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Grattan, Chapter 4


HOLLAND THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS

BY
THOMAS COLLEY GRATTAN
WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER OF RECENT EVENTS BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
Lardner's ‘Cyclop.’ vol. x. 1830

CHAPTER IV

FROM THE FORMATION OF HOLLAND TO THE DEATH OF LOUIS DE MALE A.D. 1018--1384

The district in which Dordrecht is situated, and the grounds in its environs which are at present submerged, formed in those times an island just raised above the waters, and which was called Holland or Holtland (which means wooded land, or, according to some, hollow land). The formation of this island, or rather its recovery from the waters, being only of recent date, the right to its possession was more disputable than that of long-established Countries. All the bishops and abbots whose states bordered the Rhine and the Meuse had, being equally covetous and grasping, and mutually resolved to pounce on the prey, made it their common property. A certain Count Thierry, descended from the Counts of Ghent, governed about this period the western extremity of Friesland - the Country which now forms the province of Holland; and with much difficulty maintained his power against the Frisons, by whom his right was not acknowledged. Beaten out of his own territories by these refractory insurgents, he sought refuge in the ecclesiastical island, where he intrenched himself, and founded a town which is believed to have been the origin of Dordrecht.

 This Count Thierry, like all the feudal lords, took advantage of his position to establish and levy certain duties on all the vessels which sailed past his territory, dispossessing in the meantime some vassalsof the church, and beating, as we have stated, the bishop of Utrecht himself. Complaints and appeals without number were laid at the foot of the imperial throne. Godfrey of Eenham, whom the emperor had created Duke of Lower Lorraine, was commanded to call the whole Country to arms. The bishop of Liege, though actually dying, put himself at the head of the expedition, to revenge his brother prelate, and punish the audacious spoiler of the church property. But Thierry and his fierce Frisons took Godfrey prisoner, and cut his army in pieces. The victor had the good sense and moderation to spare his prisoners, and set them free without ransom. He received in return an imperial amnesty; and from that period the Count of Holland and his posterity formed a barrier against which the ecclesiastical power and the remains of the imperial supremacy continually struggled, to be only shattered in each new assault. John Egmont, an old chronicler, says that the Counts of Holland were "a sword in the flanks of the bishops of Utrecht."

 As the partial independence of the great vassals became consolidated, the monarchs were proportionally anxious to prevent its perpetuation in the same families. In pursuance of this system, Godfrey of Eenham obtained the preference over the Counts Lambert and Robert; and Frederick of Luxemburg was named Duke of Lower Lorraine in 1046, instead of a second Godfrey, who was nephew and expectant heir to the first. But this Godfrey, upheld by Baldwin of Flanders, forced the emperor to concede to him the inheritance of the Dukedom. Baldwin secured for his share the Country of Alost and Waas, and the citadel of Ghent; and he also succeeded in obtaining in marriage for his son the Countess Richilde, heiress of Hainaut and Namur. Thus was Flanders incessantly gaining new aggrandizement, while the duchy of Lorraine was crumbling away on every side.

 In the year 1066 this state of Flanders, even then flourishing and powerful, furnished assistance, both in men and ships, to William the Bastard of Normandy, for the conquest of England. William was son-in-law to Count Baldwin, and recompensed the assistance of his wife's father by an annual payment of three hundred silver marks. It was Mathilda, the Flemish princess and wife of the conqueror, who worked with her own hands the celebrated tapestry of Bayeux, on which is embroidered the whole history of the conquest, and which is the most curious monument of the state of the arts in that age.

 Flanders acquired a positive and considerable superiority over all the other parts of the Netherlands, from the first establishment of its Counts or earls. The descendants of Baldwin Bras-de-fer, after having valiantly repulsed the Normans toward the end of the ninth century, showed themselves worthy of ruling over an industrious and energetic people. They had built towns, cut down and cleared away forests, and reclaimed inundated lands: above all things, they had understood and guarded against the danger of parcelling out their states at every succeeding generation; and the County of Flanders passed entire into the hands of the first-born of the family. The stability produced by this state of things had allowed the people to prosper. The Normans now visited the coasts, not as enemies, but as merchants; and Bruges became the mart of the booty acquired by these bold pirates in England and on the high seas.

 The fisheries had begun to acquire an importance sufficient to establish the herring as one of the chief aliments of the population. Maritime commerce had made such strides that Spain and Portugal were well known to both sailors and traders, and the voyage from Flanders to Lisbon was estimated at fifteen days' sail. Woollen stuffs formed the principal wealth of the Country; but salt, corn, and jewelry were also important branches of traffic; while the youth of Flanders were so famous for their excellence in all martial pursuits that foreign sovereigns were at all times desirous of obtaining bodies of troops from this nation.

 The greatest part of Flanders was attached, as has been seen, to the king of France, and not to Lorraine; but the dependence was little more than nominal. In 1071 the king of France attempted to exercise his authority over the Country, by naming to the government the same Countess Richilde who had received Hainaut and Namur for her dower, and who was left a widow, with sons still in their minority. The people assembled in the principal towns, and protested against this intervention of the French monarch. But we must remark that it was only the population of the low lands (whose sturdy ancestors had ever resisted foreign domination) that now took part in this opposition. The vassals which the Counts of Flanders possessed in the Gallic provinces (the high grounds), and in general all the nobility, pronounced strongly for submission to France; for the principles of political freedom had not yet been fixed in the minds of the inhabitants of those parts of the Country.

 But the lowlanders joined together under Robert, surnamed the Frison, brother of the deceased Count; and they so completely defeated the French, the nobles and their unworthy associates of the high ground, that they despoiled the usurping Countess Richilde of even her hereditary possessions. In this war perished the celebrated Norman, William Fitz-Osborn, who had flown to the succor of the defeated Countess, of whom he was enamoured.

 Robert the Frison, not satisfied with having beaten the king of France and the bishop of Liege, reinstated in 1076 the grandson of Thierry of Holland in the possessions which had been forced from him by the Duke of Lower Lorraine, in the name of the emperor and the bishop of Utrecht; so that it was this valiant chieftain, who, above all others, is entitled to the praise of having successfully opposed the system of foreign domination on all the principal points of the Country. Four years later, Othon of Nassau was the first to unite in one County the various cantons of Guelders. Finally, in 1086, Henry of Louvain, the direct descendant of Lambert, joined to his title that of Count of Brabant; and from this period the Country was partitioned pretty nearly as it was destined to remain for several centuries.

 In the midst of this gradual organization of the various Counties, history for some time loses sight of those Frisons, the maritime people of the north, who took little part in the civil wars of two centuries. But still there was no portion of Europe which at that time offered a finer picture of social improvement than these damp and unhealthy coasts. The name of Frisons extended from the Weser to the westward of the Zuyder Zee, but not quite to the Rhine; and it became usual to consider no longer as Frisons the subjects of the Counts of Holland, whom we may now begin to distinguish as Hollanders or Dutch. The Frison race alone refused to recognize the sovereign Counts. They boasted of being self-governed; owning no allegiance but to the emperor, and regarding the Counts of his nomination as so many officers charged to require obedience to the laws of the Country, but themselves obliged in all things to respect them. But the Counts of Holland, the bishops of Utrecht, and several German lords, dignified from time to time with the title of Counts of Friesland, insisted that it carried with it a personal authority superior to that of the sovereign they represented. The descendants of the Count Thierry, a race of men remarkably warlike, were the most violent in this assumption of power. Defeat after defeat, however, punished their obstinacy; and numbers of those princes met death on the pikes of their Frison opponents. The latter had no regular leaders; but at the approach of the enemy the inhabitants of each canton flew to arms, like the members of a single family; and all the feudal forces brought against them failed to subdue this popular militia.

 The frequent result of these collisions was the refusal of the Frisons to recognize any authority whatever but that of the national judges. Each canton was governed according to its own laws. If a difficulty arose, the deputies of the nation met together on the borders of the Ems, in a place called "the Trees of Upstal" (Upstall-boomen), where three old oaks stood in the middle of an immense plain. In this primitive council-place chieftains were chosen, who, on swearing to maintain the laws and oppose the common enemy, were invested with a limited and temporary authority.

 It does not appear that Friesland possessed any large towns, with the exception of Staveren. In this respect the Frisons resembled those ancient Germans who had a horror of shutting themselves up within walls. They lived in a way completely patriarchal; dwelling in isolated cabins, and with habits of the utmost frugality. We read in one of their old histories that a whole convent of Benedictines was terrified at the voracity of a German sculptor who was repairing their chapel. They implored him to look elsewhere for his food; for that he and his sons consumed enough to exhaust the whole stock of the monastery.

 In no part of Europe was the good sense of the people so effectively opposed to the unreasonable practices of Catholicism in those days. The Frisons successfully resisted the payment of tithes; and as a punishment (if the monks are to be believed) the sea inflicted upon them repeated inundations. They forced their priests to marry, saying that the man who had no wife necessarily sought for the wife of another. They acknowledged no ecclesiastical decree, if secular judges, double the number of the priests, did not bear a part in it. Thus the spirit of liberty burst forth in all their proceedings, and they were justified in calling themselves Vri-Vriesen, Free-Frisons.

 No nation is more interested than England in the examination of all that concerns this remote corner of Europe, so resolute in its opposition to both civil and religious tyranny; for it was there that those Saxon institutions and principles were first developed without constraint, while the time of their establishment in England was still distant. Restrained by our narrow limits, we can merely indicate this curious state of things; nor may we enter on many mysteries of social government which the most learned find a difficulty in solving. What were the rights of the nobles in their connection with these freemen? What ties of reciprocal interest bound the different cantons to each other?

 What were the privileges of the towns? - These are the minute but important points of detail which are overshadowed by the grand and imposing figure of the national independence. But in fact the emperors themselves, in these distant times, had little knowledge of this province, and spoke of it vaguely, and as it were at random, in their diplomas, the chief monuments of the history of the Middle Ages. The Counts of Holland and the apostolic nuncios addressed their acts and rescripts indiscriminately to the nobles, clergy, magistrates, judges, consuls, or commons of Friesland. Sometimes appeared in those documents the vague and imposing title of "the great Frison," applied to some popular leader. All this confusion tends to prove, on the authority of the historians of the epoch, and the charters so carefully collected by the learned, that this question, now so impossible to solve, was even then not rightly understood - what were really those fierce and redoubtable Frisons in their popular and political relations? The fact is, that liberty was a matter so difficult to be comprehended by the writers of those times that Froissart gave as his opinion, about the year 1380, that the Frisons were a most unreasonable race, for not recognizing the authority and power of the great lords.

 The eleventh century had been for the Netherlands (with the exception of Friesland and Flanders) an epoch of organization; and had nearly fixed the political existence of the provinces, which were so long confounded in the vast possessions of the empire. It is therefore important to ascertain under what influence and on what basis these provinces became consolidated at that period. Holland and Zealand, animated by the spirit which we may fairly distinguish under the mingled title of Saxon and maritime, Countries scarcely accessible, and with a vigorous population, possessed, in the descendants of Thierry I, a race of national chieftains who did not attempt despotic rule over so unconquerable a people. In Brabant, the maritime towns of Berg-op-Zoom and Antwerp formed, in the Flemish style, so many republics, small but not insignificant; while the southern parts of the province were under the sway of a nobility who crushed, trampled on, or sold their vassals at their pleasure or caprice. The bishopric of Liege offered also the same contrast; the domains of the nobility being governed with the utmost harshness, while those prince-prelates lavished on their plebeian vassals privileges which might have been supposed the fruits of generosity, were it not clear that the object was to create an opposition in the lower orders against the turbulent aristocracy, whom they found it impossible to manage single-handed.

 The wars of these bishops against the petty nobles, who made their castles so many receptacles of robbers and plunder, were thus the foundation of public liberty. And it appears tolerably certain that the Paladins of Ariosto were in reality nothing more than those brigand chieftains of the Ardennes, whose ruined residences preserve to this day the names which the poet borrowed from the old romance writers. But in all the rest of the Netherlands, excepting the provinces already mentioned, no form of government existed, but that fierce feudality which reduced the people into serfs, and turned the social state of man into a cheerless waste of bondage.

 It was then that the Crusades, with wild and stirring fanaticism, agitated, in the common impulse given to all Europe, even those little states which seemed to slumber in their isolated independence. Nowhere did the voice of Peter the Hermit find a more sympathizing echo than in these lands, still desolated by so many intestine struggles. Godfrey of Bouillon, Duke of Lower Lorraine, took the lead in this chivalric and religious frenzy. With him set out the Counts of Hainaut and Flanders; the latter of whom received from the English crusaders the honorable appellation of Fitz St. George. But although the valor of all these princes was conspicuous, from the foundation of the kingdom of Jerusalem by Godfrey of Bouillon in 1098, until that of the Latin empire of Constantinople by Baldwin of Flanders in 1203, still the simple gentlemen and peasants of Friesland did not less distinguish themselves. They were, on all occasions, the first to mount the breach or lead the charge; and the Pope's nuncio found himself forced to prohibit the very women of Friesland from embarking for the Holy Land - so anxious were they to share the perils and glory of their husbands and brothers in combating the Saracens.

 The outlet given by the crusaders to the overboiling ardor of these warlike Countries was a source of infinite advantage to their internal economy; under the rapid progress of civilization, the population increased and the fields were cultivated. The nobility, reduced to moderation by the enfeebling consequences of extensive foreign wars, became comparatively impotent in their attempted efforts against domestic freedom. Those of Flanders and Brabant, also, were almost decimated in the terrible battle of Bouvines, fought between the Emperor Othon and Philip Augustus, king of France. On no occasion, however, had this reduced but not degenerate nobility shown more heroic valor. The Flemish knights, disdaining to mount their horses or form their ranks for the repulse of the French cavalry, composed of common persons, contemptuously received their shock on foot and in the disorder of individual resistance. The brave Buridan of Ypres led his comrades to the fight, with the chivalric war-cry, "Let each now think of her he loves!" But the issue of this battle was ruinous to the Belgians, in consequence of the bad generalship of the emperor, who had divided his army into small portions, which were defeated in detail.

 While the nobility thus declined, the towns began rapidly to develop the elements of popular force. In 1120, a Flemish knight who might descend so far as to marry a woman of the plebeian ranks incurred the penalty of degradation and servitude. In 1220, scarcely a serf was to be found in all Flanders. The Countess Jane had enfranchised all those belonging to her as early as 1222. In 1300, the chiefs of the gilden, or trades, were more powerful than the nobles. These dates and these facts must suffice to mark the epoch at which the great mass of the nation arose from the wretchedness in which it was plunged by the Norman invasion, and acquired sufficient strength and freedom to form a real political force. But it is remarkable that the same results took place in all the Counties or Dukedoms of the Lowlands precisely at the same period. In fact, if we start from the year 1200 on this interesting inquiry, we shall see the commons attacking, in the first place, the petty feudal lords, and next the Counts and the Dukes themselves, often as justice was denied them. In 1257, the peasants of Holland and the burghers of Utrecht proclaimed freedom and equality, drove out the bishop and the nobles, and began a memorable struggle which lasted full two hundred years. In 1260, the townspeople of Flanders appealed to the king of France against the decrees of their Count, who ended the quarrel by the loss of his County. In 1303, Mechlin and Louvain, the chief towns of Brabant, expelled the patrician families. A coincidence like this cannot be attributed to trifling or partial causes, such as the misconduct of a single Count, or other local evil; but to a great general movement in the popular mind, the progress of agriculture and industry in the whole Country, superinducing an increase of wealth and intelligence, which, when unrestrained by the influence of a corrupt government, must naturally lead to the liberty and the happiness of a people.

 The weaving of woollen and linen cloths was one of the chief sources of this growing prosperity. A prodigious quantity of cloth and linen was manufactured in all parts of the Netherlands. The maritime prosperity acquired an equal increase by the carrying trade, both in imports and exports. Whole fleets of Dutch and Flemish merchant ships repaired regularly to the coasts of Spain and Languedoc. Flanders was already become the great market for England and all the north of Europe. The great increase of population forced all parts of the Country into cultivation; so much so, that lands were in those times sold at a high price, which are today left waste from imputed sterility.

 Legislation naturally followed the movements of those positive and material interests. The earliest of the towns, after the invasion of the Normans, were in some degree but places of refuge. It was soon however, established that the regular inhabitants of these bulwarks of the Country should not be subjected to any servitude beyond their care and defence; but the citizen who might absent himself for a longer period than forty days was considered a deserter and deprived of his rights. It was about the year 1100 that the commons began to possess the privilege of regulating their internal affairs; they appointed their judges and magistrates, and attached to their authority the old custom of ordering all the citizens to assemble or march when the summons of the feudal lord sounded the signal for their assemblage or service. By this means each municipal magistracy had the disposal of a force far superior to those of the nobles, for the population of the towns exceeded both in number and discipline the vassalsof the seigniorial lands. And these trained bands of the towns made war in a way very different from that hitherto practiced; for the chivalry of the Country, making the trade of arms a profession for life, the feuds of the chieftains produced hereditary struggles, almost always slow, and mutually disastrous. But the townsmen, forced to tear themselves from every association of home and its manifold endearments, advanced boldly to the object of the contest; never shrinking from the dangers of war, from fear of that still greater to be found in a prolonged struggle. It is this that it may be remarked, during the memorable conflicts of the thirteenth century, that when even the bravest of the knights advised their Counts or Dukes to grant or demand a truce, the citizen militia never knew but one cry - "To the charge!"

 Evidence was soon given of the importance of this new nation, when it became forced to take up arms against enemies still more redoubtable than the Counts. In 1301, the Flemings, who had abandoned their own sovereign to attach themselves to Philip the Fair, king of France, began to repent of their newly-formed allegiance, and to be weary of the master they had chosen. Two citizens of Bruges, Peter de Koning, a draper, and John Breydel, a butcher, put themselves at the head of their fellow-townsmen, and completely dislodged the French troops who garrisoned it. The following year the militia of Bruges and the immediate neighborhood sustained alone, at the battle of Courtrai, the shock of one of the finest armies that France ever sent into the field. Victory soon declared for the gallant men of Bruges; upward of three thousand of the French chivalry, besides common soldiers, were left dead on the field. In 1304, after a long contested battle, the Flemings forced the king of France to release their Count, whom he had held prisoner. "I believe it rains Flemings!" said Philip, astonished to see them crowd on him from all sides of the field. But this multitude of warriors, always ready to meet the foe, were provided for the most part by the towns. In the seigniorial system a village hardly furnished more than four or five men, and these only on important occasions; but in that of the towns every citizen was enrolled as a soldier to defend the Country at all times.

 The same system established in Brabant forced the Duke of that province to sanction and guarantee the popular privileges, and the superiority of the people over the nobility. Such was the result of the famous contract concluded in 1312 at Cortenbergh, by which the Duke created a legislative and judicial assembly to meet every twenty-one days for the, provincial business; and to consist of fourteen deputies, of whom only four were to be nobles, and ten were chosen from the people. The Duke was bound by this act to hold himself in obedience to the legislative decisions of the council, and renounced all right of levying arbitrary taxes or duties on the state. Thus were the local privileges of the people by degrees secured and ratified; but the various towns, making common cause for general liberty, became strictly united together, and progressively extended their influence and power. The confederation between Flanders and Brabant was soon consolidated. The burghers of Bruges, who had taken the lead in the grand national union, and had been the foremost to expel the foreign force, took umbrage in 1323 at an arbitrary measure of their Count, Louis (called of Cressy by posthumous nomination, from his having been killed at that celebrated fight), by which he ceded to the Count of Namur, his great-uncle, the port of Ecluse, and authorized him to levy duties there in the style of the feudal lords of the high Country. It was but the affair of a day to the intrepid citizens to attack the fortress of Ecluse, carry it by assault, and take prisoner the old Count of Namur. They destroyed in a short time almost all the strong castles of the nobles throughout the province; and having been joined by all the towns of western Flanders, they finally made prisoners of Count Louis himself, with almost the whole of the nobility, who had taken refuge with him in the town of Courtrai. But Ghent, actuated by the jealousy which at all times existed between it and Bruges, stood aloof at this crisis. The latter town was obliged to come to a compromise with the Count, who soon afterward, on a new quarrel breaking out, and supported by the king of France, almost annihilated his sturdy opponents at the battle of Cassel, where the Flemish infantry, commanded by Nicholas Zannekin and others, were literally cut to pieces by the French knights and men-at-arms.

 This check proved the absolute necessity of union among the rival cities. Ten years after the battle of Cassel, Ghent set the example of general opposition; this example was promptly followed, and the chief towns flew to arms. The celebrated James d'Artaveldt, commonly called the brewer of Ghent, put himself at the head of this formidable insurrection. He was a man of a distinguished family, who had himself enrolled among the guild of brewers, to entitle him to occupy a place in the corporation of Ghent, which he soon succeeded in managing and leading at his pleasure. The tyranny of the Count, and the French party which supported him, became so intolerable to Artaveldt, that he resolved to assail them at all hazards, unappalled by the fate of his father-in-law, Sohier de Courtrai, who lost his head for a similar attempt, and notwithstanding the hitherto devoted fidelity of his native city to the Count. One only object seemed insurmountable. The Flemings had sworn allegiance to the crown of France; and they revolted at the idea of perjury, even from an extorted oath.

 But to overcome their scruples, Artaveldt proposed to acknowledge the claim of Edward III. of England to the French crown. The Flemings readily acceded to this arrangement; quickly overwhelmed Count Louis of Cressy and his French partisans; and then joined, with an army of sixty thousand men, the English monarch, who had landed at Antwerp. These numerous auxiliaries rendered Edward's army irresistible; and soon afterward the French and English fleets, both of formidable power, but the latter of inferior force, met near Sluys, and engaged in a battle meant to be decisive of the war: victory remained doubtful during an entire day of fighting, until a Flemish squadron, hastening to the aid of the English, fixed the fate of the combat by the utter defeat of the enemy.

 A truce between the two kings did not deprive Artaveldt of his well-earned authority. He was invested with the title of ruward, or conservator of the peace, of Flanders, and governed the whole province with almost sovereign sway. It was said that King Edward used familiarly to call him "his dear gossip"; and it is certain that there was not a feudal lord of the time whose power was not eclipsed by this leader of the people. One of the principal motives which cemented the attachment of the Flemings to Artaveldt was the advantage obtained through his influence with Edward for facilitating the trade with England, whence they procured the chief supply of wool for their manufactories. Edward promised them seventy thousand sacks as the reward of their alliance. But though greatly influenced by the stimulus of general interest, the Flemings loved their domestic liberty better than English wool; and when they found that their ruward degenerated from a firm patriot into the partisan of a foreign prince, they became disgusted with him altogether; and he perished in 1345, in a tumult raised against him by those by whom he had been so lately idolized. The Flemings held firm, nevertheless, in their alliance with England, only regulating the connection by a steady principle of national independence.

 Edward knew well how to conciliate and manage these faithful and important auxiliaries during all his continental wars. A Flemish army covered the siege of Calais in 1348; and, under the command of Giles de Rypergherste, a mere weaver of Ghent, they beat the dauphin of France in a pitched battle. But Calais once taken, and a truce concluded, the English king abandoned his allies. These, left wholly to their own resources, forced the French and the heir of their Count, young Louis de Male, to recognize their right to self-government according to their ancient privileges, and of not being forced to give aid to France in any war against England. Flanders may therefore be pronounced as forming, at this epoch, both in right and fact, a truly independent principality.

 But such struggles as these left a deep and immovable sentiment of hatred in the minds of the vanquished. Louis de Male longed for the re-establishment and extension of his authority; and had the art to gain over to his views not only all the nobles, but many of the most influential guilds or trades. Ghent, which long resisted his attempts, was at length reduced by famine; and the Count projected the ruin, or at least the total subjection, of this turbulent town. A son of Artaveldt started forth at this juncture, when the popular cause seemed lost, and joining with his fellow-citizens, John Lyons and Peter du Bois, he led seven thousand resolute burghers against forty thousand feudal vassals. He completely defeated the Count, and took the town of Bruges, where Louis de Male only obtained safety by hiding himself under the bed of an old woman who gave him shelter. Thus once more feudality was defeated in a fresh struggle with civic freedom.

 The consequences of this event were immense. They reached to the very heart of France, where the people bore in great discontent the feudal yoke; and Froissart declares that the success of the people of Ghent had nearly overthrown the superiority of the nobility over the people in France. But the king, Charles VI, excited by his uncle, Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, took arms in support of the defeated Count, and marched with a powerful army against the rebellious burghers. Though defeated in four successive combats, in the latter of which, that of Roosbeke, Artaveldt was killed, the Flemings would not submit to their imperious Count, who used every persuasion with Charles to continue his assistance for the punishment of these refractory subjects. But the Duke of Burgundy was aware that a too great perseverance would end, either in driving the people to despair and the possible defeat of the French, or the entire conquest of the Country and its junction to the crown of France. He, being son-in-law to Louis de Male, and consequently aspiring to the inheritance of Flanders, saw with a keen glance the advantage of a present compromise. On the death of Louis, who is stated to have been murdered by Philip's brother, the Duke of Berri, be concluded a peace with the rebel burghers, and entered at once upon the sovereignty of the Country.


 

Grattan, Chapter 2


HOLLAND THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS

BY
THOMAS COLLEY GRATTAN
WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER OF RECENT EVENTS BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
Lardner's ‘Cyclop.’ vol. x. 1830

CHAPTER II

FROM THE SETTLEMENT OF THE FRANKS TO THE SUBJUGATION OF FRIESLAND A.D. 250--800

From this epoch we must trace the progress of a totally new and distinct population in the Netherlands. The Batavians being annihilated, almost without resistance, the low Countries contained only the free people of the German race. But these people did not completely sympathize together so as to form one consolidated nation. The Salians, and the other petty tribes of Franks, their allies, were essentially warlike, and appeared precisely the same as the original inhabitants of the high grounds. The Menapians and the Frisons, on the contrary, lost nothing of their spirit of commerce and industry. The result of this diversity was a separation between the Franks and the Menapians. While the latter, under the name of Armoricans, joined themselves more closely with the people who bordered the Channel, the Frisons associated themselves with the tribes settled on the limits of the German Ocean, and formed with them a connection celebrated under the title of the Saxon League. Thus was formed on all points a union between the maritime races against the inland inhabitants; and their mutual antipathy became more and more developed as the decline of the Roman empire ended the former struggle between liberty and conquest.

The Netherlands now became the earliest theatre of an entirely new movement, the consequences of which were destined to affect the whole world. This Country was occupied toward the sea by a people wholly maritime, excepting the narrow space between the Rhine and the Vahal, of which the Salian Franks had become possessed. The nature of this marshy soil, in comparison with the sands of Westphalia, Guelders, and North Brabant, was not more strikingly contrasted than was the character of their population.

 The Franks, who had been for a while under the Roman sway, showed a compound of the violence of savage life and the corruption of civilized societssy. They were covetous and treacherous, but made excellent soldiers; and at this epoch, which intervened between the power of imperial Rome and that of Germany, the Frank might be morally considered as a borderer on the frontiers of the Middle Ages. The Saxon (and this name comprehends all the tribes of the coast from the Rhine as far north as Denmark), uniting in himself the distinctive qualities of German and navigator, was moderate and sincere, but implacable in his rage. Neither of these two races of men was excelled in point of courage; but the number of Franks who still entered into the service of the empire diminished the real force of this nation, and naturally tended to disunite it. Therefore, in the subsequent shock of people against people, the Saxons invariably gained the final advantage.

They had no doubt often measured their strength in the most remote times, since the Franks were but the descendants of the ancient tribes of Sicambers and others, against whom the Batavians had offered their assistance to Cæsar. Under Augustus, the inhabitants of the coast had in the same way joined themselves with Drusus, to oppose these their old enemies. It was also after having been expelled by the Frisons from Guelders that the Salians had passed the Rhine and the Meuse; but, in the fourth century, the two peoples, recovering their strength, the struggle recommenced, never to terminate--at least between the direct descendants of each. It is believed that it was the Varni, a race of Saxons nearly connected with those of England (and coming, like them, from the coast of Denmark), who on this occasion struck the decisive blow on the side of the Saxons. Embarking on board a numerous fleet, they made a descent in the ancient isle of the Batavians, at that time inhabited by the Salians, whom they completely destroyed. Julian the Apostate, who was then with a numerous army pursuing his career of early glory in these Countries, interfered for the purpose of preventing the expulsion, or at least the utter destruction, of the vanquished; but his efforts were unavailing. The Salians appear to have figured no more in this part of the Low Countries.

The defeat of the Salians by a Saxon tribe is a fact on which no doubt rests. The name of the victors is, however, questionable.

 The Varni having remained settled near the mouths of the Rhine till near the year 500, there is strong, probability that they were the people alluded to. But names and histories, which may on this point appear of such little importance, acquire considerable interest when we reflect that these Salians, driven from their settlement, became the conquerors of France; that those Saxons who forced them on their career of conquest were destined to become the masters of England; and that these two petty tribes, who battled so long for a corner of marshy earth, carried with them their reciprocal antipathy while involuntarily deciding the destiny of Europe.

The defeat of the Franks was fatal to those peoples who had become incorporated with the Romans; for it was from them that the exiled wanderers, still fierce in their ruin, and with arms in their hands, demanded lands and herds; all, in short, which they themselves had lost. From the middle of the fourth century to the end of the fifth, there was a succession of invasions in this spirit, which always ended by the subjugation of a part of the Country; and which was completed about the year 490, by Clovis making himself master of almost the whole of Gaul. Under this new empire not a vestige of the ancient nations of the Ardennes was left. The civilized population either perished or was reduced to slavery, and all the high grounds were added to the previous conquests of the Salians.

But the maritime population, when once possessed of the whole coast, did not seek to make the slightest progress toward the interior. The element of their enterprise and the object of their ambition was the ocean; and when this hardy and intrepid race became too numerous for their narrow limits, expeditions and colonies beyond the sea carried off their redundant population.

 The Saxon warriors established themselves near the mouths of the Loire; others, conducted by Hengist and Horsa, settled in Great Britain. It will always remain problematical from what point of the coast these adventurers departed; but many circumstances tend to give weight to the opinion which pronounces those old Saxons to have started from the Netherlands.

Paganism not being yet banished from these Countries, the obscurity which would have enveloped them is in some degree dispelled by the recitalsof the monks who went among them to preach Christianity.

 We see in those records, and by the text of some of their early laws, that this maritime people were more industrious, prosperous, and happy, than those of France. The men were handsome and richly clothed; and the land well cultivated, and abounding in fruits, milk, and honey. The Saxon merchants carried their trade far into the southern Countries. In the meantime, the parts of the Netherlands which belonged to France resembled a desert. The monasteries which were there founded were established, according to the words of their charters, amid immense solitudes; and the French nobles only came into Brabant for the sport of bear-hunting in its interminable forests. Thus, while the inhabitants of the low lands, as far back as the light of history penetrates, appear in a continual state of improvement, those of the high grounds, after frequent vicissitudes, seem to sink into utter degeneracy and subjugation. The latter wished to denaturalize themselves, and become as though they were foreigners even on their native soil; the former remained firm and faithful to their Country and to each other.

But the growth of French power menaced utter ruin to this interesting race. Clovis had succeeded about the year 485 of our era, in destroying the last remnants of Roman domination in Gaul. The successors of these conquerors soon extended their empire from the Pyrenees to the Rhine. They had continual contests with the free population of the Low Countries, and their nearest neighbors. In the commencement of the seventh century, the French king, Clotaire II., exterminated the chief part of the Saxons of Hanover and Westphalia; and the historians of those barbarous times unanimously relate that he caused to be beheaded every inhabitant of the vanquished tribes who exceeded the height of his sword. The Saxon name was thus nearly extinguished in those Countries; and the remnant of these various peoples adopted that of Frisons (Friesen), either because they became really incorporated with that nation, or merely that they recognized it for the most powerful of their tribes. Friesland, to speak in the language of that age, extended then from the Scheldt to the Weser, and formed a considerable state. But the ascendency of France was every year becoming more marked; and King Dagobert extended the limits of her power even as far as Utrecht. The descendants of the Menapians, known at that epoch by the different names of Menapians, Flemings, and Toxandirans, fell one after another directly or indirectly under the empire of the Merovingian princes; and the noblest family which existed among the French--that which subsequently took the name of Carlovingians--comprised in its dominions nearly the whole of the southern and western parts of the Netherlands.

Between this family, whose chief was called Duke of the Frontier Marshes (_Dux_Brabantioe_), and the free tribes, united under the common name of Frisons, the same struggle was maintained as that which formerly existed between the Salians and the Saxons.

 Toward the year 700, the French monarchy was torn by anarchy, and, under "the lazy kings," lost much of its concentrated power; but every Dukedom formed an independent sovereignty, and of all those that of Brabant was the most redoubtable. Nevertheless the Frisons, under their king, Radbod, assumed for a moment the superiority; and Utrecht, where the French had established Christianity, fell again into the power of the pagans. Charles Martell, at that time young, and but commencing his splendid career, was defeated by the hostile king in the forest of the Ardennes; and though, in subsequent conquests, he took an ample revenge, Radbod still remained a powerful opponent. It is related of this fierce monarch that he was converted by a Christian missionary; but, at the moment in which he put his foot in the water for the ceremony of baptism, he suddenly asked the priest where all his old Frison companions in arms had gone after their death? "To hell," replied the priest. "Well, then," said Radbod, drawing back his foot from the water, "I would rather go to hell with them, than to paradise with you and your fellow foreigners!" and he refused to receive the rite of baptism, and remained a pagan.

After the death of Radbod, in 719, Charles Martell, now become Duke of the Franks, mayor of the palace, or by whatever other of his several titles he may be distinguished, finally triumphed over the long-resisting Frisons. He labored to establish Christianity among them; but they did not understand the French language, and the lot of converting them was consequently reserved for the English. St. Willebrod was the first missionary who met with any success, about the latter end of the seventh century; but it was not till toward the year 750 that this great mission was finally accomplished by St. Boniface, archbishop of Mayence, and the apostle of Germany. Yet the progress of Christianity, and the establishment of a foreign sway, still met the partial resistance which a conquered but not enervated people are always capable of opposing to their masters. St. Boniface fell a victim to this stubborn spirit. He perished a martyr to his zeal, but perhaps a victim as well to the violent measures of his colleagues, in Friesland, the very province which to this day preserves the name.

The last avenger of Friesland liberty and of the national idols was the illustrious Witikind, to whom the chronicles of his Country give the title of first azing, or judge. This intrepid chieftain is considered as a compatriot, not only by the historians of Friesland, but by those of Saxony; both, it would appear, having equal claims to the honor; for the union between the two peoples was constantly strengthened by intermarriages between the noblest families of each. As long as Witikind remained a pagan and a freeman, some doubt existed as to the final fate of Friesland; but when by his conversion he became only a noble of the court of Charlemagne, the slavery of his Country was consummated.


 

Grattan, Chapter 3


HOLLAND THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS

BY
THOMAS COLLEY GRATTAN
WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER OF RECENT EVENTS BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
Lardner's ‘Cyclop.’ vol. x. 1830

CHAPTER III

FROM THE CONQUEST OF FRIESLAND TO THE FORMATION OF HOLLAND A.D. 800--1000

Even at this advanced epoch of foreign domination, there remained as great a difference as ever between the people of the high grounds and the inhabitants of the plain. The latter were, like the rest, incorporated with the great monarchy; but they preserved the remembrance of former independence, and even retained their ancient names. In Flanders, Menapians and Flemings were still found, and in the Country of Antwerp the Toxandrians were not extinct. All the rest of the coast was still called Friesland. But in the high grounds the names of the old inhabitants were lost. Nations were designated by the names of their rivers, forests, or towns. They were classified as accessories to inanimate things; and having no monuments which reminded them of their origin, they became as it were without recollections or associations; and degenerated, as may be almost said, into a people without ancestry.

 The physical state of the Country had greatly changed from the times of Caesar to those of Charlemagne. Many parts of the forest of the Ardennes had been cut down or cleared away. Civilization had only appeared for a while among these woods, to perish like a delicate plant in an ungenial clime; but it seemed to have sucked the very sap from the soil, and to have left the people no remains of the vigor of man in his savage state, nor of the desperate courage of the warriors of Germany. A race of serfs now cultivated the domains of haughty lords and imperious priests. The clergy had immense possessions in this Country; an act of the following century recognizes fourteen thousand families of vassals as belonging to the single abbey of Nivelle. Tournay and Tongres, both Episcopal cities, were by that title somewhat less oppressed than the other ancient towns founded by the Romans; but they appear to have possessed only a poor and degraded population.

 The low lands, on the other hand, announced a striking commencement of improvement and prosperity. The marshes and fens, which had arrested and repulsed the progress of imperial Rome, had disappeared in every part of the interior. The Meuse and the Scheldt no longer joined at their outlets, to desolate the neighboring lands; whether this change was produced by the labors of man, or merely by the accumulation of sand deposited by either stream and forming barriers to both. The towns of Courtraig, Bruges, Ghent, Antwerp, Berg-op-Zoom, and Thiel, had already a flourishing trade. The last-mentioned town contained in the following century fifty-five churches; a fact from which, in the absence of other evidence, the extent of the population may be conjectured. The formation of dikes for the protection of lands formerly submerged was already well understood, and regulated by uniform custom. The plains thus reconquered from the waters were distributed in portions, according to their labor, by those who reclaimed them, except the parts reserved for the chieftain, the church, and the poor.

 This vital necessity for the construction of dikes had given to the Frison and Flemish population a particular habit of union, goodwill, and reciprocal justice, because it was necessary to make common cause in this great work for their mutual preservation. In all other points, the detail of the laws and manners of this united people presents a picture similar to that of the Saxons of England, with the sole exception that the people of the Netherlands were milder than the Saxon race properly so called - their long habit of laborious industry exercising its happy influence on the martial spirit original to both. The manufacturing arts were also somewhat more advanced in this part of the continent than in Great Britain. The Frisons, for example, were the only people who could succeed in making the costly mantles in use among the wealthy Franks.

 The government of Charlemagne admitted but one form, borrowed from that of the empire in the period of its decline - a mixture of the spiritual and temporal powers, exercised in the first place by the emperor, and at second-hand by the Counts and bishops. The Counts in those times were not the heads of noble families, as they afterward became, but officers of the government, removable at will, and possessing no hereditary rights. Their incomes did not arise from salaries paid in money, but consisted of lands, of which they had the revenues during the continuance of their authority. These lands being situated in the limits of their administration, each regarded them as his property only for the time being, and considered himself as a tenant at will. How unfavorable such a system was to culture and improvement may be well imagined. The force of possession was, however, frequently opposed to the seigniorial rights of the crown; and thus, though all civil dignity and the revenues attached to it were but personal and reclaimable at will, still many dignitaries, taking advantage of the barbarous state of the Country in which their isolated cantons were placed, sought by every possible means to render their power and prerogatives inalienable and real. The force of the monarchical government, which consists mainly in its centralization, was necessarily weakened by the intervention of local obstacles, before it could pass from the heart of the empire to its limits. Thus it was only by perpetually interposing his personal efforts, and flying, as it were, from one end to the other of his dominions, that Charlemagne succeeded in preserving his authority. As for the people, without any sort of guarantee against the despotism of the government, they were utterly at the mercy of the nobles or of the sovereign. But this state of servitude was quite incompatible with the union of social powers necessary to a population that had to struggle against the tyranny of the ocean. To repulse its attacks with successful vigor, a spirit of complete concert was absolutely required; and the nation being thus united, and consequently strong, the efforts of foreign tyrants were shattered by its resistance, as the waves of the sea that broke against the dikes by which it was defied.

 From the time of Charlemagne, the people of the ancient Menapia, now become a prosperous commonwealth, formed political associations to raise a barrier against the despotic violence of the Franks. These associations were called Gilden, and in the Latin of the times Gildonia. They comprised, besides their covenants for mutual protection, an obligation which bound every member to give succor to any other, in cases of illness, conflagration, or shipwreck. But the growing force of these social compacts alarmed the quick-sighted despotism of Charlemagne, and they were, consequently, prohibited both by him and his successors. To give a notion of the importance of this prohibition to the whole of Europe, it is only necessary to state that the most ancient corporations (all which had preceded and engendered the most valuable municipal rights) were nothing more than gilden. Thus, to draw an example from Great Britain, the corporative charter of Berwick still bears the title of Charta Gildoniae. But the ban of the sovereigns was without efficacy, when opposed to the popular will. The gilden stood their ground, and within a century after the death of Charlemagne, all Flanders was covered with corporate towns.

 This popular opposition took, however, another form in the northern parts of the Country, which still bore the common name of Friesland; for there it was not merely local but national. The Frisons succeeded in obtaining the sanction of the monarch to consecrate, as it were, those rights which were established under the ancient forms of government. The fact is undoubted; but the means which they employed are uncertain. It appears most probable that this great privilege was the price of their military services; for they held a high place in the victorious armies of Charlemagne; and Turpin, the old French romancer, alluding to the popular traditions of his time, represents the warriors of Friesland as endowed with the most heroic valor.

 These rights, which the Frisons secured, according to their own statements, from Charlemagne, but most undoubtedly from some one or other of the earliest emperors, consisted, first, in the freedom of every order of citizens; secondly, in the right of property - a right which admitted no authority of the sovereign to violate by confiscation, except in cases of downright treason; thirdly, in the privilege of trial by none but native judges, and according to their national usages; fourthly, in a very narrow limitation of the military services which they owed to the king; fifthly, in the hereditary title to feudal property, in direct line, on payment of certain dues or rents. These five principal articles sufficed to render Friesland, in its political aspect, totally different from the other portions of the monarchy. Their privileges secured, their property inviolable, their duties limited, the Frisons were altogether free from the servitude which weighed down France. It will soon be seen that these special advantages produced a government nearly analogous to that which Magna Charta was the means of founding at a later period in England.

 The successors of Charlemagne chiefly signalized their authority by lavishing donations of all kinds on the church. By such means the ecclesiastical power became greater and greater, and, in those Countries under the sway of France, was quite as arbitrary and enormous as that of the nobility. The bishops of Utrecht, Liege, and Tournay, became, in the course of time, the chief personages on that line of the frontier. They had the great advantage over the Counts, of not being subjected to capricious or tyrannical removals. They therefore, even in civil affairs, played a more considerable part than the latter; and began to render themselves more and more independent in their episcopal cities, which were soon to become so many principalities. The Counts, on their parts, used their best exertions to wear out, if they had not the strength to break, the chains which bound them to the footstool of the monarch. They were not all now dependent on the same sovereign; for the empire of Charlemagne was divided among his successors: France, properly so called, was bounded by the Scheldt; the Country to the eastward of that river, that is to say, nearly the whole of the Netherlands, belonged to Lorraine and Germany.

 In the state of things, it happened that in the year 864, Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald, king of France, having survived her husband Ethelwolf, king of England, became attached to a powerful Flemish chieftain called Baldwin. It is not quite certain whether he was Count, forester, marquis, or protector of the frontiers; but he certainly enjoyed, no matter under what title, considerable authority in the Country; since the Pope on one occasion wrote to Charles the Bald to beware of offending him, lest he should join the Normans, and open to them an entrance into France. He carried off Judith to his possessions in Flanders. The king, her father, after many ineffectual threats, was forced to consent to their union; and confirmed to Baldwin, with the title of Count, the hereditary government of all the Country between the Scheldt and the Somme, a river of Picardy. This was the commencement of the celebrated County of Flanders; and this Baldwin is designated in history by the surname of Bras-de-fer (iron-handed), to which his courage had justly entitled him.

 The Belgian historians are also desirous of placing about this epoch the first Counts of Hainaut, and even of Holland. But though it may be true that the chief families of each canton sought then, as at all times, to shake off the yoke, the epoch of their independence can only be fixed at the later period at which they obtained or enforced the privilege of not being deprived of their titles and their feudal estates. The Counts of the high grounds, and those of Friesland, enjoyed at the utmost but a fortuitous privilege of continuance in their rank. Several foreigners had gained a footing and an authority in the Country; among others Wickmand, from whom descended the chatelains of Ghent; and the Counts of Holland, and Heriold, a Norman prince who had been banished from his own Country. This name of Normans, hardly known before the time of Charlemagne, soon became too celebrated. It designated the pagan inhabitants of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, who, driven by rapacity and want, infested the neighboring seas. The asylum allowed in the dominions of the emperors to some of those exiled outlaws, and the imprudent provocations given by these latter to their adventurous Countrymen, attracted various bands of Norman pirates to the shores of Guelders; and from desultory descents upon the coast, they soon came to inundate the interior of the Country. Flanders alone successfully resisted them during the life of Baldwin Bras-de-fer; but after the death of this brave chieftain there was not a province of the whole Country that was not ravaged by these invaders. Their multiplied expeditions threw back the Netherlands at least two centuries, if, indeed, any calculation of the kind may be fairly formed respecting the relative state of population and improvement on the imperfect data that are left us. Several cantons became deserted. The chief cities were reduced to heaps of ruins. The German emperors vainly interposed for the relief of their unfortunate vassals. Finally, an agreement was entered into, in the year 882, with Godfrey the king or leader of the Normans, by which a peace was purchased on condition of paying him a large subsidy, and ceding to him the government of Friesland. But, in about two years from this period, the fierce barbarian began to complain that the Country he had thus gained did not produce grapes, and the present inspiration of his rapacity seemed to be the blooming vineyards of France. The emperor Charles the Fat, anticipating the consequence of a rupture with Godfrey, enticed him to an interview, in which he caused him to be assassinated. His followers, attacked on all points by the people of Friesland, perished almost to a man; and their destruction was completed, in 891, by Arnoul the Germanic. From that period, the scourge of Norman depredation became gradually less felt. They now made but short and desultory attempts on the coast; and their last expedition appears to have taken place about the year 1000, when they threatened, but did not succeed in seizing on, the city of Utrecht.

 It is remarkable that, although for the space of one hundred and fifty years the Netherlands were continually the scene of invasion and devastation by these northern barbarians, the political state of the Country underwent no important changes. The emperors of Germany were sovereigns of the whole Country, with the exception of Flanders. These portions of the empire were still called Lorraine, as well as all which they possessed of what is now called France, and which was that part forming the appanage of Lothaire and of the Lotheringian kings. The great difficulty of maintaining subordination among the numerous chieftains of this Country caused it, in 958, to be divided into two governments, which were called Higher and Lower Lorraine. The latter portion comprised nearly the whole of the Netherlands, which thus became governed by a lieutenant of the emperors. Godfrey Count of Ardenne was the first who filled this place; and he soon felt all the perils of the situation. The other Counts saw, with a jealous eye, their equal now promoted into a superior. Two of the most powerful, Lambert and Reginald, were brothers. They made common cause against the new Duke; and after a desperate struggle, which did not cease till the year 985, they gained a species of imperfect independence - Lambert becoming the root from which sprang the Counts of Louvain, and Reginald that of the Counts of Hainaut.

 The emperor Othon II., who upheld the authority of his lieutenant, Godfrey, became convinced that the imperial power was too weak to resist singly the opposition of the nobles of the Country. He had therefore transferred, about the year 980, the title of Duke to a young prince of the royal house of France; and we thus see the duchy of Lower Lorraine governed, in the name of the emperor, by the last two shoots of the branch of Charlemagne, the Dukes Charles and Othon of France, son and grandson of Louis d'Outremer. The first was a gallant prince: he may be looked on as the founder of the greatness of Brussels, where he fixed his residence. After several years of tranquil government, the death of his brother called him to the throne of France; and from that time he bravely contended for the crown of his ancestors, against the usurpation of Hugues Capet, whom he frequently defeated in battle; but he was at length treacherously surprised and put to death in 990. Othon, his son, did not signalize his name nor justify his descent by any memorable action; and in him ingloriously perished the name of the Carlovingians.

 The death of Othon set the emperor and the great vassals once more in opposition. The German monarch insisted on naming some creature of his own to the dignity of Duke; but Lambert II., Count of Louvain, and Robert, Count of Namur, having married the sisters of Othon, respectively claimed the right of inheritance to his title. Baldwin of the comely beard, Count of Flanders, joined himself to their league, hoping to extend his power to the eastward of the Scheldt. And, in fact, the emperor, as the only means of disuniting his two powerful vassals, felt himself obliged to cede Valenciennes and the islands of Zealand to Baldwin. The imperial power thus lost ground at every struggle.

 Amid the confusion of these events, a power well calculated to rival or even supplant that of the fierce Counts was growing up. Many circumstances were combined to extend and consolidate the episcopal sway. It is true that the bishops of Tournay had no temporal authority since the period of their city being ruined by the Normans. But those of Liege and Utrecht, and more particularly the latter, had accumulated immense possessions; and their power being inalienable, they had nothing to fear from the caprices of sovereign favor, which so often ruined the families of the aristocracy. Those bishops, who were warriors and huntsmen rather than ecclesiastics, possessed, however, in addition to the lance and the sword, the terrible artillery of excommunication and anathema, which they thundered forth without mercy against every laic opponent; and when they had, by conquest or treachery, acquired new dominions and additional store of wealth, they could not portion it among their children, like the nobles, but it devolved to their successors, who thus became more and more powerful, and gained by degrees an authority almost royal, like that of the ecclesiastical elector of Germany.

 Whenever the emperor warred against his lay vassals, he was sure of assistance from the bishops, because they were at all times jealous of the power of the Counts, and had much less to gain from an alliance with them than with the imperial despots on whose donations they throve, and who repaid their efforts by new privileges and extended possessions. So that when the monarch, at length, lost the superiority in his contests with the Counts, little was wanting to make his authority be merged altogether in the overgrown power of these churchmen. Nevertheless, a first effort of the bishop of Liege to seize on the rights of the Count of Louvain in 1013 met with a signal defeat, in a battle which took place at the little village of Stongarde. And five years later, the Count of the Friesland marshes (comes Frisonum Morsatenorum) gave a still more severe lesson to the bishop of Utrecht. This last merits a more particular mention from the nature of the quarrel and the importance of its results.


 

Grattan, Contents


HOLLAND THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS

BY
THOMAS COLLEY GRATTAN
WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER OF RECENT EVENTS BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
Lardner's ‘Cyclop.’ vol. x. 1830

CONTENTS


 

CHAPTER I

FROM THE INVASION OF THE NETHERLANDS BY THE ROMANS TO THE INVASION BY THE SALIAN FRANKS B.C. 50--A.D. 250

Extent of the Kingdom--Description of the People--Ancient State of the Low Countries--Of the High Grounds--Contrasted with the present Aspect of the Country--Expedition of Julius Cæsar--The Belgæ--The Menapians--Batavians--Distinguished among the Auxiliaries of Rome--Decrease of national Feeling in Part of the Country--Steady Patriotism of the Frisons and Menapians Commencement of Civilization--Early Formation of the Dikes- Degeneracy of those who became united to the Romans--Invasion of the Netherlands by the Salian Franks.

CHAPTER II

FROM THE SETTLEMENT OF THE FRANKS TO THE SUBJUGATION OF FRIESLAND BY THE FRENCH A.D. 250--800

Character of the Franks--The Saxon Tribes--Destruction of the Salians by a Saxon Tribe--Julian the Apostate--Victories of Clovis in Gaul--Contrast between the Low Countries and the Provinces of France--State of Friesland--Charles Martell--Friesland converted to Christianity--Finally subdued by France.

CHAPTER III

FROM THE CONQUEST OF FRIESLAND TO THE FORMATION OF HOLLAND A.D. 800--1000

Commencement of the Feudal System in the Highlands--Flourishing State of the Low Countries--Counts of the Empire--Formation of the Gilden or Trades--Establishment of popular Privileges in Friesland--In what they consisted--Growth of Ecclesiastical Power--Baldwin of Flanders--Created Count--Appearance of the Normans--They ravage the Netherlands--Their Destruction, and final Disappearance--Division of the Empire into Higher and Lower Lorraine--Establishment of the Counts of Lorraine and Hainaut--Increasing Power of the Bishops of Liege and Utrecht--Their Jealousy of the Counts; who resist their Encroachments.

CHAPTER IV

FROM THE FORMATION OF HOLLAND TO THE DEATH OF LOUIS DE MALE A.D. 1018--1384

Origin of Holland--Its first Count--Aggrandizement of Flanders--Its growing Commerce--Fisheries--Manufactures--Formation of the County of Guelders, and of Brabant--State of Friesland--State of the Provinces--The Crusades--Their good Effects on the State of the Netherlands--Decline of the Feudal Power, and Growth of the Influence of the Towns--Great Prosperity of the Country--The Flemings take up Arms against the French--Drive them out of Bruges, and defeat them in the Battle of Courtrai--Popular Success in Brabant--Its Confederation with Flanders--Rebellion of Bruges against the Count, and of Ghent under James d' Artaveldt--His Alliance with England--His Power, and Death--Independence of Flanders--Battle of Roosbeke--Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, obtains the Sovereignty of Flanders.

CHAPTER V

FROM THE SUCCESSION OF PHILIP THE BOLD TO THE County OF FLANDERS TO THE DEATH OF PHILIP THE FAIR A.D. 1384--1506

Philip succeeds to the Inheritance of Brabant--Makes War on England as a French Prince, Flanders remaining neuter--Power of the Houses of Burgundy and Bavaria, and Decline of Public Liberty--Union of Holland, Hainaut, and Brabant--Jacqueline, Countess of Holland and Hainaut--Flies from the Tyranny of her Husband, John of Brabant, and takes Refuge in England--Murder of John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy--Accession of his Son, Philip the Good--His Policy--Espouses the Cause of John of Brabant against Jacqueline--Deprives her of Hainaut, Holland, and Zealand--Continues his Persecution, and despoils her of her last Possession and Titles--She marries a Gentleman of Zealand, and Dies--Peace or Arras--Dominions of the House of Burgundy equal to the present Extent of the Kingdom of the Netherlands--Rebellion of Ghent--Affairs of Holland and Zealand--Charles the Rash--His Conduct in Holland--Succeeds his Father--Effects of Philip's Reign on the Manners of the People--Louis XI.--Death of Charles, and Succession of Mary--Factions among her Subjects--Marries Maximilian of Austria--Battle of Guinegate--Death of Mary--Maximilian unpopular--Imprisoned by his Subjects-Released--Invades the Netherlands--Succeeds to the Imperial Throne by the Death of his Father--Philip the Fair proclaimed Duke and Count--His wise Administration--Affairs of Friesland--Of Guelders--Charles of Egmont--Death of Philip the Fair.

CHAPTER VI

FROM THE GOVERNMENT OF MARGARET OF AUSTRIA TO THE ABDICATION OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V A.D. 1506--1555

Margaret of Austria invested with the Sovereignty--Her Character and Government--Charles, Son of Philip the Fair, created Duke of Brabant and Count of Flanders and Holland--The Reformation--Martin Luther--Persecution of the Reformers--Battle of Pavia--Cession of Utrecht to Charles V.--Peace of Cambray--The Anabaptists' Sedition at Ghent--Expedition against Tunis and Algiers--Charles becomes possessed of Friesland and Guelders--His increasing Severity against the Protestants--His Abdication and Death--Review--Progress of Civilization.

CHAPTER VII

FROM THE ACCESSION OF PHILIP II. OF SPAIN TO THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE INQUISITION IN THE NETHERLANDS A.D. 1555--1566

Accession of Philip II.--His Character and Government--His Wars with France, and with the Pope--Peace with the Pope--Battle of St. Quentin--Battle of Gravelines--Peace of Câteau-Cambresis--Death of Mary of England--Philip's Despotism--Establishes a Provisional Government--Convenes the States--General at Ghent--His Minister Granvelle--Goes to Zealand--Embarks for Spain--Prosperity revives--Effects of the Provisional Government--Marguerite of Palma--Character of Granvelle--Viglius de Berlaimont--Departure of the spanish Troops--Clergy--Bishops--National Discontent--Granvelle appointed Cardinal--Edict against Heresy--Popular Indignation--Reformation--State of Brabant--Confederacy against Granvelle--Prince of Orange--Counts Egmont and Horn join the Prince against Granvelle--Granvelle recalled--Council of Trent--Its Decrees received with Reprobation--Decrees against Reformers--Philip's Bigotry--Establishment of the Inquisition--Popular Resistance.

CHAPTER VIII

COMMENCEMENT OF THE REVOLUTION A.D. 1566

Commencement of the Revolution--Defence of the Prince of Orange--Confederacy of the Nobles--Louis of Nassau--De Brederode--Philip de St. Aldegonde--Assembly of the Council of State--Confederates enter Brussels--Take the Title of _Gueux_---Quit Brussels, and disperse in the Provinces--Measures of Government--Growing Power of the Confederates--Progress of the Reformation--Field Preaching--Herman Stricker--Boldness of the Protestants--Peter Dathen--Ambrose Ville--Situation of Antwerp--The Prince repairs to it, and saves it--Meeting of the Confederates at St. Trond---The Prince of Orange and Count Egmont treat with them--Tyranny of Philip and Moderation of the Spanish Council--Image Breakers--Destruction of the Cathedral, of Antwerp--Terror of Government--Firmness of Viglius--Arbitration between the Court and the People--Concessions made by Government--Restoration of Tranquillity.

CHAPTER IX

TO THE ADMINISTRATION OF REQUESENS A.D. 1566--1573

Philip's Vindictiveness and Hypocrisy--Progress of Protestantism--Gradual Dissolution of the Conspiracy--Artifices of Philip and the Court to disunite the Protestants--Firmness of the Prince of Orange--Conference at Termonde--Egmont abandons the Patriot Cause--Fatal Effects of his Conduct--Commencement of Hostilities--Siege of Valenciennes--Protestant Synod at Antwerp--Haughty Conduct of the Government--Royalists Repulsed at Bois-le-duc--Battle of Osterweel, and Defeat of the Patriots--Antwerp again saved by the Firmness and Prudence of the Prince of Orange--Capitulation of Valenciennes--Success of the Royalists--Death of De Brederode--New Oath of Allegiance; Refused by the Prince of Orange and others--The Prince resolves on voluntary Banishment, and departs for Germany--His Example is followed by the Lords--Extensive Emigration--Arrival of the Duke of Orleans--Egmont's Humiliation--Alva's Powers--Arrest of Egmont and others---Alva's first Acts of Tyranny--Council of Blood--Recall of the Government--Alva's Character--He summons the Prince of Orange, who is tried by Contumacy--Horrors committed by Alva--Desolate State of the Country--Trial and Execution of Egmont and Horn--The Prince of Orange raises an Army in Germany, and opens his first Campaign in the Netherlands--Battle of Heiligerlee--Death of Adolphus of Nassau--Battle of Jemminghem--Success and skilful Conduct of Alva--Dispersion of the Prince of Orange's Army--Growth of the naval Power of the Patriots--Inundation in Holland and Friesland--Alva reproached by Philip--Duke of Medina-Celi appointed Governor--Is attacked, and his fleet destroyed by the Patriots--Demands his Recall--Policy of the English Queen, Elizabeth--The Dutch take Brille--General Revolt in Holland and Zealand--New Expedition of the Prince of Orange--Siege of Mons--Success of the Prince--Siege of Haarlem--Of Alkmaer--Removal of Alva--Don Luis Zanega y Requesens appointed Governor-General.

CHAPTER X

TO THE PACIFICATION OF GHENT A.D. 1573--1576

Character of Requesens--His conciliating Conduct--Renews the War against the States--Siege of Middleburg--Generosity of the Prince of Orange--Naval Victory--State of Flanders--Count Louis of Nassau--Battle of Mookerheyde--Counts Louis and Henry slain--Mutiny of the Spanish Troops--Siege of Leyden--Negotiations for Peace at Breda--The Spaniards take Zuriczee--Requesens dies--The Government devolves on the Council of State--Miserable State of the Country, and Despair of the Patriots--Spanish Mutineers--The States-General are convoked, and the Council arrested by the Grand Bailiff of Brabant--The Spanish Mutineers sack and capture Maestricht, and afterward Antwerp--The States-General assemble at Ghent and assume the Government--The Pacification of Ghent.

CHAPTER XI

TO THE RENUNCIATION OF THE SOVEREIGNTY OF SPAIN AND THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE A.D. 1576--1580

Don John of Austria, Governor-General, arrives in the Netherlands--His Character and Conduct--The States send an Envoy to Elizabeth of England--She advances them a Loan of Money--The Union of Brussels--The Treaty of Marche-en-Famenne, called the Perpetual Edict--The impetuous Conduct of Don John excites the public Suspicion--He seizes on the Citadel of Namur--The Prince of Orange is named Protector of Brabant--The People destroy the Citadels of Antwerp and other Towns--The Duke of Arschot is named Governor of Flanders--He invites the ArchDuke Mathias to accept the Government of the Netherlands--Wise Conduct of the Prince of Orange--Ryhove and Hembyse possess themselves of supreme Power at Ghent--The Prince of Orange goes there and establishes Order--The ArchDuke Mathias is installed--The Prince of Parma arrives in the Netherlands, and gains the Battle of Gemblours--Confusion of the States-General--The Duke of Alencon comes to their Assistance--Dissensions among the Patriot Chiefs--Death of Don John of Austria--Suspicions of his having been Poisoned by Order of Philip II.--The Prince of Parma is declared Governor-General--The Union of Utrecht--The Prince of Parma takes the Field--The Congress of Cologne rendered fruitless by the Obstinacy of Philip--The States-General assemble at Antwerp, and issue a Declaration of National Independence--The Sovereignty of the Netherlands granted to the Duke of Alencon.

CHAPTER XII

TO THE MURDER OF THE PRINCE OF ORANGE A.D. 1580--1584

Proscription of the Prince of Orange--His celebrated Apology--Philip proposes sending back the Duchess of Parma as Stadtholder ess--Her son refuses to act jointly with her, and is left in the exercise of his Power--The Siege of Cambray undertaken by the Prince of Parma, and gallantly defended by the Princess of Epinoi--The Duke of Alencon created Duke of Anjou--Repairs to England, in hopes of marrying Queen Elizabeth--He returns to the Netherlands unsuccessful, and is inaugurated at Antwerp--The Prince of Orange desperately wounded by an Assassin--Details on John Jaureguay and his Accomplices--The People suspect the French of the Crime--Rapid Recovery of the Prince, who soon resumes his accustomed Activity--Violent Conduct of the Duke of Anjou, who treacherously attempts to seize on Antwerp--He is defeated by the Townspeople-- His Disgrace and Death--Ungenerous Suspicions of the People against the Prince of Orange, who leaves Flanders in Disgust--Treachery of the Prince of Chimay and others--Treason of Hembyse--He is executed at Ghent--The States resolve to confer the Sovereignty on the Prince of Orange--He is murdered at Delft--Parallel between him and the Admiral Coligny--Execution of Balthazar Gerard, his Assassin--Complicity of the Prince of Parma.

CHAPTER XIII

TO THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER, PRINCE OF PARMA A.D. 1584--1592

Effects of William's Death on the History of his Country--Firm Conduct of the United Provinces--They reject the Overtures of the Prince of Parma--He reduces the whole of Flanders--Deplorable Situation of the Country--Vigorous Measures of the Northern States--Antwerp besieged--Operations of the Siege--Immense Exertions of the Besiegers--The Infernal Machine--Battle on the Dike of Couvestien--Surrender of Antwerp--Extravagant Joy of Philip II.--The United Provinces solicit the Aid of France and England--Elizabeth sends them a supply of Troops under the Earl of Leicester--He returns to England--Treachery of some English and Scotch Officers--Prince Maurice commences his Career--The Spanish Armada--Justin of Nassau blocks up the Prince of Parma in the Flemish Ports--Ruin of the Armada--Philip's Mock Pietssy on hearing the News--Leicester dies--Exploits and Death of Martin Schenck--Breda surprised--The Duke of Parma leads his Army into France--His famous Retreat--His Death and Character.

CHAPTER XIV

TO THE INDEPENDENCE OF BELGIUM AND THE DEATH OF PHILLIP II. A.D. 1592--1599

Count Mansfield named Governor-General--State of Flanders and Brabant--The ArchDuke Ernest named Governor-General-Attempts against the Life of Prince Maurice--He takes Groningen--Death of the ArchDuke Ernest--Count Fuentes named Governor-General--He takes Cambray and other Towns--Is soon replaced by the ArchDuke Albert of Austria--His high Reputation--He opens his first Campaign in the Netherlands--His Successes--Prince Maurice gains the Battle of Turnhout--Peace of Vervins--Philip yields the Sovereignty of the Netherlands to Albert and Isabella--A new Plot against the Life of Prince Maurice--Albert sets out for Spain, and receives the News of Philip's Death--Albert arrives in Spain, and solemnizes his Marriage with the Infanta Isabella--Review of the State of the Netherlands.

CHAPTER XV

TO THE CAMPAIGN OF PRINCE MAURICE AND SPINOLA A.D. 1599--1604

Cardinal Andrew of Austria Governor--Francisco Mendoza, Admiral of Aragon, invades the neutral States of Germany--His atrocious Conduct--Prince Maurice takes the Field--His masterly

Movements--Sybilla of Cleves raises an Army, which is, quickly destroyed--Great Exertions of the States-General--Naval Expedition under Vander Goes--Its complete Failure--Critical Situation of the United Provinces--Arrival of the ArchDuke in Brussels--Success of Prince Maurice--His Expedition into Flanders--Energy of the ArchDuke--Heroism of Isabella--Progress of Albert's Army--Its first Success--Firmness of Maurice--The Battle of Nieuport--Total Defeat of the Royalists--Consequences of the Victory--Prince Maurice returns to Holland--Negotiations for Peace--Siege of Ostend--Death of Elizabeth of England--United Provinces send Ambassadors to James I.--Successful Negotiations of Barneveldt and the Duke of Sully in London--Peace between England and Spain--Brilliant Campaign between Spinola and Prince Maurice--Battle of Roeroord--Naval Transactions--Progress of Dutch Influence in India--Establishment of the East India Company.

CHAPTER XVI

TO THE SYNOD OF DORT AND THE EXECUTION OF BARNEVELDT A.D. 1600--1619

Spinola proposes to invade the United Provinces--Successfully opposed by Prince Maurice--The Dutch defeated at Sea- Desperate Conduct of Admiral Klagoon--Great naval Victory of the Dutch, and Death of their Admiral Heemskirk--Overtures of the ArchDukes for Peace--How received in Holland--Prudent Conduct of Barneveldt--Negotiations opened at The Hague--John de Neyen, Ambassador for the ArchDukes--Armistice for Eight Months--Neyen attempts to bribe D'Aarsens, the Greffier of the States-General--His Conduct disclaimed by Verreiken, Counsellor to the ArchDukes--Great Prejudices in Holland against King James I. and the English, and Partiality toward France--Rupture of the Negotiations--They are renewed--Truce for Twelve Years signed at Antwerp--Gives great Satisfaction in the Netherlands--Important Attitude of the United Provinces--Conduct of the Belgian Provinces--Disputes relative to Cleves and Juviers--Prince Maurice and Spinola remove their Armies into the contested states--Intestine Troubles in the United Provinces--Assassination of Henry IV. of France--His Character--Change in Prince Maurice's Character and Conduct--He is strenuously opposed by Barneveldt--Religious Disputes--King James enters the Lists of Controversy--Barneveldt and Maurice take Opposite sides--The cautionary Towns released from the Possession of England--Consequences of this Event--Calumnies against Barneveldt--Ambitious Designs of Prince Maurice--He is baffled by Barneveldt--The Republic assists its Allies with Money and Ships--Its great naval Power--Outrages of some Dutch Sailors in Ireland--Unresented by King James--His Anger at the manufacturing Prosperity of the United Provinces--Excesses of the Gomarists--The Magistrates call out the National Militia--Violent Conduct of Prince Maurice--Uncompromising Steadiness of Barneveldt--Calumnies against him--Maurice succeeds to the Title of Prince of Orange, and Acts with increasing Violence--Arrest of Barneveldt and his Friends--Synod of Dort--Its Consequences--Trial, Condemnation, and Execution of Barneveldt--Grotius and Hoogerbeets sentenced to perpetual Imprisonmemt--Ledenburg commits Suicide.

CHAPTER XVII

TO THE DEATH OF PRINCE MAURICE A.D. 1619--1625

The Parties Of Arminianism quite subdued--Emigrations--Grotius resolves to attempt an Escape from Prison--Succeeds in his Attempt--He repairs to Paris, and publishes his "Apology"--Expiration of the Twelve Years' Truce--Death of Philip III. And of the ArchDuke Albert--War in Germany--Campaign between Prince Maurice and Spinola--Conspiracy against the Life of Prince Maurice--Its Failure--Fifteen of the Conspirators executed--Great Unpopularity of Maurice--Death of Maurice.

CHAPTER XVIII

TO THE TREATY OF MUNSTER A.D. 1625--1648

Frederick Henry succeeds his Brother--Charles I. King of England--War between France and England--Victories of Admiral Hein--Brilliant Success of Frederick Henry--Fruitless Enterprise in Flanders--Death of the Archduchess Isabella--Confederacy in Brabant--Its Failure, and Arrest of the Nobles--Ferdinand, Prince-Cardinal, Governor-General--Treaty between France and Holland--Battle of Avein--Naval Affairs--Battle of the Downs--Van Tromp--Negotiations for the Marriage of Prince William with the Princess Mary of England--Death of the Prince-Cardinal--Don Francisco de Mello Governor-General--Battle of Rocroy--Gallantry of Prince William--Death of Cardinal Richelieu and of Louis XIII.--English Politics--Affairs of Germany--Negotiations for Peace--Financial Embarrassment of the Republic--The Republic negotiates with Spain--Last Exploits of Frederick Henry--His Death, and Character--William II. Stadtholder --Peace of Munster--Resentment of Louis XIII.--Peace of Westphalia--Review of the Progress of Art, Science, and Manners--Literature-- Painting--Engraving-- Sculpture--Architecture--Finance--Population--Commercial

Companies--Manners.

CHAPTER XIX

FROM THE PEACE OF MUNSTER TO THE PEACE OF NIMEGUEN A.D. 1648--1678

State of the Republic after the Peace of Munster--State of England--William II. Stadtholder --His ambitious Designs and Violent Conduct--Attempts to seize on Amsterdam--His Death--Different Sensations caused by his Death--The Prerogatives of the Stadtholder assumed by the People--Naval War with England--English Act of Navigation--Irish Hostilities--Death of Tromp--A Peace with England--Disturbed State of the Republic--War with Denmark--Peace concluded--Charles II. restored to the English Throne--Declares War against Holland--Naval Actions--Charles endeavors to excite all Europe against the Dutch--His Failure--Renewed Hostilities--De Ruyter defeated--Peace of Breda--Invasion of Flanders by Louis XIV.--He overruns Brabant and Flanders--Triple League, 1668--Perfidious Conduct of Charles II.--He declares War against Holland, etc., as does Louis XIV.--Unprepared State of United Provinces--William III. Prince of Orange--Appointed Captain-General and High Admiral--Battle of Solebay--The French Invade the Republic--The States-General implore Peace--Terms demanded by Louis XIV. and by Charles II.--Desperation of the Dutch--The Prince of Orange proclaimed Stadtholder --Massacre of the De Witts--Fine Conduct of the Prince of Orange--He takes the Field--Is reinforced by Spain, the Emperor, and Brandenburg--Louis XIV. forced to abandon his Conquests--Naval Actions with the English--A Peace, 1674--Military Affairs--Battle of Senef--Death of De Ruyter--Congress for Peace at Nimeguen--Battle of Mont Cassel--Marriage of the Prince of Orange--Peace of Nimeguen.

CHAPTER XX

FROM THE PEACE OF NIMEGUEN TO THE PEACE OF UTRECHT A.D. 1678--1713

State of Europe subsequently to the Peace of Nimeguen--Arrogant Conduct of Louis XIV.--Truce for Twenty Years--Death of Charles II. of England--League of Augsburg--The Conduct of William--He invades England--James II. Deposed--William III. proclaimed King of England--King William puts himself at the Head of the Confederacy against Louis XIV., and enters on the War--Military Operations--Peace of Ryswyk--Death of Charles II. of Spain--War of Succession--Death of William III.--His Character--Duke of Marlborough--Prince Eugene--Successes of the Earl of Peterborough in Spain and Portugal--Louis XIV. solicits Peace--Conferences for Peace--Peace of Utrecht--Treaty of the Barrier.

CHAPTER XXI

FROM THE PEACE OF UTRECHT TO THE INCORPORATION OF BELGIUM WITH THE FRENCH REPUBLIC A.D. 1713--1794

Quadruple Alliance--General Peace of Europe--Wise Conduct of the Republic--Great Danger from the bad State of the Dikes- Death of the Emperor Charles VI.--Maria Theresa Empress--Her heroic Conduct--Battle of Dettingen--Louis XV. invades the Netherlands--Conferences for Peace at Breda--Battle of Fontenoy--William IV. Stadtholder and Captain-General--Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle--Death of the Stadtholder , who is succeeded by his Son William V.--War of Seven Years--State of the Republic- William V. Stadtholder --Dismemberment of Poland--Joseph II. Emperor--His attempted Reforms in Religion--War with England--Sea-Fight on the Doggerbank--Peace with England, 1784--Progress of Public Opinion in Europe, in Belgium, and Holland--Violent Opposition to the Stadtholder --Arrest of the Princess of Orange--Invasion of Holland by the Prussian Army--Agitation in Belgium--Vander Noot--Prince Albert of Saxe-Teschen and the Archduchess Maria Theresa joint Governors-General--Succeeded by Count Murray--Riots--Meetings of the Provisional States--General Insurrection--Vonckists--Vander Mersch--Takes the Command of the Insurgents--His Skilful Conduct--He gains the Battle of Turnhout--Takes Possession of Flanders--Confederation of the Belgian Provinces--Death of Joseph II.--Leopold Emperor--Arrest of Vander Mersch--Arrogance of the States-General of Belgium--The Austrians overrun the Country--Convention at The Hague--Death of Leopold--Battle of Jemmappes--General Dumouriez--Conquest of Belgium by the French--Recovered by the Austrians--The ArchDuke Charles Governor-General--War in the Netherlands--Duke of York--The Emperor Francis--The Battle of Fleurus--Incorporation of Belgium with the French Republic--Peace of Leoben--Treaty of Campo-Formio.

CHAPTER XXII

FROM THE INVASION OF HOLLAND BY THE FRENCH TO THE RETURN OF THE PRINCE OF ORANGE A.D. 1794--1818

Pichegru invades Holland--Winter Campaign--The Duke of York vainly resists the French Army--Abdication of the Stadtholder --Batavian Republic--War with England--Unfortunate Situation of Holland--Naval Fight--English Expedition to the Helder--Napoleon Bonaparte--Louis Bonaparte named King of Holland--His popular Conduct--He abdicates the Throne--Annexation of Holland to the French Empire--Ruinous to the Prosperity of the Republic--The people desire the Return of the Prince of Orange--Confederacy to effect this Purpose--The Allied Armies advance toward Holland--The Nation rises to throw off the Yoke of France--Count Styrum and his Associates lead on that Movement, and proclaim the Prince of Orange, who lands from England--His first Proclamation--His second Proclamation.

CHAPTER XXIII

FROM THE INSTALLATION OF WILLIAM I. AS PRINCE-SOVEREIGN OF THE NETHERLANDS TO THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO A.D. 1813--1815

Rapid Organization of Holland--The Constitution formed--Accepted by the People--Objections made to it by some Individuals--Inauguration of the Prince-Sovereign--Belgium is occupied by the Allies--Treaty of Paris--Treaty of London--Formation of the Kingdom of the Netherlands--Basis of the Government--Relative Character and Situation of Holland and Belgium--The Prince-Sovereign of Holland arrives in Belgium as Governor-General--The fundamental Law--Report of the Commissioners by whom it was framed--Public Feeling in Holland, and in Belgium--The Emperor Napoleon invades France, and Belgium--The Prince of Orange takes the Field--The Duke of Wellington--Prince Blucher--Battle of Ligny--Battle of Quatre Bras--Battle of Waterloo--Anecdote of the Prince of Orange, who is wounded--Inauguration of the King.

SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER (A.D. 1810--1899).


 

Grattan, Chapter 1


HOLLAND THE HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS

BY
THOMAS COLLEY GRATTAN
WITH A SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER OF RECENT EVENTS BY JULIAN HAWTHORNE
Lardner's ‘Cyclop.’ vol. x. 1830

CHAPTER I

FROM THE INVASION OF THE NETHERLANDS BY THE ROMANS TO THE INVASION BY THE SALIAN FRANKS B.C. 50--A.D. 200

The Netherlands form a kingdom of moderate extent, situated on the borders of the ocean, opposite to the southeast coast of England, and stretching from the frontiers of France to those of Hanover. The Country is principally composed of low and humid grounds, presenting a vast plain, irrigated by the waters from all those neighboring states which are traversed by the Rhine, the Meuse, and the Scheldt. This plain, gradually rising toward its eastern and southern extremities, blends on the one hand with Prussia, and on the other with France. Having, therefore, no natural or strongly marked limits on those sides, the extent of the kingdom could only be determined by convention; and it must be at all times subject to the arbitrary and varying influence of European policy. Its greatest length, from north to south, is about two hundred and twenty English miles; and its breadth, from east to west, is nearly one hundred and forty.

 Two distinct kinds of men inhabit this kingdom. The one occupying the valleys of the Meuse and the Scheldt, and the high grounds bordering on France, speak a dialect of the language of that Country, and evidently belong to the Gallic race. They are called Walloons, and are distinguished from the others by many peculiar qualities. Their most prominent characteristic is a propensity for war, and their principal source of subsistence the working of their mines. They form nearly one-fourth of the population of the whole kingdom, or about one million three hundred thousand persons. All the rest of the nation speak Low German, in its modifications of Dutch and Flemish; and they offer the distinctive characteristics of the Saxon race--talents for agriculture, navigation, and commerce; perseverance rather than vivacity; and more courage than taste for the profession of arms. They are subdivided into Flemings--those who were the last to submit to the House of Austria; and Dutch--those who formed the republic of the United Provinces. But there is no difference between these two subdivisions, except such as has been produced by political and religious institutions. The physical aspect of the people is the same; and the soil, equally law and moist, is at once fertilized and menaced by the waters.

 The history of this last-mentioned portion of the nation is completely linked to that of the soil which they occupy. In remote times, when the inhabitants of this plain were few and uncivilized, the Country formed but one immense morass, of which the chief part was incessantly inundated and made sterile by the waters of the sea. Pliny the naturalist, who visited the northern coasts, has left us a picture of their state in his days. "There," says he, "the ocean pours in its flood twice every day, and produces a perpetual uncertainty whether the Country may be considered as a part of the continent or of the sea. The wretched inhabitants take refuge on the sand-hills, or in little huts, which they construct on the summits of lofty stakes, whose elevation is conformable to that of the highest tides. When the sea rises, they appear like navigators; when it retires, they seem as though they had been shipwrecked. They subsist on the fish left by the re-fluent waters, and which they catch in nets formed of rushes or seaweed. Neither tree nor shrub is visible on these shores. The drink of the people is rain-water, which they preserve with great care; their fuel, a sort of turf, which they gather and form with the hand. And yet these unfortunate beings dare to complain against their fate, when they fall under the power and are incorporated with the empire of Rome!" The picture of poverty and suffering which this passage presents is heightened when joined to a description of the Country. The coasts consisted only of sand-banks or slime, alternately overflowed or left imperfectly dry. A little further inland, trees were to be found, but on a soil so marshy that an inundation or a tempest threw down whole forests, such as are still at times discovered at either eight or ten feet depth below the surface. The sea had no limits; the rivers no beds nor banks; the earth no solidity; for according to an author of the third century of our era, there was not, in the whole of too immense plain, a spot of ground that did not yield under the footsteps of man.--Eumenius.

 It was not the same in the southern parts, which form at present the Walloon Country. These high grounds suffered much less from the ravages of the waters. The ancient forest of the Ardennes, extending from the Rhine to the Scheldt, sheltered a numerous though savage population, which in all things resembled the Germans, from whom they derived their descent. The chase and the occupations of rude agriculture sufficed for the wants of a race less poor and less patient, but more unsteady and ambitious, than the fishermen of the low lands. Thus it is that history presents us with a tribe of warriors and conquerors on the southern frontier of the Country; while the scattered inhabitants of the remaining parts seemed to have fixed there without a contest, and to have traced out for themselves, by necessity and habit, an existence which any other people must have considered insupportable.

 This difference in the nature of the soil and in the fate of the inhabitants appears more striking when we consider the present situation of the Country. The high grounds, formerly so preferable, are now the least valuable part of the kingdom, even as regards their agriculture; while the ancient marshes have been changed by human industry into rich and fertile tracts, the best parts of which are precisely those conquered from the grasp of the ocean. In order to form an idea of the solitude and desolation which once reigned where we now see the most richly cultivated fields, the most thriving villages, and the wealthiest towns of the continent, the imagination must go back to times which have not left one monument of antiquity and scarcely a vestige of fact.

 The history of the Netherlands is, then, essentially that of a patient and industrious population struggling against every obstacle which nature could oppose to its well-being; and, in this contest, man triumphed most completely over the elements in those places where they offered the greatest resistance. This extraordinary result was due to the hardy stamp of character imprinted by suffering and danger on those who had the ocean for their foe; to the nature of their Country, which presented no lure for conquest; and, finally, to the toleration, the justice, and the liberty nourished among men left to themselves, and who found resources in their social state which rendered change neither an object of their wants nor wishes.

 About half a century before the Christian era, the obscurity which enveloped the north of Europe began to disperse; and the expedition of Julius Cæsar gave to the civilized world the first notions of the Netherlands, Germany, and England. Cæsar, after having subjugated the chief part of Gaul, turned his arms against the warlike tribes of the Ardennes, who refused to accept his alliance or implore his protection. They were called Belgæ by the Romans; and at once pronounced the least civilized and the bravest of the Gauls. Cæsar there found several ignorant and poor but intrepid clans of warriors, who marched fiercely to enCounter him; and, notwithstanding their inferiority in numbers, in weapons, and in tactics, they nearly destroyed the disciplined armies of Rome. They were, however, defeated, and their Country ravaged by the invaders, who found less success when they attacked the natives of the low grounds. The Menapians, a people who occupied the present provinces of Flanders and Antwerp, though less numerous than those whom the Romans had last vanquished, arrested their progress both by open fight and by that petty and harassing contest--that warfare of the people rather than of the soldiery--so well adapted to the nature of the Country. The Roman legions retreated for the first time, and were contented to occupy the higher parts, which now form the Walloon provinces.

 But the policy of Cæsar made greater progress than his arms. He had rather defeated than subdued those who had dared the contest. He consolidated his victories without new battles; he offered peace to his enemies, in proposing to them alliance; and he required their aid, as friends, to carry on new wars in other lands. He thus attracted toward him, and ranged under his banners, not only those people situated to the west of the Rhine and the Meuse, but several other nations more to the north, whose territory he had never seen; and particularly the Batavians--a valiant tribe, stated by various ancient authors, and particularly by Tacitus, as a fraction of the Catti, who occupied the space comprised between these rivers. The young men of these warlike people, dazzled by the splendor of the Roman armies, felt proud and happy in being allowed to identify themselves with them. Cæsar encouraged this disposition, and even went so far on some occasions as to deprive the Roman cavalry of their horses, on which he mounted those new allies, who managed them better than their Italian riders. He had no reason to repent these measures; almost all his subsequent victories, and particularly that of Pharsalia, being decided by the valor of the auxiliaries he obtained from the Low Countries.

 These auxiliaries were chiefly drawn from Hainaut, Luxemburg, and the Country of the Batavians, and they formed the best cavalry of the Roman armies, as well as their choicest light infantry force. The Batavians also signalized themselves on many occasions, by the skill with which they swam across several great rivers without breaking their squadrons ranks. They were amply rewarded for their military services and hazardous exploits, and were treated like stanch and valuable allies. But this unequal connection of a mighty empire with a few petty states must have been fatal to the liberty of the weaker party. Its first effect was to destroy all feeling of nationality in a great portion of the population. The young adventurer of this part of the Low Countries, after twenty years of service under the imperial eagles, returned to his native wilds a Roman. The generalsof the empire pierced the forests of the Ardennes with causeways, and founded towns in the heart of the Country. The result of such innovations was a total amalgamation of the Romans and their new allies; and little by little the national character of the latter became entirely obliterated. But to trace now the precise history of this gradual change would be as impossible as it will be one day to follow the progress of civilization in the woods of North America.

 But it must be remarked that this metamorphosis affected only the inhabitants of the high grounds, and the Batavians (who were in their origin Germans) properly so called. The scanty population of the rest of the Country, endowed with that fidelity to their ancient customs which characterizes the Saxon race, showed no tendency to mix with foreigner, rarely figured in their ranks, and seemed to revolt from the southern refinement which was so little in harmony with their manners and ways of life. It is astonishing, at the first view, that those beings, whose whole existence was a contest against famine or the waves, should show less inclination than their happier neighbors to receive from Rome an abundant recompense for their services. But the greater their difficulty to find subsistence in their native land, the stronger seemed their attachment; like that of the Switzer to his barren rocks, or of the mariner to the frail and hazardous home that bears him afloat on the ocean. This race of patriots was divided into two separate peoples. Those to the north of the Rhine were the Frisons; those to the west of the Meuse, the Menapians, already mentioned.

 The Frisons differed little from those early inhabitants of the coast, who, perched on their high-built huts, fed on fish and drank the water of the clouds. Slow and successive improvements taught them to cultivate the beans which grew wild among the marshes, and to tend and feed a small and degenerate breed of horned cattle. But if these first steps toward civilization were slow, they were also sure; and they were made by a race of men who could never retrograde in a career once begun.

 The Menapians, equally repugnant to foreign impressions, made, on their part, a more rapid progress. They were already a maritime people, and carried on a considerable commerce with England. It appears that they exported thither salt, the art of manufacturing which was well known to them; and they brought back in return marl, a most important commodity for the improvement of their land. They also understood the preparation of salting meat, with a perfection that made it in high repute even in Italy; and, finally, we are told by Ptolemy that they had established a colony on the eastern coast of Ireland, not far from Dublin.

 The two classes of what forms at present the population of the Netherlands thus followed careers widely different, during the long period of the Roman power in these parts of Europe. While those of the high lands and the Batavians distinguished themselves by a long-continued course of military service or servitude, those of the plains improved by degrees their social condition, and fitted themselves for a place in civilized Europe. The former received from Rome great marks of favor in exchange for their freedom. The latter, rejecting the honors and distinctions lavished on their neighbors, secured their national independence, by trusting to their industry alone for all the advantages they gradually acquired.

 Were the means of protecting themselves and their Country from the inundations of the sea known and practiced by these ancient inhabitants of the coast? or did they occupy only those elevated points of land which stood out like islands in the middle of the floods? These questions are among the most important presented by their history; since it was the victorious struggle of man against the ocean that fixed the extent and form of the Country. It appears almost certain that in the time of Cæsar they did not labor at the construction of dikes, but that they began to be raised during the obscurity of the following century; for the remains of ancient towns are even now discovered in places at present overflowed by the sea. These ruins often bring to light traces of Roman construction, and Latin inscriptions in honor of the Menapian divinities. It is, then, certain that they had learned to imitate those who ruled in the neighboring Countries: a result by no means surprising; for even England, the mart of their commerce, and the nation with which they had the most constant intercourse, was at that period occupied by the Romans. But the nature of their Country repulsed so effectually every attempt at foreign domination that the conquerors of the world left them unmolested, and established arsenals and formed communications with Great Britain only at Boulogne and in the island of the Batavians near Leyden.

 This isolation formed in itself a powerful and perfect barrier between the inhabitants of the plain and those of the high grounds. The first held firm to their primitive customs and their ancient language; the second finished by speaking Latin, and borrowing all the manners and usages of Italy. The moral effect of this contrast was that the people, once so famous for their bravery, lost, with their liberty, their energy and their courage. One of the Batavian chieftains, named Civilis, formed an exception to this degeneracy, and, about the year 70 of our era, bravely took up arms for the expulsion of the Romans. He effected prodigies of valor and perseverance, and boldly met and defeated the enemy both by land and sea. Reverses followed his first success, and he finally concluded an honorable treaty, by which his Countrymen once more became the allies of Rome. But after this expiring effort of valor, the Batavians, even though chosen from all nations for the bodyguards of the Roman emperors, became rapidly degenerate; and when Tacitus wrote, ninety years after Christ, they were already looked on as less brave than the Frisons and the other peoples beyond the Rhine. A century and a half later saw them confounded with the Gauls; and the barbarian conquerors said that "they were not a nation, but merely a _prey_." Reduced into a Roman province, the southern portion of the Netherlands was at this period called Belgic Gaul; and the name of Belgium, preserved to our days, has until lately been applied to distinguish that part of the Country situated to the south of the Rhine and the Meuse, or nearly that which formed the Austrian Netherlands.

 During the establishment of the Roman power in the north of Europe, observation was not much excited toward the rapid effects of this degeneracy, compared with the fast-growing vigor of the people of the low lands. The fact of the Frisons having, on one occasion, near the year 47 of our era, beaten a whole army of Romans, had confirmed their character for intrepidity. But the long stagnation produced in these remote Countries by the colossal weight of the empire was broken, about the year 250, by an irruption of Germans or Salian Franks, who, passing the Rhine and the Meuse, established themselves in the vicinity of the Menapians, near Antwerp, Breda and Bois-le-duc. All the nations that had been subjugated by the Roman power appear to have taken arms on this occasion and opposed the intruders. But the Menapians united themselves with these newcomers, and aided them to meet the shock of the imperial armies. Carausius, originally a Menapian pilot, but promoted to the command of a Roman fleet, made common cause with his fellow-citizens, and proclaimed himself emperor of Great Britain, where the naval superiority of the Menapians left him no fear of a competitor. In recompense of the assistance given him by the Franks, he crossed the sea again from his new empire, to aid them in their war with the Batavians, the allies of Rome; and having seized on their islands, and massacred nearly the whole of its inhabitants, he there established his faithful friends the Salians. Constantius and his son Constantine the Great vainly strove, even after the death of the brave Carausius, to regain possession of the Country; but they were forced to leave the new inhabitants in quietss possession of their conquest.


 

Michiel Versteegh, Jan Veth, Alexander Wüst

Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland

Part 25


60. Michiel Versteegh
61. Jan Veth
62. Alexander Wüst 

painters25

Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.


Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries.

On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.


Michiel Versteegh

Dordrecht 1756 - Dordrecht 1843

Michiel Versteegh was born in Dordrecht. No information of him is available than only that he was a collector of paintings and other art. After his dead in 1843 his estates was auctioned  by Geluk and Mak van Waay, entrepreneurs of public sale shall, in Dordrecht on April 14, 1847, under the direction of the Painters Frans .J. van den Blijk and H.F. Verheggen.


Versteegh-Woman-in-a-niche-by-candlelight

Female in a bay by candlelight

Michiel Versteegh
Oil on panel 34,4 x 27,2 cm
Dordrechts museum


Versteegh-An-elegant-couple-counting-money-by-candlelight-at-a-stone-niche

An elegant couple Counting money by candlelight, at a stone niche

Michiel Versteegh, 1779
Oil on panel 51.7 x 40.7 cm 
Private collection


Versteegh-Smoking-a-pipe

Smoking a pipe

Michiel Versteegh
Ink and gouache on paper 22.5 x 20.5 cm
Private collection


Versteegh-Astronomers-at-a-Table-by-Candlelight

Astronomers at a Table by Candlelight

Michiel Versteegh
Pencil, pen and black ink, black wash heightened with white 22,3 x 30,5 cm
Private collection


Jan Veth

Dordrecht 1864 - Amsterdam 1925

Jan Veth (1864-1925) was a man of many talents. In addition to his activities as a painter and a graphic artist he wrote art reviews and poems. Above all, though, he was a successful portraitist. The exhibition centers on portraits of artists and writers. Portraits of artists, including those of George Breitner, Jozef Israels, Willem Maris, Jacob Maris and Hendrik Mesdag, are displayed among their watercolors, gouaches, drawings, sketchbooks and prints from the museum's collection. Portraits of writers such as Louis Couperus, Lodewijk van Deijssel, Frederik van Eeden and Jacobus van Looy are shown in combination with their finest book-covers. There is also a gallery with portraits of art collectors, museum directors, scholars, politicians and so forth. The atmosphere of the period during which Jan Veth and his contemporaries lived is evoked in the exhibition by examples of decorative art, including furniture, vases, lamps and rugs.

Partly by his litho images of his contemporaries he was one of the most famous artists of his time. In the twenties he was professor at the State Academy in Amsterdam. Besides painting Vethj was a writer. As a poet he belonged to the circle of the Eighties and was member of the literary magazine The New Guide. Around the turn of the century he was one of the first real art critics.


Veth-Jacobus

Portrait of Jacobus van Looy

Jan Veth
Paper, black and red chalk, paintbrush in black, 38 x 31 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portait-of-a-boy

Laren's child

Jan Veth,  1886
Oil on canvas 38,1 x 25,9 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Lambertus

Portrait of Lambertus Zijl

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas 42 x 33 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-doctor-hein-boeken

Portrait of Dr. H.J. (Hein) Boeken

Jan Veth, 1887
Oil on canvas 52,7 x 37,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum

From 1884 Veth is a member of the literary establishment in Amsterdam "Flanor" association. He meets the new generation of writers, including Kloss, Verwey, Van Deyssel, Van Eeden and writer and classicist Hein Boeken (1861-1933). His portrait is an exhibition of Arti refused in favor of the portrait of Frank van der Goes. Veth writes: " Boeken is returned, I will not have fun of the work but I am convinced of, not by the defects but by the qualities. "


Veth-Portrait-of-a-girl

Heintje, a Gooi's girl

Jan Veth, 1891
Oil on canvas 46 x 38,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum

Heintje was repeatedly a model for Veth. In this painting he paints a refined and dreamy image of that fishing-girl from Huizen. Artists such as Jan Veth, Richard Roland Holst and Wally Moes saw in the women from this village a "Gooise" model of purity and innocence. Several of these women were portrayed by them.


Veth-Portrait-of-professor-august-allebe

Portrait of Prof. August Allebé

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas and panel 45,3 x 39,8 cm
Dordrechts Museum

The portrait of August Allebé, Professor Director of the National Academy of Visual Arts in Amsterdam, is one of the best portraits painted by Jan Veth. The esteemed teacher of a whole generation of painters, is here with loving attention put down. The portrait shows us the older artist in the year 1907, more than 20 years after Jan Veth received his first lessons from Allebé at the Stadhouderskade.


Veth-Portrait-of-his-father-gveth

Portrait of G.H. Veth, father of the artist

Jan Veth, 1900
Oil on panel 46 x 40 cm
Dordrechts Museum

Veth portrayed his father at the age of 82. Gerards Veth was salesman in old iron, but in his hometown Dordrecht he was especially known as councilor, alderman and connoisseur and collector of Dordrecht painters from the 17th and 18th century.


Veth-Portrait-of-boxman-winkler

Portrait of Mrs. K.C. Boxman - Winkler

Jan Veth, 1906
Oil on canvas on panel 25 x 20 cm
Dordrechts Museum

About this portrait of the writer Klazina Winkler, Jozef Israels wrote to Veth: " It is characteristic very extraordinary. It's like Holbein signed, but voilà la question (but I ask you): should it not have been treated and signed as a Veth? ". Holbein and Dürer were for the portrait painter Veth major examples, even as the sixteenth-century German masters, Veth sought in the image of human face a major natural fidelity. Winkler Klazina he knew well. She lived in Bussum, not far from the family Veth. For many years she readed Jan Veth's manuscripts before publication and were on amicable terms with each other in correspondence.


Veth-Portrait-of-frank-van-der-goes

Portrait of Frank van der Goes

Jan Veth, 1887
Oil on canvas 108,3 x 87,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum

The writer Frank van der Goes (1859-1934) was one of the founders of "De Nieuwe Gids", which he cooperated years. He was the first theorist of the in 1894 established 'parliamentary' SDAP. With Gorter, Roland Holst and Saks he was the editor of the Marxist magazine "De Nieuwe Tijd". Following the reviews of this portrait Van der Goes wrote on November 2, 1888: " I have read in the "Handelsblad" that now nobody would have pleased his puss with your green-gray paint on it. This is not very pleasant for people, whose portrait is preceded by a publication with this warning. Now, it's good for me, but never again! "


Veth-Max

Portrait of Max Liebermann

Jan Veth, 1904
Oil on canvas 67,8 x 53,4 cm
Dordrechts Museum

The German painter Max Liebermann (1847-1935) often worked in the Netherlands. Particularly in the Amsterdam Jewsish area he found inspiration for cityscapes, interiors and market scenes. Jan Veth met Liebermann for the first time in 1886 in Laren, this meeting would be the beginning of a lifelong friendship. Veth wrote in 1904: "Under Liebermann continuous and strenuous criticism I have learned more than the adoption of less critical patients." In 1929 the widow of Veth donated this portrait, together with a number of other works, to the Dordrecht Museum. During the second world war the work was removed by the Germans. The museum was able to acquire the portrait again in 1992.


Veth-Selfportrait

Self portrait

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas 35 x 26,1 cm
Dordrechts Museum

Jan Veth is characterized as a scholar and an artist and artistic scientist. In 1886, when this self-portrait was created, he had still to make all true. He was 22 years old and stood at the beginning of his career. In thought he is the tail, a promising artist with an intelligent face. Veth had a brilliant career ahead. Not only would he become a master in portraiture, but also a respected art historian and writer. Around 1900 he was one of the first art critics. He received an honorary doctorate and became professor at the State Academy in Amsterdam.


Veth-Portrait-of-a-lebret

Portrait of mister A.J. Lebret

Jan Veth, 1920
Oil on canvas 66,8 x 50,6 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-his-mother-cornelia-veth-giltay

Portrait of Anna Cornelia Veth-Giltay, mother of the artist

Jan Veth
Oil on panel 13,3 x 10,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Street-at-naarden

Street in Naarden

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas on panel 32,8 x 25,8 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-doctor-samson

Portrait of Dr. H.G. Samson

Jan Veth, 1893
 Oil on canvas on panel 52,4 x 43,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-frans-lebret

Portrait of Frans Lebret

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas 74,5 x 64,2 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-painter-maurits-willem-van-der-valk

Portrait of the painter Maurits Willem van der Valk

Veth, Jan, 1929
Oil on canvas 43,1 x 35 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-wertheim-salomonson-hijmans

Portrait of Mrs. H.J.E. Wertheim Salomonson-Hijmans

Jan Veth, 1908
Oil on panel 65,6 x 51,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-professor-doctor-pieter-johannes-veth

Portrait of Prof. Dr. Pieter Johannes Veth

Jan Veth, 1886
Oil on canvas on panel 100,5 x 80 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-professor-anton-derkinderen

Portrait of Prof. Anton Derkinderen

Jan Veth, 1915
Oil on canvas 117,2 x 89,8 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-elisabeth-ragazzi-van-der-wall-bake

Portrait of Elisabeth Ragazzi-van den Wall Bake

Jan Veth
Oil on canvas 41,7 x 35,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Portrait-of-odenwald

Portrait of W.H.J. Oderwald

Jan Veth, 1925
Oil on canvas 67,4 x 54,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Shipwarf

Shipyard

Veth, Jan
Oil on panel 16,7 x 32,9 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Veth-Heintje

Portrait of Heintje

Jan Veth, 1891
Paper, red-brown and en black chalk
Dordrechts Museum


Alexander Wüst

Dordrecht 1837 - Antwerp 1876

Alexander Wust was born in Dordrecht and moved to Antwerp about 1850s Shortly after he moved, lived and studied in New York, painting primarily in the Adirondack region and in New England. He exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and the Brooklyn Art Association. At the end of his life he returned to Antwerp where he shortly after died in 1876.


Wust-Pond-in-woodsy-environment

Pond in wooded area

Alexander Wüst
Oil on canvas on panel 24 x 33,2 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Wust-Landscape-at-mount-desert-by-moonlight

Mount Desert landscape in moonlight

Alexander Wüst
panel 59,2 x 83 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Wust-Native-American-hunter

Native American hunter alongside a woodland creek with other companions in front of their tipis

Alexander Ferdinand Wust, 1869
oil on canvas 45.5" x 20"
Private collection


Wust-Sunset landscape

Sunset landscape

Alexander Ferdinand Wust, 1868
Oil on canvas 45.7 x 80.2 cm
Private collection


Wust-Fire-at-twilight

Fire at twilight

Alexander Ferdinand Wust
Oil on paper laid on canvas 20.3 x 40.6 cm
Private collection


 That's it

Teerlink, Cornelis and Andries Vermeulen

Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland

Part 24


57. Abraham Teerlink
58. Cornelis Vermeulen
59.Andries Vermeulen 

painters24

Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.


Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries.

On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.


Abraham Teerlink

Dordrecht 1776 - Rome 1857

Teerlink, although born a Dutchman, his work was of French style. In the late eighteenth early nineteenth century, the low lands subject to the French government. Many young Dutch artists departure to France for their artistic training. Also Teerlink went to France with two landscape painters. Later he would be a student of Arie Lamme, the grandfather of Ary Scheffer. In 1806 he worked in the studio of Jacques Louis David, one of the most important artists of that time. A year later he received a scholarship to study in Rome where he for the rest of his life will continue to live. He plays the role of friend and host for a new generation of Dutch painters to the wonders of Italy shows. In his work is clear to see the influence of David and Valenciennes. He gives more preference to naturalism than to the romantic ideal. He remains a respected and popular teacher, but at the end of his life his work is considered as old-fashioned.


Teerlink-Stone-quarry-at-belleville

View of a quarry at Belleville

Teerlink, Abraham
Oil on canvas 96 x 130,5 cm
Dordrechts museum


Teerlink-Italian-coastal-landscape

Italia coastal landscape

Teerlink, Abraham
Paper 36,7 x 49,9 cm
Dordrechts museum


Teerlink-Snowstorm

Snowstorm

Teerlink, Abraham 1803
Pencil and brush 22,1 x 31,4 cm
Dordrechts museum


Teerlink-Roman-landscape

Roman Landscape

Abraham Teerlink
Oil on canvas 101 x 141 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


Teerlink-Riverlandcape-with-cattle-at-dust

River Landscape with cattle in emerging Sun

Abraham Teerlink 1803
Pen in brown, brush in brown and watercolor, pencil 35.4 x 46.9 cm
Teylers Museum, Haarlem


Teerlink-By the-koek-en-zopie

By the koek-en-zopie

Abraham Teerlink, 1806
Pencil, ink and watercolor on paper 42 x 57 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-An-Italianate-river-landscape-with-travellers-on-a-track

An Italianate river landscape with travelers on a track

Abraham Teerlink
Oil on panel 37.5 x 50.2 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-View-of-the-waterfall-of-Marmore

View on the waterfall of Marmore

Abraham Teerlink
Oil on canvas 55 x 67.5 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-Fishermen-by-a-Bridge-over-a-Ditch-cows-and-a-horseman-on-a-rise-nearby

Fishermen by a Bridge over a Ditch, cows and a horseman on a rise nearby on the old mount

Abraham Teerlink
Black chalk, pen and brown ink, watercolor, grey ink framing lines 23,4 x 34,4 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-A-figure-on-a-bridge-by-a-house-a-tree-in-the-foreground

A figure on a bridge by a house, a tree in the foreground

Abraham Teerlink, 1801
Pencil, pen and brown and grey ink, grey wash, watermark, black ink framing lines 20,1 x 25,1 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-An-Italianate-landscape-with-travellers-and-peasants-on-a-mountain-track-others-praying-in-front-of-a-chapel-beyond

An Italianate landscape with travelers and peasants on a mountain track, others praying in front of a chapel beyond

Abraham Teerlink, 1815
Oil on canvas 75.4 x 100.9 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-In-the-Roman-campagna

In the Roman Campagna

Abraham Teerlink, 1840
Oil on canvas 43 x 57 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-Buffaloes-in-the-Roman-Campagna-at-sunset-with-cattle-shepherds-and-tavellers-by-a-ruined-wall-beyond

Buffaloes in the Roman Campagna at sunset with cattle, shepherds and travelers by a ruined wall beyond

Abraham Teerlink
Oil on canvas 75 x 100 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-Herdsmen-watering-their-cattle-by-a-wooded-road

Herdsmen watering their cattle by a wooded road

Abraham Teerlink
Pen and brown ink, watercolour, framed 51,5 x 42,4 cm
Private collection


Teerlink-A-view-of-cava-dei-Tirreni-near-Salerno-Italy

A view of cava dei Tirreni near Salerno, Italy

Abraham Teerlink
Oil on canvas 56 x 78 cm
Private collection


Cornelis Vermeulen

Dordrecht 1732 - Dordrecht 1813

Painter and dealer in Dordrecht, Cornelis Vermeulen was known for his copies from the Dutch painters of the seventeenth century. It copies and Cuyp, Verschuir, van de Velde, Dujardin, Steen, van Ostade, Wouwerman, Miers, Lingelbach, Schouwman. More than two hundred paintings were included in the sale of his collection in Dordrecht, on 6 April 1813. Today we know that his evil reappears gradually. A pair of landscapes is preserved in Karlsruhe, one in Cambridge and a landscape like Isaac van Ostade in the Dordrechts Museum.


Vermeulen-Cornelis-Peasants-and-cattle-in-an-Italianate-landscape

Peasants and cattle in an Italianate landscape

Cornelis Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 47.3 x 64.5 cm


Vermeulen-Cornelis-The-distribution-of-hay-in-winter

The distribution of hay in winter

Cornelis Vermeulen
Oil on panel 20,1 x 25,5 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Cornelis-A-vanitas-stillife-of-a-skull

A vanitas still life of a skull, a guttering candle, a tortoiseshell mirror, a book, a statue and a pack of cards

Cornelis Vermeulen (after François Duquesnoy, 1688)
Oil on canvas 58.4 x 47.3 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Cornelis-Width-riverscape-with-horsemen-and-flock

Width riverscape with horsemen, and flock

Cornelis Vermeulen
Oil on panel 24 x 30 cm
Private collection


Andries Vermeulen

Dordrecht 1763 - Dordrecht 1814

Andries Vermeulen was born in Dordrecht on 23 March 1763. He was trained by his father Cornelis, himself a landscape painter and art dealer who is mainly known for his copies after famous masters. Andries specialized in landscapes after seventeenth-century Dutch models. He originally painted landscapes in the manner of Meindert Hobbema, but later preferred to paint ice scenes that resemble the work of Isack van Ostade in style, for which he is chiefly known. He also created marine paintings and summer landscapes, and made drawings after Albert Cuyp. He worked for some time in Amsterdam, where he died on 6 July 1814.


Vermeulen-Andries-Winter-Scene-with-Skaters

Winter Scene with Skaters

Attributed to Andries Vermeulen, previous attributions to his father Cornelis Vermeulen c. 1783
Oil on panel 16 x 22 cm
Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum(Warwick District Council)

The work is clearly inspired by Dutch winter landscapes of the seventeenth century, although the costumes worn by the figures here are clearly those of a later period. The painting has a slightly naive charm, but there is a certain flatness, and the reflections of the skaters on the ice is rather unconvincing. The attribution to Andries Vermeulen is not wholly beyond doubt.


Vermeulen-Andries-A-Scene-on-the-Ice

A Scene on the Ice

Andries Vermeulen, c. 1800
Oil on panel 39.8 x 49 cm
The National Gallery, London

Vermeulen's landscapes are based upon 17th-century precedents. This type of composition is based on the work of Isack van Ostade, for example his 'Winter Scene' in the National Gallery's Collection. A similar work by the artist (Frankfurt, Städelsches Kunstinstitut) is signed and dated 1800.


Vermeulen-Andries-Sleigh-riding-on-the-ice

Sleigh riding on the ice

Andries Vermeulen
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Winterlandschap met een arrenslee en schaatsers op het ijs. 


Vermeulen-Andries-A-Winter-Scene-In-Holland

A Winter Scene In Holland

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on cradled panel 53.3 x 71.1 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-The-Vegetable-Market

The Vegetable Market At Night

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on panel 70 x 52.7 cm
Public collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-figures-skating-on-a-frozen-river

A winter landscape with figures skating on a frozen river

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 48.2 x 65 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-figures-skating-on-a-frozen-river2

A winter landscape with figures skating on a frozen river

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 48.5 x 67.4 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-figures-skating-on-a-frozen-lake

A winter landscape with figures skating on a frozen lake

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 47 x 56.2 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-skaters-and-a-cart-on-a-frozen-river-near-a-village

A winter landscape with skaters and a cart on a frozen river near a village

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 67.5 x 84.5 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-Winter-Landscape-with-horsedrawn-Sledge-on-frozen-River-and-Villagers-warming-near-Fire-before-Windmill

A Winter Landscape with a horse-drawn Sledge on a frozen River and Villagers warming themselves near a Fire before a Windmill

Andries Vermeulen, 1798
Oil on canvas 86.4 x 111 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-skaters-on-a-frozen-river

A winter landscape with skaters on a frozen river

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 40.6 x 53.6 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-An-extensive-landscape-with-herdsmen-by-a-stream

An extensive landscape with herdsmen by a stream

Andries Vermeulen
Black chalk, watercolor, pen and brown ink framing lines 22,9 x 33,4 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-forest-landscape-with-travellers-resting-by-a-house-with-a-pond

A forest landscape with travelers resting by a house with a pond

Andries Vermeulen
Black chalk, pen and brown ink, brown wash, black chalk framing lines 27,9 x 41,9 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-skaters-on-frozen-water-and-travellers-on-a-bridge-a-village-with-a-watermill-nearby

A winter landscape with skaters on frozen water and travelers on a bridge, a village with a watermill nearby

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 70.5 x 92.9 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-Shepherds-with-their-flocks-in-an-extensive-landscape

Shepherds with their flocks in an extensive landscape

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on panel 48.2 x 63.5 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-winter-landscape-with-skaters-on-a-frozen-canal-a-house-with-a-watermill-nearby

A winter landscape with skaters on a frozen canal, a house with a watermill nearby

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on canvas 105.9 x 100 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-A-frozen-river-with-townsfolk-skating-and-sledging

A frozen river with townsfolk skating and sledging

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on panel 26 x 35 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-Skating-party

Skating party

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on panel 36,7 x 50,8 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-Townsfolk-Sledging-Skating

Frozen River with Townsfolk skating and sledging at Sunset

Andries Vermeulen, 1795
Oil on panel 27.5 x 35.5 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-Winter-landscape-with-a-frost-fair-and-figures-skating-upon-a-frozen-river

Winter landscape with a frost fair and figures skating upon a frozen river

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on Panel 41 x 70 cm
Private collection


Vermeulen-Andries-Winter-landscape-with-skaters

Winter landscape with skaters

Andries Vermeulen
Oil on Panel 30 x 45.7 cm
Private collection


 

Abraham van Strij

Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland

Part 22


54. Abraham van Strij 

painters22

Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.


Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries.

On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.


Abraham van Strij

Dordrecht 1753 - Dordrecht 1826

Abraham received his first drawing lessons from his father, Leendert van Strij (1728-1798). Van Strij senior had a painting shop, which meant he painted houses, but he also decorated spreads and wall panels. Later, Abraham got lesson from Joris Ponse (1723-1783), maker of decorative pieces and still lifes and a short study at the Antwerp academy of art. In 1774 Abraham founded the Art societssy "Pictura" in Dordrecht, which he would remain committed.

Abraham was more versatile than his brother Jacob, who was also a painter. He began with paintings on wall systems and interior panels. After 1780 he made regular portraits and landscapes. More familiar are the interior scenes, by which he was inspired by seventeenth-century masters such as Pieter de Hooch (1629-1684). Van Strij had many pupils, including his son Abraham (1790-1840).


Strij-Abraham-Reading-woman-at-the-window

Reading woman near a window with view on the Dordrecht Minster

Abraham van Strij
Oil on panel 70,5 x 58,4 cm
Dordrechts Museum

In many works of Abraham showed van Strij an inventive and intelligent follower of the Golden Age. The composition of this panel is reminiscent of Pietsser de Hooch (1629-1684), the bright palette that of Aelbert Cuyp, while the reading a woman is a known motif of Nicolaes Maes.

In this painting van Strij let himself known as Dordtenaar, by the half-opened window, the Great Church of Dordrecht xan be recognized.


Strij-Abraham-The lesson

The drawing lesson

Abraham van Strij
Oil on panel, 69 x 60,3 cm
Dordrechts Museum

The inspiration for this panel was the work of seventeenth-century genre painters. The theme of the student who works for a classical sculpture is already seen by Jan Steen (1626-1679). The composition of the two look through's  based Abraham van Strij likely from Pietsser de Hooch (1629-1684).

The painting style with clear colors and the font style brush lining is typical for Van Strij's own time, the period around 1800. In the painting a statue is seen, a copy is a work of Lysippus Greek sculptor (4th century BC). The image, the old Silenus, who acted as an educator of the young god Dionysus.


Strij-Abraham-Hussar-and-maid

Woman and drinking soldier

Abraham van Strij, 1825
Oil on panel, 69 x 60,3 cm
Dordrechts Museum

As a source of inspiration for this painting, served a bar scene of the 17th-century genre painter Pietsser de Hooch. De Hooch and other painters of the Golden Age were important examples for Abraham and his brother Jacob van Strij. The brothers admired the old masters to their sophisticated appearance of the light. In their work they tried their predecessors even to surpass in brightness.

As in 17th-century paintings often is the case, this scene has a double bottom. The sword between the legs of the hussar is impossible as an innocent motive to be seen. Also van Strij's contemporaries would have understood what these cheerful drinker actually want.


Strij-Abraham-Stillefe-with-flowers-fruits-and-a-fishcan

Still-life with flowers, fruits and a fish can

Abraham van Strij
Oil on panel 92,4 x 72 cm
Dordrechts Museum

In van Strij's oeuvre, this is a rare type of still life. Interestingly, the combination of very different objects and the unusual motif of the bowl with goldfish.

In the seventeenth century still lifes often contained references to the transience of life. At the end of the eighteenth century, such meanings mostly disappeared. The decorative and pictorial elements were then the most important.


Strij-Abraham-Beggars

The beggars

Abraham van Strij
Paper pencil in brown paintbrush in color 43,3 x 36,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-Woman-and-child

A woman and child

Abraham van Strij
Oil on panel 58,2 x 53,3 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-Interior-with-sitting-man-with-fur-cap

Interior with sitting man with fur cap

Abraham van Strij
Aquarelle en gouache 36,4 x 26,2 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-Stable-interior-with-woman-and-wheel-barrow

Stable interior with woman and wheel barrow

Abraham van Strij
Aquarelle 21,7 x 18,6 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-Stop-at-an-inn

Stop at an inn

Abraham van Strij, 1794
Pen in black, brush in black and gray 33,4 x 28,4 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-Art-talking

Talking about art

Abraham van Strij
Brush in black, brown and gray 21,4 x 24,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum


Strij-Abraham-The-cherries-saleswoman

A cherries saleswoman at the front door

Abraham van Strij, 1816
Oil on panel 72.7 x 59 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

A woman sits at the door and shows her daughter the cherries that a woman at the door has for sale. Right blows a cat in the windowsill to a dog. Near a window a rifle and other belongings of a hunter.


Strij-Abraham-The-drawing-lesson

The drawing lesson

Abraham van Strij, 1790/1809
Oil on panel 25 x 20.5 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

A boy is under the supervision of a master drawing a plaster statue of a nude portrait. In the background are several paintings.


Strij-Abraham-The-house-woman

The housewife

Abraham van Strij, 1800 tot 1811
Oil on panel 56.5 x 49 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Interior with a mother sitting at the cradle of her child. The woman's lap has a basket with vegetables. On the left in a corner a press.


Strij-Abraham-The-boiler-barnster

The boiler barnster

Abraham van Strij, 1808/10
Oil on panel 34 x 27 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

In a kitchen a cook is in the process of sanding a copper kettle. On a wooden bench is an earthenware pot and lid.


Strij-Abraham-Young Sweethearts

Young Sweethearts

Abraham van Strij
Montana Museum of Art & Culture


Strij-Abraham-A-Winter-Scene

A Winter Scene

Abraham van Strij
Oil on panel, 61 x 55 cm
Private collection

Abraham van Strij painted few winter scenes (he draw rather more). In this excellent and beautifully preserved example we see the artist's interest in the effects of light, and his delight in detail, such as the view through the little gate with a man holding a bucket in the late sunlight of a winter day.


Strij-Abraham-An-Extensive-River-Landscape

An Extensive River Landscape

Abraham van Strij
Oil on canvas 211 x 189 cm
Private collection

This painting, depicting an extensive river landscape with a boeier at anchor and horsemen on the shore with an elegant couple and a dog, a ferry with cows in the background, formed part of a rare set of six wall-hangings by the brothers Jacob and Abraham van Strij. Only very few complete or almost complete sets have survived, one of which, a set of seven, is now in the Dordrechts Museum, Dordrecht, and another set of five is in the Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague.

Wall-hangings became very popular in the second half of the 18th century, when several factories in Amsterdam were established producing these wall-hangings for the canal houses. The workshop of the Strij brothers also produced wall-hangings which are often signed by only one artist, the main contributor. However, in most cases the hand of both painters can be seen.


Strij-Abraham-Interieur-met-vrouw-wieg-en-hondje

Interior with mother, child and dog

Abraham van Strij, 1810
Oil on panel 64 x 78 cm
Private collection


 

Jacob van Strij, Abraham Susenier

Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland

Part 23


55. Jacob van Strij
56. Abraham Susenier 

painters23

Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.


Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries.

On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.


Jacob van Strij

Dordrecht 1756 - Dordrecht 1815

Like his brother, Abraham learned to paint from his fater Leendert van Strij (1728-1798). From 1774 he also studied two years at the Academy in Antwerp. The Antwerpse history painter Andreas Lens (1739-1822) continued his training. In 1781 Jacob returned to Dordrecht. Jacob van Strij was an excellent landscape painter in the spirit of Aelbert Cuyp. He imitated Cuyp's smooth color palette and paint area and competed with him in the composition of the landscape. Sometimes van Strij copied Cuyp's paintings in detail, but usually only on certain grounds. He was often accused to be a slavish imitator or forger of Cuyp. Jacob van Strij painted also wallpaperspreads, ocasionally with his brother Abraham.


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-river-near-dordrecht

Landscape with river and trees in the neighborhood of Dordrecht

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel70,7 x 95cm
Dordrechts museum

The painting is reminiscent of the forested landscapes of Meindert Hobbema (1638-1709). Just as painters from the Golden Age, van Strij added the most attractive elements of nature together. Thus, the fortres-likebuilding on the left based on one of the city gates of Dordrecht. The casing around the tower there is by van Strij fantasized.

With this painting van Strij developed his own character. He became incresingly removed from its seventeenth century predecesors. This painting anticipates the romantic period of a few decades later, with painters such as Barend Cornelis Koekkoek and Willem de Klerk.


 Strij-Jacob-Seven-wallpapers-with-scenes-from-holland-and-italy

 
Series of seven wall paintings with Dutch and Italian landscapes

Jacob van Strij, c. 1790
Oil on canvas
Dordrechts museum

These paintings belong to a series of wallpaper systems that Jacob made for a house on the Groenmarkt i Dordrecht. The series includes several landscapes from Italy, to pure Dutch. The sunny, Italian-like landscapes betray the influence of seventeenth-century painters such as Aelbert Cuyp and Jan Both (1618-1652). For the landscape with trees and livestock van Strij used motives after the work of Paulus Potter (1625-1654).

Until the end of the nineteent century the wall spreads stayed in Dordrecht. Then they moved to a house in Gelderland. The Dordrecht Museum acquired the series in 1976.


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape1

Series of seven wall paintings with Dutch and Italian landscapes
Close up

Jacob van Strij, c. 1790
Canvas wallpaper 230 x 186 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Paper-wallpaint3

Series of seven wall paintings with Dutch and Italian landscapes
Close up

Jacob van Strij, c. 1790
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-trees-near-dordrecht

Landscape with trees and cattle near Dordrecht

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 69,4 x 87,5 cm
Dordrechts museum

Around 1800 Jacob tried in his work to surpass the bright and sunny landscapes of Aelbert Cuyp. The rider on horseback, he literally copied from one of most famous paintings of Cuyp, Landscape with cattle, equetrian and farmers. In 1764, an engraving of the painting was produced. Van Strij must certainly have known the print.

Cuyp's composition, bt mirrored, as in the print - is in Van Strijs landscape clearly recognizable. However, the atmosphere is very different. This is due to a difference in practice, Cuyp worked on a dark background, van Strij on a muscular white. The light shines through the colors supporting over and enhanced brightness.


 Strij-Jacob-Summerscene-near-dordrecht

Summer scene outside Dordrecht

Jacobvan Strij
Oil on panel 65,7 x 81,5 cm
Dordrechts museum

In his later landscapes van Strij uses for the trees often a striking yellow-green. This was in response to a critics in 1811, who rejected van Strijs entries for an exhibition, because he saw two paintings "beautiful ordinnce, but in my opinion is of similar nature, as I have never such a green seen in the shadows of trees.


 Strij-Jacob-Winterscene-at-the-Devel

Winter scen at the Devel in Zwijndrecht

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 68,8 x 90,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum

Besides a large number of summer landscapes Jacob painted only a few winter scenes. On this winter scene we see in the distance, the Great Church of Dordrecht. The wide, bright landscape with low horizon recalls seventeenth-century painters such as Jacob Ruisdael (1628/29-1682) and Adriaen van de Velde (1636-1672).


 Strij-Abraham-Series-of-wallpaper-paintings

Five wall paintngs

Abraham and Jacob van Strij
Oil on canvas : 2 x 238 x 189 cm, 1 x 239,5 x 113,5 cm, 1 x 239,5 x 112 cm and 1 x 238 x 229 cm
Dordrechts Museum

Abraham and Jacob van Strij painted aseries of five chamber wall spreads for an unknown client in Dordrecht. The series is among the best the brothers have made in this genre.

The wall systems were for  long time no longer in their original place. In May 2005 they were by the owner put on the market. At Sotheby's in Amsterdam, the five piecs should be auctioned separately, but fortunately, at the last moment the Dordrechts Museum could be purchased as a whole series In the future, the series will be shown in full glory in a reconstruction of the original situation.


 Strij-Jacob-Equestrian-with-milk-girl-at-a-river

Landscape with horseman and milk-maid

Jacob van Strij
Paper, pencil and paintbrush in grey en black 53,3 x 64 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-dead-tree

Landscape with dead tree

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 69,3 x 90,5 cm
Dorrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Hilly-landscape-with-river

Mountain landscape with river

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 68,9 x 86,2 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Michiel-and-corneli- pompe-van-meerdervoort

Michiel en Cornelis Pompe van Meerdervoort

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 69 x 91 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Draining-of-the-water-from-the-in-1809-broken-dikes-in-Alblasserwaard

Draining of the water from the in 1809 broken dikes in Alblasserwaard (near Dordrcht)

Jacob van Strij
Oil on panel 73,8 x 93 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Winterlandscape-with-farmer-houses-and-two-children-on-the-way

Winter landscape with farm hoses and two children on the way

Jacob van Strij
Aquarelle 52,6 x 70,2 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Riverview-with-rapids

Riverview with rapids

Jacob van Strij
brush in bruin 12,8 x 17,8 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-kows-at-a-river-with-ships

Landchape with cows at a river with boats

Jacob van Strij
Brush in black, gray and brown 27,4 x 36,1 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Summerscane-near-dordrecht

Summer landscape outside Dordrecht

Jacob van Strij
Brush in gray and brown 33,2 x 41,7 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Riverview-with-rider

River view with rider

Jacob van Strij
brush in black, gray and brown 12 x 19 cm
Dordrechts Museum


 Strij-Jacob-Yacht-of-the-Kamer-Rotterdam

The yacht of the VOC-Chamber of Rotterdam greeting a Dutch East Indie shipand a warship at the coast of Hellevoetsluis

Jacob van Strij, 1790
Maritiem Museum Rotterdam


 Strij-Jacob-Sheep

Sheep

Jacob van Strij
Teylers Museum, Haarlem


 Strij-Jacob-River-Landscape-with-man-on-horseback-shepherd-and-cattle

River Landscape with man on horseback, shepherd and cattle

Jacob van Strij
Pen in brown, red and black, brush in black and brow, brush in water and body-color, pencil 44.1 x 57.8 cm
Teylers Museum, Haarlem


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-Figures-Cattle-and-Sheep

Landscape with Figures, Cattle and Sheep

Jacob van Strij
oil on panel; 36 x 42 cm
Ashmolen Museum at the University of Oxford, UK


 Strij-Jacob-Landscape-with-Cattle

Landscape with Cattle

Jacob van Strij, c. 1800
Oil on panel 80 x 107.3 cm
Metropolitan museum of art, New York


 Strij-Jacob-Hollands-winterlandschap

Dutch winter landscape with frozen river and farm with thatched roof, in the foreground a figure with sleigh and a lady with a creel basket

Jacob van Strij
Oil on canvas 66 x 82 cm
Private collection


 Strij-Jacob-Paper-wallpaint2

The Grotekerksbuurt (The neighborhood of the Dordrecht Minster)

Jacob van Strij
Paper, pencil and paintbrush in grey en black
Private collection


 Strij-Jacob-Holland

Holland

Jacob van Strij
Oil on canvas 56 x71 cm
Private collection


 Strij-Jacob-Two-Boeiers-and-a-Cat-under-Sail

Two Boeiers and a Cat under Sail

Jacob van Strij
Oil on canvas, 212 x 189 cm
Private collection

This painting, depicting two boeies and a cat under sail with other smaller vessels moored at the end of a jetty, with figures near a lantern on the jetty, formed pat of a rare set of six wall-hangings by the brothers Jacob and Abraham van Strij. Only very few complete or almost complete sets have survived, one of which, a set of seve, is now in the Dordrechts Museum, Dordrecht, and another set of five is in the Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague. Wall-hangings became very popuar in the second half of the 18th century, when several factories in Amsterdam were established producing thse wall-hangings for the canal houses. The workshop of the Strij brothers also produced wall-hangings which are often signed by only one artist, the ain contributor, in this case Jacob. However, in most cases the hand of both painters can be seen.


 Strij-Jacob-Autumn-Landscape

Autumn Landscape

Jcob van Strij
Oil on canvas, 229 x 210 cm
Private collection

This painting, depicting an autumn landscape with a shpherd and his herd and travelers near an inn, formed part of a rare set of six wall-hangings by the brothers Jacob and Abraham van Strij. Only very few complete or almost complete sets have srvived, one of which, a set of seven, is now in the Dordrechts Museu, Dordrecht, and another set of five is in the Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague.

Wall-hangings became very popular in the second half of the 18th century, when several factories in Amsterdam were established producing these wll-hangings for the canal houses. The workshop of the Strij brothers also produced wall-hangings which are often signed by only one artist, the main contibutor, in this case Jacob. However, in most cases the hand of both painters can be seen.


Abraham Susenier

Leiden ca.1620 - Dordrecht 1666/72

From before 1646 - the year he arrived in Dordrecht - little is known about Abraham Susenier. Shortly after its establishment in Dordt he became a member of the painting fraternity. Documents of ceditors seem to indicate that Susenier had regular financial difficulties. The most famous works of Susenier are still-lifes. A few seascapes have survived.

Susener should have been quite diverse, in seventeenth-century Dordtse inventories are seveal type of paintings mentioned, for example, 'a viswyf-ken' (fish woman) and 'twee lantschappe' (two lasndscapes) "de stadt Dordt" (the city of Dordrecht" and "een Swean" (a Swon).

In his still-lifes Susenier often made variations. He combined painted fruit still-lifes and flowers, shells and vanitas objects. There is also a known painting of him with fish. His images of tables with fruit, flowers and utensils have often a light landscape in the background.


 Susenier-Stillife

Still-life

Abraham Susenier
Oil on panel 52 x 90 cm
Dordrechts museum

Om this still-life was the signature "A.Susenier', but disappeared during a cleaning of the painting. However, the painting is attributed to Susenier becsause typical for him is the way the grape vines in the composite are situatedl and th silhouette against the bright background.


 Susenier-Stillife-with-shells

Still-life with shells

Abrahm Susenier, 1659
Oil on canvas 58,2 x 85,3 cm
Dordrechts museum

This painting is unique in Susenier's oeuvre. It is one of the few Dutch still lifes from the seventeenth century with shells as main object. Most shells on this painting come from the East Indies area, a few are from other parts of the world.


 Susenier-Vanitas-stillife-with-a-skull

Vanitas still life with a skull, feathers, an overturned Roemer, a sculpture and a portfolio of drawings

Abraham Susenier
oil on canvas 60.3 x 74.3 cm
Private collection


 Susenier-A Stillife-with-a-Basket-of-Grapes

A Still Life with a Basket of Grapes, a Lemmon on a Pewter Plate and a Roemer

 Abraham Susenier
Oil on panel 54.6 x 59.7 cm
Private collection


 Susenier-A Stillife-with-a-Lobster

A Still Life with a Lobster, Roemer, Clams, Grapes, and a Knife

Abraham Susenier
oil on canvas 38.5 x 50.5 cm
Private collection


 Susenier-A Stillife-of-a-lobster

A still-life of a lobster on a blue and white Wang-Li dish

Abraham Susenier, 1666
Oil on Canvas 83 x 111 cm
Private collection


 

Martinus Schouman, Gilles Smak Gregoor

Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland

Part 21


52. Martinus Schouman
53. Gilles Smak Gregoor 

painters21

Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.


Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries.

On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.


Martinus Schouman

Dordrecht 1770 - Breda 1848

Martinus Schouman was the son of a skipper. After several lessons with Michael Versteegh he became a pupil of his famous old uncle Aert Schouman in The Hague. Inspired by the profession of his father, he had a remarkable knowledge of ships and sea conditions and used it in his seascapes.

After a few years he settled as marine-painter in Dordrecht, a city surrounded by water, he developed into a celebrated marine painter, and he led a number of students, including the gifted Johannes Christiaan Schotel. He received several awards during his life and he also sold a painting to King Louis Napoleon. He painted a few historical subjects, such as The Dutch battle at Boulogne in 1809 and the bombardment of Algiers in 1816.

 With Johannes Christiaan Schotel he painted several historical seascapes. He also took an active part in the exhibition of arts and life of Dordrecht and was a member of the societssy Pictura. In 1839 his son Izak became a signing-teacher at the KMA in Breda he also moved to this city. There he painted for nine more years before he died.


Schouman-Martinus-The-last-shot-fired-from-Dordrecht-at-the-French-at-Papendrecht

The last shot fired from Dordrecht to the French at Papendrecht

Martinus Schouman
Oil on canvas on panel 71,8 x 93,5 cm
Dordrechts museum


Schouman-Martinus-Riverview-with-ships-at-dordrecht

River View with ships at Dordrecht

Martinus Schouman
Oil on canvas on panel 46,3 x 56,1 cm
Dordrechts museum

Martinus Schouman was the son of a skipper and apprenticed to his old uncle Aart Schouman to become a painter. Inspired by the profession of his father, he specialized in painting ships, sea and river views. He received several awards during his life and he also sold a painting to King Louis Napoleon. 
J.C. Schotel was his main student.

Right in the foreground of this painting can be seen a "beurtschip" of Rotterdam.


Schouman-Martinus-Seaview-by-stormy-weather

Sea view with emerging storm

Martinus Schouman 1809
Oil on panel 59,2 x 83,3 cm
Dordrechts museum


Schouman-Martinus-Riverview-near-dordrecht-with-the-ruins-of-house-te-merwede

Riverview at Dordrecht with the ruins of castle "Te Merwede".

Martinus Schouman
Oil on canvas on panel 73 x 95 cm
Dordrechts museum


Schouman-Martinus-Riverview-by-rainy-weather

Riverview by rainy weather

Martinus Schouman
Pen in brown, brush and gray 26 x 34,8 cm
Dordrechts museum


Schouman-Martinus-Seaview-with-sailboats

Sea scene with sailing boats

Martinus Schouman 1805
Aquarelle 48 x 64 cm
Dordrechts museum


Schouman-Martinus-Salute-shot-to-the-Yacht-of-State

A still water with a saluting Yacht

Martinus Schouman and Johannes Christiaan Schotel
Oil on panel
Museum Mr. Simon van Gijn, Dordrecht

Martinus Schouman painted the river scene, while Johannes Christiaan Schotel painted the upholstery.


Schouman-Martinus-Kofship-and-Frigate-on-full-sea

Kof-ship and Frigate on wild sea

Martinus Schouman
Oil on canvas 72 x 98,5 cm
Private collection


Schouman-Martinus-Het-bombardement-van-Algiers-ter-ondersteuning-van-het-ultimatum-tot-vrijlating-van-blanke-slaven-26-27-augustus-1816

The bombing of Algiers in support of the ultimatum for the release of white slaves, 26-27 August 1816

Martinus Schouman, 1823
Oil on canvas 95 × 159.5 cm
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam


Schouman-Martinus-The-Dutch-and-English-fleets-meet-during-the-trip-to-Boulogne-1805
Dutch and English fleets meet during the trip to Boulogne, 1805

Martinus Schouman, 1806
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


Schouman-Martinus-The-explosion-of-gunboat-nr2-under-command-of-Jan-van-Speijk-Antwerp-february-5-1831
The explosion of gunboat nr. 2 under command of Jan van Speijk, Antwerp, february 5, 1831

Martinus Schouman, 1832
Oil on canvas 53 x 75 cm
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

In 1830, the Catholic Belgians, since 1815 united with The Netherlands in one State, came in rebellion against the Protestant King William I. On February 5, 1831, a Dutch gunboat was blown in a storm to the shore in the river Scheldt at Antwerp.

To prevent the ship would fall in the hands of the Belgians, Commander van Speyk blew it. Almost all crew on board and an unknown number of Belgians found death.


Schouman-Martinus-Sailing-in-choppy-waters

 Sailing in choppy waters

Martinus Schouman, 1817
Oil on panel 70 x 90 cm
Private collection


Schouman-Martinus-The-English-flagship-Venerable-engaging-the-Dutch-flagship-Vrijheid
The English flagship "Venerable" engaging the Dutch flagship "Vrijheid"

Martinus Schouman
Oil on Canvas 81.3 x 118.2 cm
Private collection

Portrayed is the Battle of Camperdown, 11th October 1797, the Dutch ships "Staten-Generaal" and "Admiral de Vries" to the left and right.


Schouman-Martimus-On-stormy-sea

On stormy sea

Martinus Schouman
Oil on canvas 72 x 99 cm
Private collection


Schouman-Martinus-Shipping-in-a-Stormy-Sea

Shipping in a Stormy Sea

Martinus Schouman
Watercolor 14 x 21 cm
Private collection


Gilles Smak Gregoor

Dordrecht 1770 - Dordrecht 1843

Gillis Smak-Gregoor was born in Dordrecht January 10 1770,  he was the son of Dina Schotel and Servaas Smak. He received lessons in drawing and painting from the brothers Abraham and Jacob van Strij, while the interest of M. Versteeg and Willem van Leen, both deservingly artists. His paintings can be found inside and outside his Country. He died in Dordrecht on December 3 1843.


Smak-Landscape-with-cattle-near-weizigt-at-dordrecht

Landscape with cattle, left in the background the villa Weizigt at Dordrecht

Smak Gregoor, Gilles
Oil on canvas 127 x 170 cm
Dordrechts museum


Smak-Landscape-with-cows-near-the-ruins-of-the-abbey-of-rijnsburg

Landscape with two cows at the ruins of the Abbey of Rijnsburg

Smak Gregoor, Gilles
Black chalk, brush and brown 54,4 x 79,9 cm
Dordrechts museum


Smak-Landscape-with-farm

Landscape with a farm girl and cattle

Smak Gregoor, Gilles
Pen in brown, brush and gray 18,4 x 25,5 cm
Dordrechts museum


Smak-Landscspe-with-sleeping-farmer-near-the-ruins-of-the-abbey-of-rijnsburg

Landscape with cattle and sleeping peasant at the ruins of the Abbey of Rijnsburg

Smak Gregoor, Gilles
Black chalk, brush and brown 44 x 59,8 cm
Dordrechts museum


Smak-A-pastoral-landscape-with-a-milkmaid-and-livestock-outside-a-farm-house

A pastoral landscape with a milkmaid and livestock outside a farm house

Gillis Smak Gregoor
Oil on Panel 52.8 x 69 cm
Private collection


Smak-A-woodsy-landscape-with-a-horseman-taking-refreshment-at-a-farmhouse

A wooded landscape with a horseman taking refreshment at a farmhouse, sheep and cattle by a pond in the foreground

Gillis Smak Gregoor
Oil on Canvas 72,5 x 95 cm
Private collection


Smak-A-traveller-conversing-with-a-milkmaid-in-a-farmyard

A traveler conversing with a milkmaid in a farmyard, in summer

Gillis Smak Gregoor
Oil on panel 45,9 x 48,3 cm
Private collection


 

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