24 April 1533 A.D. Birth: William 1 “The Silent:” Calvinistic Defender of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands from the Persecutorial, Inquisitorial, Spanish and Romanist King Philip
24
April 1533 A.D. Birth: William 1 “The Silent:”
Calvinistic Defender of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands from the
Persecutorial, Inquisitorial, Spanish and Romanist King Philip
Jongkees,
Adriaan G. “William I.” N.d. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/644041/William-I.
Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed 23
Apr 2015.
William I, in full William, prince of Orange, count of Nassau, byname William the Silent, Dutch Willem,
prins van Oranje, graaf van Nassau, or Willem de
Zwijger (born April 24, 1533, Dillenburg, Nassau—died
July 10, 1584, Delft, Holland), first of the hereditary stadtholders (1572–84) of
the United Provinces of the Netherlands and leader of the revolt of the
Netherlands against Spanish rule and the Catholic religion.
Family and inheritance
William, the
eldest son of William, count of Nassau-Dillenburg, grew up in a cultivated
Lutheran environment. Far richer than his father’s ancestral possessions in the
region of the Lahn River in Nassau were the estates that, since 1404, another
branch of the family had obtained in Brabant and elsewhere in the Low
Countries, where its main seat was at Breda. At the time of William’s birth, the Brabant branch was
represented by his father’s elder brother Henry and by Henry’s only son, René, who in 1530 had inherited from a maternal uncle the
domains of the House of Chalon-Arlay, so becoming the greatest seigneur of the
Franche-Comté and ruler of the Provençal principality of Orange. René of Orange
was killed in 1544, leaving the combined wealth of the houses of Nassau-Breda
and of Chalon-Orange to his cousin William, then aged 11.
In view of
the importance of this heritage, the lord of the Burgundian Netherlands, the
Habsburg emperor Charles V, stipulated that William’s parents should
renounce his guardianship and that the young prince should be educated in his
new fatherland as a Catholic. So William passed his formative years at Breda
and Brussels, under the guidance of suitable tutors, and was duly imbued with
the principles proper to a youth of his standing. French became his daily
language, and he acquired a colloquial command of Dutch.
In spite of
his immense landed property, his financial circumstances were straitened from
the beginning. Scarcity of liquid assets continued to hamper him, even after
his marriage (July 8, 1551) to a wealthy heiress, Countess Anne of
Egmond-Buren, who brought him several additional baronies, mainly in Holland.
These “structural” pecuniary straits he shared with most of his class and with
the Burgundian government itself.
A favourite
with Charles
V and with the court at Brussels, the Prince faithfully
discharged the social, military, and diplomatic duties that were expected of
him. He continued to do so under Philip II, the Emperor’s son and successor as king of
Spain and lord of the Burgundian dominions. Together with his
later enemies Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle, bishop of Arras, and
the duke of Alba, he was a negotiator of the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis (1559), which, in ending prolonged
strife between Burgundy-Habsburg and France, released from French occupation his princedom of Orange
and made the Netherlands accessible to Calvinist preachers from France. Philip
II, at his accession in 1555, had admitted William to the
Council of State, and, now before his departure to Spain, the King appointed
him his stadtholder (governor and commander in chief) in Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht (August 1559) and afterward in Franche-Comté (February
1561).
Loyal opposition to the King’s
government
From about 1561
William, the prince of Orange, together with other great lords who felt
themselves excluded from their rightful share in the country’s government,
began to protest openly against the conduct of the Brussels administration, in
which Granvelle, the principal adviser of the regent Margaret, duchess of
Parma, was the most powerful figure. At first religious questions were not
prominent among the causes of discontent, but they gradually became so with the
spread of Protestant ideas and the determination of Philip II not to tolerate
any deviation from the strictest Catholic orthodoxy. The Prince and his
associates, in varying degrees influenced by the comprehensive views of the
Humanist Desiderius Erasmus, shared in this respect the feelings of the
majority of their countrymen, who, while remaining conventional Roman
Catholics, resented religious persecution. Besides, several of the nobles had,
as had William, friends and parents among the Protestants. On Aug. 25, 1561,
the Prince, a widower since 1558, reinforced his Lutheran and German
connections by taking as his second wife Anna of Saxony.
In the mind
of William, the prince of Orange, the religious issue gradually assumed
paramount importance. In a sensational speech in the Council of State, he
argued that it was not feasible to enforce religious unity and that it was not
right for princes to presume to rule over the consciences of their subjects.
But the King in October 1565 gave strict orders that the ordinances against
heretics should be inexorably applied.
Consequently,
the situation became increasingly dangerous. The leadership of the opposition
was now taken over by a confederation of lesser nobles and gentlemen, some of
them Calvinists, who were more desperate than the grandees
and less averse to a violent solution; they and their followers soon came to be
called the Gueux (Beggars). The great lords kept aloof, but
William and a few others showed sympathy for the movement, with which the
Prince was personally in touch through his brother, Count Louis of Nassau, a Lutheran with Calvinistic
leanings. Orange persuaded the confederates not to resort to armed action but
instead to petition the regent Margaret for a suspension of the decrees against
Protestants. The Duchess did indeed promise a moderation of the anti-heretical
measures, but it was already too late for minor relaxations to avert trouble.
Misery caused by the economic depression contributed to the violent explosions
of religious fanaticism that shook the Low Countries in August 1566. Calvinist
mobs forcibly entered churches, smashing the images and destroying the
furnishings. Besides causing irreparable damage, these excesses had a threefold
effect: peaceful coexistence of Catholics and Protestants became more
difficult; the opposition movement was weakened because its responsible members
felt it necessary to defend the church; and, finally, it caused King Philip to
resort to force in an attempt to crush heresy and rebellion at one blow. To
this end, in December 1566, he appointed the duke of Alba as his captain
general in the Netherlands.
Orange seems
to have contemplated immediate active resistance but in the end did nothing
because the popular hero Lamoral, count of Egmond, stadtholder of Flanders and Artois, would not support him. William allowed the
Protestants, now openly rebellious, to hail him as their defender, but he
upheld public order. As hereditary viscount of Antwerp he quelled an insurrection of the numerous Calvinists
there, and he kept the city gates closed to rebels and government forces alike.
He protested his loyalty to the king, yet he refused to take the new oath of
unconditional obedience that the Regent required from all officeholders and
prudently retired in April 1567 to the family seat at Dillenburg. Many
thousands followed William’s example or had preceded him; a general exodus to
England, Germany, and France took place.
Open revolt and alliance with Calvinism
By May 1567
order was everywhere restored. Nevertheless, in August Alba entered Brussels at
the head of a well-trained army and inaugurated a reign of terror. In September
a special court, the Council of Troubles, was set up to try all cases of
rebellion and heresy, and more than 1,000 executions took place (including
those of the counts of Egmond and Hoorne). Orange, summoned to appear before
the court, replied with a dignified Justification of his conduct. But his possessions in Philip’s
dominions were confiscated, and his son Philip William, a student at Leuven (Louvain), was deported to Spain.
Once again
the cause of liberty, no less than that of religion, was clearly seen to be at
stake. The opposition, however secret, became much more widespread, and Orange
was justified in expecting a general rising when he should appear as a
liberator. He saw his own fortunes irrevocably bound up with those of the
Netherlands, and he no longer hesitated to proceed to military action. Though
disappointed in his hopes of substantial support from the Lutheran German
princes (he himself had reverted to the creed of his childhood) or from the
emperor Maximilian II, he managed, mainly through the aid of his relatives, to raise
a number of troops. In April 1568 two invasions of the Low Countries were
inaugurated, but both badly miscarried. One of the attacking forces was
destroyed by Alba on the banks of the Ems River. The Prince himself took the
field in the beginning of October and marched toward Brabant, but the expected
rising did not materialize, and he was obliged to retire to France. There he
stayed for a time with the Huguenots, the Calvinist party then in rebellion
against the royal government, before returning, in October 1569, to Germany.
His brother Count Louis remained in France as his personal representative. The
abortive campaigns had at least popularized Orange as the champion against
oppression. The Calvinists were ready to forgive him for failing to take up arms
in 1566, while he had come to appreciate them as the hardcore of the resistance
movement, though he disliked their Puritanism and intolerance. Moreover,
Calvinism was an “international” power, and from its adherents in Germany and
France he had hitherto received his most effective support. So a rapprochement
took place, but it was not until 1573 that he finally joined the Reformed
Church.
These were
his darkest years. With Alba securely in power and his own designs frustrated,
having lost a brother (Adolph) and many of his friends, and bereft of his son,
his estates, and his offices, he was also harassed by financial difficulties
and by the wayward conduct of his wife, Anna of Saxony, whom he divorced in
1571. Orangist propaganda was active, but military operations were mainly confined
to the exploits of the Sea Beggars, who had taken to the sea to combat the King
of Spain from foreign bases. Their blockading activities contributed to the
economic malaise in the Netherlands and so to the discontent nourished by
Alba’s harsh administration. This was especially the case in the seafaring
province of Holland.
For the
summer of 1572 Orange planned a number of coordinated attacks, counting on help
from France, but on April 1, well ahead of any officially planned move, a fleet
of Sea Beggars, driven from English ports, surprised and captured the port of
Brielle (Den Briel) in Zuid-Holland. Their success triggered off the desired
popular rising in Holland and Zeeland, most towns declaring themselves for the
Prince, so that by July only Amsterdam, Middelburg, and two other towns in Zeeland remained in loyalist
hands. On the initiative of Orange, the provincial States of Holland met at
Dordrecht (July 19–23) and recognized the Prince as still being their
stadtholder, nominally on behalf of the King, and they themselves assumed an
effective share in the government. Equal rights for Catholics and Calvinists
were proclaimed, pending a decision by the States General, the joint assembly
of all the provinces.
Meanwhile,
large parts of Gelderland and Friesland joined the revolt, as Alba and his army were retained in
the south to counter the main attack, which had been launched from France. Louis
of Nassau had captured Mons and was besieged there by the Spanish. Orange himself
marched into Brabant, and several towns opened their gates to him. Hopes of
French support were soon dashed, however, when the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew’s Day destroyed Huguenot influence at the French court. Louis was obliged to
capitulate in September, and Orange disbanded his mercenaries. The fighting in
the south had at least provided breathing space for the rebellious northern
provinces to consolidate their position. The Prince decided to join them,
landing at Enkhuizen on October 21.
For four
heroic years (1572–76), William, the prince of Orange, led the desperate
resistance of the two maritime provinces (Holland and Zeeland) against the
Spanish armies sent to subdue them. Two more of his brothers—Louis and
Henry—fell in a serious defeat near Nijmegen in April 1574. Meanwhile, his
agents were active in the subdued provinces, in England, Germany, and France,
and on June 12, 1575, he married Charlotte of Bourbon-Montpensier, a former
abbess who had joined the Reformed Church. The Prince needed all his authority,
tact, and tenacity of purpose to hold his followers together and prevent their
pursuing divisive interests. He tried to check the excesses and mitigate the
intolerance of the Protestants but was unable to maintain the equality of the
Catholic and Reformed churches that he had previously advocated, and in 1573
Catholic worship was forbidden. In the closer unions Orange brought about
between the different parts of Holland (July 1575) and between Holland and
Zeeland (April 1576), he was recognized as “Chief and Supreme Authority” for
the duration of the war, but liberty of worship was specifically excluded,
though liberty of conscience was recognized.
The Prince’s triumph
A temporary
collapse of Spanish power in the Low Countries in 1576 gave the Prince a fresh
chance. In the absence of a governor-general after the death of Alba’s
successor, Luis de Requesens y Zúñiga, and confronted with mutinous Spanish
troops, the Council of State ventured to convene the States General. This
assembly, pretending to act in the name of the King but in fact usurping viceregal
powers, immediately opened negotiations with the rebellious provinces. The Pacification of Ghent (Nov. 8, 1576) was the result.
It has been supposed that Orange’s influence and agents were primarily
responsible for this achievement. Certainly this peace, supplemented by the
first Union of Brussels (January 1577), heralded the
realization of his ambitions and ideals: not only were his governorships
confirmed and his possessions restored to him, but the union of the so-called
17 Netherlands under a national government seemed about to be accomplished. But
the idea of a “common fatherland,” though steadily growing, was not yet strong
enough to overcome particularistic or religious divisions. Because of the Perpetual Edict of 1577, the treaty the States
General concluded with the new governor-general, Don John of Austria, specified that the Roman
Catholic religion was to be maintained all over the country, and because of the
absence of provisions for the maintenance of the Pacification, the deputies of
Holland and Zeeland left the assembly.
In July
1577, however, Don John attempted to renew hostilities, thus driving more and
more people to support the Prince. Those towns of Holland and Zeeland that had
always opposed Orange or had been recovered by Spanish arms now recognized his
authority; the last to accede (February 1578) was Amsterdam. The town and
province of Utrecht followed suit, and in Flanders, Brabant, Groningen, and elsewhere, the radical Orangists, mostly
Calvinistic burghers and craftsmen, gained the upper hand. In September 1577
the States General, to which the representatives of Holland and Zeeland had now
returned, invited Orange to come south to Brussels, where he was triumphantly
received. Under his influence a new union came into being, providing for joint
action by both Roman Catholics and Protestants against “the common enemy of the
fatherland.” Meanwhile, the States General, continuing to act with sovereign
power, had formed a government headed by the young archduke Matthias, an Austrian nephew of King Philip. Matthias
agreed to conditions laid down by the Prince guaranteeing a constitutional system
of government. Moreover, in January 1578, Orange was commissioned to act as
lieutenant general for Matthias.
The Prince’s failure
Orange was
now at the zenith of his career, but his triumph proved as short-lived as was
the general union of the provinces. His failure to consolidate the newly won
unity was primarily due to the excesses of his Calvinist supporters who
forcibly introduced popular and intolerant regimes. Thus, the revolutionaries
played into the hands of King Philip’s new governor-general, Alessandro
Farnese, duke of Parma. He was the son of the former regent Margaret, and on
Oct. 1, 1578, he had taken office after the death of Don John.
The Catholic
but still anti-Spanish reaction made itself felt first in the southern,
French-speaking provinces. Not unnaturally, when seeking for help, their
thoughts turned to France, but it was on the Prince of Orange’s advice that the
States General in August 1578 adopted the Catholic Duke d’Anjou, brother of Henry
III of France, as “Defender of the Liberty of the
Netherlands.” Soon afterward, the formation of specific unions by smaller
groups of provinces began to compromise the general union, which was
irrevocably compromised in May 1579 when the Prince gave qualified support to
the “Union of Utrecht,” whose main promoter was his
brother John, stadtholder of Gelderland and a staunch Calvinist. On March 15
the Prince was outlawed by Philip II and a reward offered for his
assassination. He answered the charges of treason with a vehement Apologie, written for him by
his court chaplain, and he continued to put his trust in France. Against much
Protestant opposition, he persuaded the States General in 1580 to give the Duke
d’Anjou the hereditary sovereignty of the Netherlands, and in 1581 they
solemnly renounced their allegiance to the king of Spain. Meanwhile, the
provinces of Holland and Zeeland, unwilling to grant the French prince any
direct authority, planned to create Orange their hereditary count.
Anjou,
however, far from aiding the cause of liberty, added to the prevailing
confusion. With great difficulty Orange effected his reconciliation with the States
General. His own continuing reliance on France is shown by his fourth marriage
(1583), to Louise de Coligny, a daughter of the murdered Huguenot leader the
Count de Coligny.
As a result
of the ban pronounced by Philip II, an attempt was made on the Prince’s life at
Antwerp in March 1582. With Parma advancing from the south, he retired in July
1582 to Holland, where he moved into his old quarters in a former convent at
Delft. There, in 1584, he was shot by a fanatical Catholic, the Franc-Comtois
Balthasar Gérard. His last words were a prayer for the people he had tried to
lead for so long. The family seat of Breda being then in enemy hands, he was
buried in the New Church at Delft.

Comments
Post a Comment