomed the opportunity to obtain cargo and ships at fire-sale prices, when the privateers came to dispose of their prizes; the arrangement was mutually beneficial.</ref> Orange's temporary abode in [[Dillenburg]] therefore became the command center for plans to invade the Netherlands from several directions at once.<ref>Tracy, p. 78</ref>
The many exiles found asylum in the few areas in neighboring countries that welcomed Calvinists, like the [[Huguenot]] areas in France, England, and [[Emden]] or [[Wesel]] in Germany. Many were ready to join an armed fight, but the fate of the rebels at Oosterweel had shown that irregular forces did not stand a chance against well-disciplined troops. A better organised effort was needed to lead such an effort, and Orange was uniquely well-placed. As a sovereign prince of the Holy Roman Empire{{efn|The [[principality of Orange]] in present-day France at the time was an independent [[fief]] of the Empire.{{cn|date=July 2022}}}} Orange was in a sense the equal of Philip, in his capacity of Count of Holland, for instance. Orange was therefore entirely within his rights to make war on Philip (or, as he for the moment preferred, on Philip's "bad advisor" Alba). This was important in a diplomatic context as it legitimised Orange's efforts to hire mercenaries in the principalities of his German "colleagues," and enabled him to issue [[Letter of marque|letters of marque]] to the many Calvinist seamen who had embarked on a career of piracy from economic desperation. Such letters elevated the latter, the so-called [[Geuzen|Sea Beggars]], to the status of [[privateer]]s, which enabled the authorities in neutral countries, like the England of [[Elizabeth I]], to accommodate them without legal embarrassment.{{efn|As a matter of fact, the English probably welcomed the opportunity to obtain cargo and ships at fire-sale prices, when the privateers came to dispose of their prizes; the arrangement was mutually beneficial.{{cn|date=July 2022}}}} Orange's temporary abode in [[Dillenburg]] therefore became the command center for plans to invade the Netherlands from several directions at once.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=78}} Orange went into exile in his ancestral castle in Dillenburg, which became the centre for plans to invade the Netherlands.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=78}}{{efn|Orange was a sovereign prince of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] and as such could legally make war on his "colleague" king Philip,{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=78}} in his capacity of sovereign of the several entities of the same Empire that together constituted the Habsburg Netherlands.{{cn|date=July 2022}}}}


Other nobles decided to stay, but remained critical of the royal government. [[Philippe III de Croÿ]], the Duke of Aarschot, had been Orange's rival before Alba's 1567 arrival, and he became the ''de facto'' leader of his majesty's loyal opposition in the years thereafter (1567–1576).{{sfn|van der Lem|1995}} It was not until the [[Spanish Fury]] that their interests firmly coincided, and Orange and Aarschot became allies in their joint rebellion against the king.{{sfn|van der Lem|1995}}
Orange went into exile in his ancestral castle in [[Dillenburg]], which became the centre for plans to invade the Netherlands.<ref group=Note>Orange was a sovereign prince of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] and as such could legally make war on his "colleague" king Philip, in his capacity of sovereign of the several entities of the same Empire that together constituted the Habsburg Netherlands.{{cn|date=July 2022}}</ref>

Other nobles decided to stay, but remained critical of the royal government. [[Philippe III de Croÿ]], the Duke of Aarschot, had been Orange's rival before Alba's 1567 arrival, and he became the ''de facto'' leader of his majesty's loyal opposition in the years thereafter (1567–1576).{{sfn|van der Lem|1995}} It was not until the [[Spanish Fury]] that their interests firmly coinciced, and Orange and Aarschot became allies in their joint rebellion against the king.{{sfn|van der Lem|1995}}


=== Orange's first invasion (April–November 1568) ===
=== Orange's first invasion (April–November 1568) ===
{{Main|nl:Oranjes eerste invasie|label1=Orange's first invasion}}
[[File:Campaign Map of Prince of Orange vs Duke of Alva October 1568.jpg|thumb|500px|Campaign map Prince of Orange vs Duke of Alba, October 1568]]
[[File:Campaign Map of Prince of Orange vs Duke of Alva October 1568.jpg|thumb|300px|Campaign map of the Prince of Orange vs the Duke of Alba, October 1568]]
[[Louis of Nassau]], Orange's brother, crossed into [[Groningen (province)|Groningen]] from [[East Frisia|East Friesland]] with a mercenary army of ''[[Landsknecht]]en'', and defeated a small royalist force at [[Battle of Heiligerlee (1568)|Heiligerlee]] on 23 May 1568. Two months later, Louis' mercenary forces were smashed at the [[Battle of Jemmingen]]. Shortly thereafter, a [[Geuzen|Sea Beggars]] naval squadron defeated a royalist fleet in a naval battle on the [[Ems (river)|Ems]]. However, a [[Huguenot]] army invading [[Artois]] was pushed back into France and then annihilated by the forces of [[Charles IX of France]] in June. Orange marched into [[Duchy of Brabant|Brabant]], but with money running out he could not maintain his mercenary army and had to retreat.<ref>Tracy, pp. 78–79</ref>
[[Louis of Nassau]], Orange's brother, crossed into [[Groningen (province)|Groningen]] from [[East Frisia|East Friesland]] with a mercenary army of ''[[Landsknecht]]en'', and defeated a small royalist force at [[Battle of Heiligerlee (1568)|Heiligerlee]] on 23 May 1568. Two months later, Louis's mercenary forces were smashed at the [[Battle of Jemmingen]]. Shortly thereafter, a [[Geuzen|Sea Beggars]] naval squadron defeated a royalist fleet in a naval battle on the [[Ems (river)|Ems]]. However, a [[Huguenot]] army invading [[Artois]] was pushed back into France and then annihilated by the forces of [[Charles IX of France]] in June. Orange marched into [[Duchy of Brabant|Brabant]], but with money running out he could not maintain his mercenary army and had to retreat.{{sfn|Tracy|2008|p=78–79}}

=== 1569–1571 ===
{{Further|Eighty Years' War, 1572–1576#Background}}
Philip was suffering from the high cost of his war against the [[Ottoman Empire]], and ordered Alba to fund his armies from taxes levied in the Netherlands.{{sfn|Parker|2004|p=118–120}}{{efn|Parker (2004) discusses the financial difficulties the Spanish Crown almost continually encountered, when it often had to fight several wars at the same time as the war in the Netherlands, which forced it to declare bankruptcy several times; see Parker, ch. 6, Financial Resources.}} Alba went against the [[States General of the Netherlands]] by imposing sales taxes by decree on 31 July 1571. Alba commanded local governments to collect the unpopular taxes, which alienated even loyal lower governments from the central government.{{sfn|Israel|1995|p=167–168}}


=== 1571 ===
== Notes ==
{{notelist}}
Philip was suffering from the high cost of his war against the [[Ottoman Empire]], and ordered Alba to fund his armies from taxes levied in the Netherlands.<ref group=Note>Parker, pp. 118–120; Parker discusses the financial difficulties the Spanish Crown almost continually encountered, when it often had to fight several wars at the same time as the war in the Netherlands, which forced it to declare bankruptcy several times; see Parker, ch. 6, Financial Resources</ref> Alba went against the [[States General of the Netherlands]] by imposing sales taxes by decree on 31 July 1571. Alba commanded local governments to collect the unpopular taxes, which alienated even loyal lower governments from the central government.<ref>Israel (1995), pp. 167–168</ref>
{{reflist|group=note}}


== References ==
== References ==
Line 47: Line 57:


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==
* {{Cite book |last=Israel |first=Jonathan |authorlink=Jonathan Israel |date=1995 |title=The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall 1477–1806 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |ISBN=0-19-873072-1}}
* {{Cite book |last=DuPlessis |first=Robert S. |date=2002 |title=Lille and the Dutch Revolt: Urban Stability in an Era of Revolution, 1500–1582 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JlP6xWKusKQC |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=392 |isbn=9780521894173 |access-date=31 July 2022}}
* {{Cite book |last=Israel |first=Jonathan |authorlink=Jonathan Israel |date=1995 |title=The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall 1477–1806 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |isbn=0-19-873072-1}}
* {{Cite book |last=Kamen |first=Henry |date=2005 |title=Spain, 1469–1714: a society of conflict |edition=3rd |publisher=Pearson Education |url=https://archive.org/details/spain14691714soc00kame |location= [[Harlow]], [[United Kingdom]] |isbn=0-582-78464-6 |df=dmy-all |url-access=registration}}
* {{Cite book |last=Kamen |first=Henry |date=2005 |title=Spain, 1469–1714: a society of conflict |edition=3rd |publisher=Pearson Education |url=https://archive.org/details/spain14691714soc00kame |location= [[Harlow]], [[United Kingdom]] |isbn=0-582-78464-6 |df=dmy-all |url-access=registration}}
* {{Cite book |last=van der Lem |first=Anton |url=https://dutchrevolt.leiden.edu/dutch/verhaal/Pages/verhaal05.aspx |title=De Opstand in de Nederlanden (1555–1648) |chapter=Het verhaal van de Opstand. Hoofdstuk 5: De scheiding in de Nederlanden |work=dutchrevolt.leiden.edu |publisher=Uitgeverij Kosmos / Leiden University |date=1995 |access-date=11 July 2022 |language=nl}}
* {{Cite book |last=van der Lem |first=Anton |url=https://dutchrevolt.leiden.edu/dutch/verhaal/Pages/verhaal05.aspx |title=De Opstand in de Nederlanden (1555–1648) |chapter=Het verhaal van de Opstand. Hoofdstuk 5: De scheiding in de Nederlanden |work=dutchrevolt.leiden.edu |publisher=Uitgeverij Kosmos / Leiden University |date=1995 |access-date=11 July 2022 |language=nl}}
* {{cite book |last=[[John Lothrop Motley|Motley]] |first=John Lothrop |title=The Rise of the Dutch Republic: In three volumes, Volume 2|date=1856|publisher=J. Chapman|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LY06AAAAcAAJ |access-date=2 June 2018}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Mulder |first1=Liek |last2=Doedens |first2=Anne |last3=Kortlever |first3=Yolande |date=2008 |title=Geschiedenis van Nederland, van prehistorie tot heden |url= |location=Baarn |publisher=HBuitgevers |pages=288 |isbn=9789055746262}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Mulder |first1=Liek |last2=Doedens |first2=Anne |last3=Kortlever |first3=Yolande |date=2008 |title=Geschiedenis van Nederland, van prehistorie tot heden |url= |location=Baarn |publisher=HBuitgevers |pages=288 |isbn=9789055746262}}
* {{Cite book |last=Parker |first=Geoffrey |date=2004 |title=The Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road 1567–1659. Second edition |publisher=Cambridge University Press |ISBN=978-0-521-54392-7}} paperback
* {{Cite book |last=Parker |first=Geoffrey |date=2004 |title=The Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road 1567–1659. Second edition |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-54392-7}} paperback
* {{Cite book |last=Tracy |first=J.D. |date=2008 |title=The Founding of the Dutch Republic: War, Finance, and Politics in Holland 1572–1588 |publisher=Oxford University Press |ISBN=978-0-19-920911-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Rooze-Stouthamer |first=Clasina Martina |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tCh4wbRYpNgC |title=De opmaat tot de Opstand: Zeeland en het centraal gezag (1566–1572) |year=2009 |publisher=Uitgeverij Verloren |isbn=9789087040918 |language=nl}}
* {{Cite book |last=Tracy |first=J.D. |date=2008 |title=The Founding of the Dutch Republic: War, Finance, and Politics in Holland 1572–1588 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-920911-8}}
[[Category:Eighty Years' War| ]]
[[Category:16th century in Spain]]
[[Category:16th-century conflicts]]
[[Category:Wars involving Spain]]
[[Category:Wars involving the Netherlands]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Eighty Years' War, 1566-1572}}

Latest revision as of 16:33, 6 November 2024

The Beeldenstorm or Iconoclastic Fury was a more or less organised destruction of Catholic sacred objects which swept through the Habsburg Netherlands' churches in 1566. 1630 painting by Dirck van Delen

The period between the start of the Beeldenstorm in August 1566 until early 1572 (before the Capture of Brielle on 1 April 1572) contained the first events of a series that would later be known as the Eighty Years' War between the Spanish Empire and disparate groups of rebels in the Habsburg Netherlands.[a] Some of the first pitched battles and sieges between radical Calvinists and Habsburg governmental forces took place in the years 1566–1567, followed by the arrival and government takeover by Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba (simply known as "Alba" or "Alva") with an army of 10,000 Spanish and Italian soldiers. Next, an ill-fated invasion by the most powerful nobleman of the Low Countries, the exiled but still-Catholic William "the Silent" of Orange, failed to inspire a general anti-government revolt. Although the war seemed over before it got underway, in the years 1569–1571, Alba's repression grew severe, and opposition against his regime mounted to new heights and became susceptible to rebellion.

Although virtually all historians place the start of the war somewhere in this period, there is no historical consensus on which exact event should be considered to have begun the war. Consequently, there is no agreement whether the war really lasted exactly eighty years. For this and other reasons, some historians have endeavoured to replace the name "Eighty Years' War" with "Dutch Revolt", but there is also no consensus either to which period the term "Dutch Revolt" should apply (be it the prelude to the war, the initial stage(s) of the war, or the entire war).[2]

Origins

[edit]

The origins of the Eighty Years' War are complicated, and have been a source of disputes amongst historians for centuries.[3]

The Habsburg Netherlands emerged as a result of the territorial expansion of the Burgundian State in the 14th and 15th centuries. Upon extinction of the Burgundian State in 1477/1482, these lands were inherited by the House of Habsburg, whose Charles V became both King of Spain[b] and Holy Roman Emperor. By conquering the rest of what would become the "Seventeen Provinces" during the Guelders Wars (1502–1543), and seeking to combine these disparate regions into a single political entity, Charles aspired to counter the Protestant Reformation and keep all his subjects obedient to the Catholic Church.

King Philip II of Spain, in his capacity as sovereign of Habsburg Netherlands, continued the anti-heresy and centralisation policies of his father Charles V. Resistance grew among the moderate nobility and population (both Catholic and dissenting) of the Netherlands.[c] This mood first led to peaceful protests (as from the Compromise of Nobles), but the summer of 1566 erupted in violent protests by Calvinists, known as the iconoclastic fury, or (Dutch: Beeldenstorm) across the Netherlands. The Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, Margaret of Parma, as well as lower authorities, feared insurrection and made further concessions to the Calvinists (such as designation of churches for Calvinist worship), but in December 1566 and early 1567 the first actual battles between Calvinist rebels and Habsburg governmental forces took place, in what would become known as the Eighty Years' War.[4]

Events and developments

[edit]

Beeldenstorm (August–November 1566)

[edit]
Relief statues in St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht, attacked in Reformation iconoclasm in the 16th century.[5]

The atmosphere in the Netherlands was tense due to preaching of Calvinist leaders, hunger after the bad harvest of 1565, and economic difficulties due to the Northern Seven Years' War.[6] The Compromise of Nobles led to the lesser nobility of the Habsburg Netherlands offering a petition to governor-general Margaret of Parma on 5 April 1566 to moderate the placards against heresy which were used for persecuting Protestants.[7] One of her aides supposedly insulted the nobles by calling them gueux, French for "beggars"; this word evolved to Dutch geuzen which the nobles and other dissidents would soon reappropriate as a badge of pride.[8] On 9 April, the duchess decided to temporarily suspend them and await further instructions from king Philip II of Spain on what to do,[8] but suspension of the placards emboldened the Protestants.[9] Some returned from exile.[9] Calvinists started to organise open-air sermons (Dutch: hagepreken, "hedge-sermons") outside the city walls of many cities.[8] Though these meetings were peaceful, their size alone caused anxiety for the authorities, especially as some of the people attending bore arms.[8] Then, the situation deteriorated rapidly. On 1 August 1566, 2000 armed Calvinists tried to force entry to the walled town of Veurne, but they failed.[9] They were led by Sebastiaan Matte [nl], who was a hatmaker by trade, but turned into a Calvinist preacher.[9] He and other Calvinist weavers from the industrial area around Ypres such as Jacob de Buzere [nl] then started attacking churches and destroying religious statuary in western Flanders.[9] On 10 August 1566, their first target was a monastery church at Steenvoorde in Flanders (now in Northern France), which was sacked by a mob led by Sebastiaan Matte.[9][10] This incident was followed by similar riots elsewhere in Flanders, and before long the Netherlands had become the scene of the Beeldenstorm. This iconoclastic movement was planned and organised by prominent Calvinists,[9] who supervised the actions of men (who had no property themselves[9]) in storming churches and other religious buildings to desecrate and destroy church art and all kinds of decorative fittings over most of the country.[9] The number of actual statue-breakers appears to have been relatively small,[11] and the exact backgrounds of the movement are debated,[12] but in general local authorities did not rein in the vandalism. The actions of the iconoclasts drove the nobility into two camps, with Orange and other grandees opposing the movement and others, notably Hendrick van Brederode, supporting it.[13]

First battles and repression (December 1566 – March 1567)

[edit]
The Siege of Valenciennes (1567) portrayed in Famiano Strada's De bello belgico decades duae (reprint 1727)

The authorities at first did not react. The central government was especially disturbed by the fact that in many cases the civic militias refused to intervene. This seemed to portend insurrection. Margaret, and also authorities at lower levels, feared insurrection and made further concessions to the Calvinists, such as designating certain churches for Calvinist worship.[14] Some provincial stadtholders used force to confront the unrest, foremost Philip of Noircarmes of Hainaut, who suppressed the revolt of the Calvinists led by Guido de Bres during the Siege of Valenciennes (6 December 1566 – 23 March 1567).[15] After the parties could not reach a compromise, and Valenciennes refused to accept a royal garrison, the city was declared in a state of rebellion on 14 December 1566.[16] Rebel attempts to relieve Valenciennes were crushed in the Battle of Wattrelos (27 December 1566) and the Battle of Lannoy (29 December 1566). For his part as stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland, William of Orange took decisive action to quell the disturbances.[17]

Other noblemen attempted a more conciliatory approach. After the Beeldenstorm reached the city of Tournai on 23 August 1566, the Calvinists (who claimed to constitute three fourths of Tournai's population[18]) demanded their own church buildings. Margaret of Parma dispatched Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn to restore order, and he sought to achieve this through a kind of religious peace, including allowing the Calvinists to build their own churches. Margaret of Parma and king Philip resented him for this, and they recalled Horne.[19] In January 1567, Philip of Noircarmes retook Tournai.[15]

On 13 March 1567 at the Battle of Oosterweel, Calvinists under John of St. Aldegonde were defeated by a royalist army and all rebels summarily executed.[14] Orange prevented the citizens of nearby Antwerp to come to the rebels' aid.[14] Margaret of Parma sent Lamoral, Count of Egmont and Philippe III de Croÿ, Duke of Aarschot to Valenciennes to negotiate with the rebels, but the talks broke down.[15] A cannonade of the city forced the Calvinist rebels to surrender, and on 23 March (Palm Sunday) Noircarmes entered Valenciennes.[15] Protestant leaders Peregrin de la Grange and Guido de Bres initially escaped, but were soon captured, and were both hanged on 31 May 1567.[15] Due to Valenciennes' capitulation, other Calvinist strongholds quickly surrendered.[20]

Arrival and takeover of Alba (April 1567 – June 1568)

[edit]
The Duke of Alba, painted by Antonis Mor in 1549

In April 1567, Margaret reported to her brother Philip II that order had been restored.[14] However, news travelled slowly and the court in Madrid had received a rather exaggerated impression of the severity of the situation.[21] Even before he answered the petition by the nobles, Philip believed he had lost control in the troublesome Netherlands, and came to the conclusion that there was no other option than to send an army to suppress the rebellion.[13] In September 1566, Philip had decided to travel himself to the Netherlands to restore order, but debate among the two factions at the Spanish court, led by the Duke of Alba and the Prince of Éboli, about the advisability of this journey grew fierce. Eventually it was decided to send an army from Italy under the command of Alba. Margaret's emissary arrived at the court on 17 April 1567, the same day that Alba and his army departed on their mission from Cartagena, Spain by ship, too late to prevent the fateful intervention.[21]

Alba's army of Spanish and Italian mercenaries reached the Netherlands by way of the Spanish Road, passing Thionville in Luxemburg on 3 August 1567.[22] On 22 August 1567, Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba, marched into Brussels at the head of 10,000 troops.[13][23] Over the course of six years, the army grew to 67,000 men.[23] Alba was supposed to act as military captain-general, while Margaret would remain in office as civil governor-general.[22] Alba took harsh measures, and rapidly established a special court (Raad van Beroerten or Council of Troubles) on 5 September 1567 to put anyone who opposed the king in some way on trial.[22] The Council conducted a campaign of repression of suspected heretics and people deemed guilty of the (already extinguished) insurrection.[22] The Council used its power to override the civilian authorities in arresting suspects.[22] Alba considered himself the direct representative of Philip in the Netherlands and therefore frequently bypassed Margaret of Parma, the king's half-sister who had been appointed governor of the Netherlands.[24] He made use of her to lure back some of the fugitive nobles, notably the counts of Egmont and Horn, causing her to resign office in September 1567.[24] Rather than working with Margaret, Alba took over command and Margaret resigned in protest.[25]

Alba thereafter was in sole command. Many high-ranking officials were arrested on various pretexts, among whom the Counts of Egmont and Horn. The victims of the repression were found in all social strata. A total of about 9,000 people were eventually convicted by the council, though only 1,000 were actually executed, as many managed to go into exile. One of the latter was Orange, who forfeited his extensive possessions in the Netherlands, like most of the people being proscribed.[26] The victims were not necessarily only Protestants. For instance, the Counts of Egmont and Horne, executed for treason on 5 June 1568, protested their Catholic orthodoxy on the scaffold.[26]

Egmont and Horne were arrested for high treason, condemned, and a year later beheaded on the Grand-Place in Brussels. Egmont and Horne had been Catholic nobles, loyal to the King of Spain until their deaths. The reason for their execution was that Alba considered they had been treasonous to the king in their tolerance to Protestantism. Their executions, ordered by a Spanish noble, provoked outrage. More than one thousand people were executed in the following months.[27] The large number of executions led the court to be nicknamed the "Blood Court" in the Netherlands, and Alba to be called the "Iron Duke".[citation needed] Rather than pacifying the Netherlands, these measures helped to fuel the unrest.[citation needed]

Opposition in exile (April 1567 – April 1568)

[edit]
William of Orange painted by Anthonis Mor around 1554

The many exiles found asylum in the few areas in neighboring countries that welcomed Calvinists, like the Huguenot areas in France, England, and Emden or Wesel in Germany. Many were ready to join an armed fight, but the fate of the rebels at Oosterweel had shown that irregular forces did not stand a chance against well-disciplined troops. A better organised effort was needed to lead such an effort, and Orange was uniquely well-placed. As a sovereign prince of the Holy Roman Empire[d] Orange was in a sense the equal of Philip, in his capacity of Count of Holland, for instance. Orange was therefore entirely within his rights to make war on Philip (or, as he for the moment preferred, on Philip's "bad advisor" Alba). This was important in a diplomatic context as it legitimised Orange's efforts to hire mercenaries in the principalities of his German "colleagues," and enabled him to issue letters of marque to the many Calvinist seamen who had embarked on a career of piracy from economic desperation. Such letters elevated the latter, the so-called Sea Beggars, to the status of privateers, which enabled the authorities in neutral countries, like the England of Elizabeth I, to accommodate them without legal embarrassment.[e] Orange's temporary abode in Dillenburg therefore became the command center for plans to invade the Netherlands from several directions at once.[28] Orange went into exile in his ancestral castle in Dillenburg, which became the centre for plans to invade the Netherlands.[28][f]

Other nobles decided to stay, but remained critical of the royal government. Philippe III de Croÿ, the Duke of Aarschot, had been Orange's rival before Alba's 1567 arrival, and he became the de facto leader of his majesty's loyal opposition in the years thereafter (1567–1576).[29] It was not until the Spanish Fury that their interests firmly coincided, and Orange and Aarschot became allies in their joint rebellion against the king.[29]

Orange's first invasion (April–November 1568)

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Campaign map of the Prince of Orange vs the Duke of Alba, October 1568

Louis of Nassau, Orange's brother, crossed into Groningen from East Friesland with a mercenary army of Landsknechten, and defeated a small royalist force at Heiligerlee on 23 May 1568. Two months later, Louis's mercenary forces were smashed at the Battle of Jemmingen. Shortly thereafter, a Sea Beggars naval squadron defeated a royalist fleet in a naval battle on the Ems. However, a Huguenot army invading Artois was pushed back into France and then annihilated by the forces of Charles IX of France in June. Orange marched into Brabant, but with money running out he could not maintain his mercenary army and had to retreat.[30]

1569–1571

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Philip was suffering from the high cost of his war against the Ottoman Empire, and ordered Alba to fund his armies from taxes levied in the Netherlands.[31][g] Alba went against the States General of the Netherlands by imposing sales taxes by decree on 31 July 1571. Alba commanded local governments to collect the unpopular taxes, which alienated even loyal lower governments from the central government.[32]

Notes

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  1. ^ "...the starting phase of the Revolt in Zeeland. We label the 1566–1572 period as the strike up to the Revolt: years in which the resistance against central authority, grown out to a rebellion, began to powerfully manifest itself."[1]
  2. ^ Constitutionally, the Crowns of Castile and Aragon would not be united into the Kingdom of Spain until the 1707–1716 Nueva Planta decrees, and Charles formally reigned as Charles I of Castile and Aragon (sometimes informally called "Spain"). But in historiography, he is more commonly known as Emperor Charles V.
  3. ^ Unless otherwise indicated, "Netherlands" and "Netherlandish" refer here to the entire area of the Habsburg Netherlands and its inhabitants (including modern Belgium, Luxembourg and parts of northern France, but excluding areas such as the Principality of Liège), whereas "Dutch Republic" and "Dutch" will refer to the country, currently known as the Netherlands, and its inhabitants.
  4. ^ The principality of Orange in present-day France at the time was an independent fief of the Empire.[citation needed]
  5. ^ As a matter of fact, the English probably welcomed the opportunity to obtain cargo and ships at fire-sale prices, when the privateers came to dispose of their prizes; the arrangement was mutually beneficial.[citation needed]
  6. ^ Orange was a sovereign prince of the Holy Roman Empire and as such could legally make war on his "colleague" king Philip,[28] in his capacity of sovereign of the several entities of the same Empire that together constituted the Habsburg Netherlands.[citation needed]
  7. ^ Parker (2004) discusses the financial difficulties the Spanish Crown almost continually encountered, when it often had to fight several wars at the same time as the war in the Netherlands, which forced it to declare bankruptcy several times; see Parker, ch. 6, Financial Resources.

References

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  1. ^ Rooze-Stouthamer 2009, p. 11–12.
  2. ^ "Tachtigjarige Oorlog §1. Historische problematiek". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 1993–2002.
  3. ^ "Tachtigjarige Oorlog §1. Historische problematiek". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 1993–2002.
  4. ^ "Tachtigjarige Oorlog §1. Historische problematiek". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 1993–2002.
  5. ^ "The birth and growth of Utrecht" Archived 14 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Parker 1985, p. 74–75.
  7. ^ Tracy 2008, p. 69–71.
  8. ^ a b c d Tracy 2008, p. 70.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Tracy 2008, p. 71.
  10. ^ Parker, Geoffrey (1985). The Dutch revolt (Rev. ed.). London, England: Penguin Books. pp. 74–75. ISBN 9780140137125. OCLC 39920102.
  11. ^ Limm (1989) notes that "there were few cases of more than 200 people being involved at any one time", even in the northern provinces, where large crowds often attended the iconoclasm (p. 25). In the case of the southern provinces, he speaks of a relatively small, orderly group moving along the country.
  12. ^ See Spaans (1999), 152 ff., where she argues that iconoclasm was actually organised by local elites for political reasons (Spaans, J. "Catholicism and Resistance to the Reformation in the Northern Netherlands". In: Benedict, Ph., and others (eds), Reformation, Revolt and Civil War in France and the Netherlands, 1555–1585 (Amsterdam 1999), pp. 149–163).
  13. ^ a b c Van der Horst, Han (2000). Nederland, de vaderlandse geschiedenis van de prehistorie tot nu (in Dutch) (3rd ed.). Bert Bakker. ISBN 90-351-2722-6.
  14. ^ a b c d Tracy 2008, p. 71–72.
  15. ^ a b c d e Anton van der Lem. "Brès, Guido de". dutchrevolt.leiden.edu (in Dutch). Leiden University. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  16. ^ Yves Junot. "Valenciennes / Valencijn". dutchrevolt.leiden.edu (in French). Leiden University. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  17. ^ Israel 1995, p. 137–153.
  18. ^ W.J.F. Nuyens, Geschiedenis der nederlandsche beroerten in de XVIe eeuw: Geschiedenis van den oorsprong en het begin der nederlandsche beroerten: (1559 - 1567) (1866) 163.
  19. ^ Encarta-encyclopedie Winkler Prins (1993-2002) s.v. Horne. Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.
  20. ^ DuPlessis 2002, p. 230.
  21. ^ a b Tracy 2008, p. 72.
  22. ^ a b c d e Tracy 2008, p. 77.
  23. ^ a b Mulder, Doedens & Kortlever 2008, p. 117.
  24. ^ a b Limm, Peter (1989). The Dutch Revolt, 1559–1648 (1st ed.). London, UK: Longman. p. 30.
  25. ^ Israel 1995, p. 156.
  26. ^ a b Tracy 2008, p. 77–78.
  27. ^ Kamen 2005.
  28. ^ a b c Tracy 2008, p. 78.
  29. ^ a b van der Lem 1995.
  30. ^ Tracy 2008, p. 78–79.
  31. ^ Parker 2004, p. 118–120.
  32. ^ Israel 1995, p. 167–168.

Bibliography

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