The Art of the Anglo Dutch Wars of the
Seventeenth Century
There were three wars
between the English and the Dutch in the seventeenth century. The first war occurred under Cromwell, fought
between what was then the Commonwealth of England and the Dutch Republic. All three wars lasted approximately two
years. The second and third Dutch Wars took place after the Restoration of the
Stuart Monarchy. The two latter wars were English defeats and they confirmed
the Dutch Republic’s hegemony as a naval power in that century.
Gerard Sibelius, Portrait of the
painter Willem van de Velde, the Elder, after Godfried Kneller. Van de Velde,
and his son Willem the Younger, were both seascape painters from Leiden during
the Golden Age of Dutch painting in the seventeenth century.
Willem Van de Velde, The Elder, The English Yacht 'Portsmouth" at Anchor
Ludolf Backhuysen, The Eendracht and a
Dutch Fleet of Men of War Before the Wind
In the golden age of
Dutch painting, the pride of the urban mercantile society of the republic that marshaled its
resources to fight the Anglo Dutch sea wars, resulted in many paintings being
commissioned by families of those directly involved, like the Tromps, or by
city governments and private patrons, to depict and represent the great
encounters between the fleets and the dramatic events attending them. The Dutch Museums are replete with such
paintings, of which the following are only a minimum sample. At the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the ink
paintings of Willem Van de Velde and his son take pride of place. The commentary is taken from the Museum’s own
program notes.
The Art of the Anglo-Dutch Wars, mostly art of Dutch origin, since the Dutch were generally more successful in the prosecution and outcome of these naval wars, the following images are but a
few examples, and they are an illustration and an expression of those wars, of that time and place, and of the
myriad details of military life on ships and the brutal and fearsome incidents
of battle. But the paintings are also an
esthetic celebration of the sea, and it is against the background of the
fearful northern seas that the historical facts play themselves out. Today, looking towards the English Channel
from Scheveningen, or from Noordwijk, or Katwijk, the tranquility of the steely
sea can only faintly echo the conflicts of those years between the two
Protestant nations and the stillness contrasts markedly with the passion and tumult of the paintings.
BACKGROUND TO THE ANGLO-DUTCH WARS OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
Queen Elizabeth, The First English Sea Monarch
Engagement between English and Dutch fleets began
during the wars of religion, predating the development of maritime trade. Queen
Elizabeth had assisted the Dutch Calvinist Revolt against Spain, in 1585 and
committed its fleet against the Spanish Empire, mostly in the form of piracy
and privateering.
Queen Elizabeth at Tilbury
After the conclusion of hostilities between the Dutch and the
Spanish in the course of the seventeenth century, the conflict having been
grievous for Spain and Portugal, the Dutch themselves gradually became adept at
privateering and piracy, spread their vessels throughout the oceans, and began
to replace the Portuguese as the main European traders in Asia. Their
mercantile fleet became dominant and an armada was built to support its traffic,
commanded by able seamen like Maartens Tromp and Michiel De Ruyter. In time, the Stuarts would enter into secret agreements
with Spain directed against Dutch sea power, but it was only after Cromwell’s
victory that open hostilities with the Republic began. Cromwell unified the country behind the
creation of a powerful navy, expanding the number of ships of the fleet and
improving its organization and discipline.
England sought to challenge Dutch trade dominance upon the seas.
Ferdinand Bol, Portrait of Michiel de Ruyter (1667). De Ruyter was born in 1607
and was a Dutch admiral, most famous for his role in the Anglo Dutch wars. He is the hero of the Raid on the Medway. He
died in 1676.
Matters came to a head after the Peace of Westphalia
in 1648 concluded the Thirty Years War, and the Dutch proceeded to occupy the
trading positions of the Spanish and Portuguese. Cromwell resented the superiority of the
Dutch naval thrust, and he also feared the Orange faction in the Dutch
government, as the Dutch Stadtholders had always favored the Stuarts, and he
feared the English Catholic exiles. He
attempted peaceful talks through delegations to Den Haag, in order to avoid the
heightening conflict, but with little success.
Portrait of Oliver Cromwell
THE FIRST ANGLO-DUTCH WAR (1652-1654)
CROMWELL
Against this
background, and to protect its trade with North America, the English Commonwealth’s
Parliament passed a Navigation Act in October of 1651, which determined that
all goods imported into England must be carried by English bottoms or by
vessels from the exporting countries or colonies, excluding Dutch middlemen. Although the Dutch were not very much
affected by these sanctions, a rivalry developed between English and Dutch
merchantmen and tense naval encounters between the two countries followed. The English pirates operating from British
territories began to take Dutch ships on the pretext that they were illegally
carrying British trade. The Dutch
responded by arming their merchantmen.
Willem Van de Velde, The Younger, Ships Riding Quietly at Anchor
Willem van de Velde II (1633-1707), Dutch Ships in a Calm, oil on canvas, c.
1665. A few warships in a calm sea: their sails are being hoisted, their anchors
raised. The small squadron is getting
ready to depart. A sloop with
dignitaries rows past the ships, to the sounding of trumpets and firing of
salutes. Already in 1778, this painting
was described in a sales catalogue as being exceptional: ‘one of the best gems
by this outstanding marine painter.’
In this atmosphere of
tension, the English attempted to revive an old custom whereby foreign ships
were compelled to strike their flags in salute to English ships, even in
foreign ports. On May 29, 1652, Admiral
Martens Tromp encountered an English fleet and refused to show the desired
protocol. A skirmish followed which became
known as the Battle of Goodwin Sands. On
July 10, the Commonwealth declared war on the Dutch.
Reinier Nooms, A Battle during the First Anglo-Dutch War.
The English were
initially successful and defeated the Dutch Vice-Admiral Witte de With in the
Battle of the Kentish Knock, October of 1652.
The English, mistakenly thinking the war was over, divided their ships
and were surprised and routed by the fleet of Admiral Maarten Tromp at the
battle of Dungeness in the English Channel.
Willem Van de Velde, The Younger, H.M.S. St. Andrew at Sea in a Moderate Breeze
Thereafter, the Dutch defeated the English at the Battle of Leghorn
(Livorno) in March, 1653, after which the Dutch dominated both the English
Channel and the Mediterranean.
The
Battle of Livorno (Leghorn), Willem van de Velde
(1611-1693), Ink on canvas, c.1659. In
1653 the English ship Samson went up in flames off the coast of Italy after an
encounter with Cornelis Tromp’s warship the Halve Moon. Van de Velde
represented both vessels at the center of this pen painting. Tromp commissioned the picture to honor and
glorify himself. The work is still in
its original frame with the Tromp family coat of arms.
At this point, it
seems that the English sea captain Robert Blake and General Monck designed a
new system of naval tactics, centering on the use of the line of battle ships,
which had great success for them at the Battle of Portland in the Channel and
later in the North Sea at the Battle of Gabbard. The Dutch navy was now in a position of
inferiority with regard to English tactics. In August 1653, the Dutch were
defeated at the Battle of Scheveningen and Admiral Tromp killed. The British
captured about 1200 Dutch merchant ships. Both sides were exhausted and reached
a compromise peace on April 5, 1654, with the signing of the Treaty of
Westminster. The British had failed to replace the Dutch as the world’s
dominant sea trading nation, and hence the war resolved nothing. The stalemate between the two Protestant
nations on the seas remained.
Jan Abrahamsz Beerstratten, c.1654, Battle of Scheveningen.
THE SECOND ANGLO-DUTCH WAR (1665-1667)
"No
King will heed our warnings,
No Court will pay our claims –
Our King and Court for their disport
Do sell the very Thames!
For, now De Ruyter’s topsails
Off naked Chatham show,
We dare not meet him with our fleet –
And this the Dutchmen know!"
No Court will pay our claims –
Our King and Court for their disport
Do sell the very Thames!
For, now De Ruyter’s topsails
Off naked Chatham show,
We dare not meet him with our fleet –
And this the Dutchmen know!"
-
Rudyard Kipling, "The Dutch in the Medway"
- See more at:
http://badassoftheweek.com/index.cgi?id=579429818534#sthash.kezo0JBE.dpuf
Bruce Von Stetina, The Second Day of the Four Day Battle of 1666
Portrait of Charles Stuart, eventually King Charles II of England
In pursuit of his own dynastic
interest, the newly restored monarch, Charles II of England, intended to place
his nephew, Prince William of Orange, as Stadtholder of the Republic of the
Netherlands. This direct intervention in
the political affairs of the neighbor republic was well received at home, as it
also served to incite the interests of British merchants against the rival
Dutch. The King’s determination moved him to propose a series of mercantilist
policies to advance British trade and shipping interests at the expense of
Dutch trading companies, and so as to enhance his own political and financial
strategy vis-a-vis the Prince of Orange.
Lieve Pietersz Verschuier, the Arrival
of King Charles II of England in Rotterdam, on May 24, 1660. (1665)
Portrait of King Charles II
Portrait of William of Orange, later King William III of England
A commercial war was brewing against the States General of the Dutch Republic.
The King’s brother,
the Duke of York, eventually King James II, had a large interest in the
British Royal African Company. Originally known as the Company of Royal
Adventurers Trading to Africa by its 1660 Charter, it was granted a monopoly by
the King over all English trade with West Africa, which was primarily the slave
trade. With the help of the British army
and navy, it established forts on the West African coast that served as staging
and trading stations and was responsible for seizing any English ships that
attempted to operate in violation of the company's monopoly. In the prize
court, the King received half of the proceeds and the company half. As tension between England and the Netherlands
grew, the momentum shifted to the colonies.
The Dutch Settlement of New Netherland (Nieuw Nederland or Nieuw Amsterdam), before the British conquest.
The King’s brother,
the Duke of York, eventually King James II, had a large interest in the
British Royal African Company. Originally known as the Company of Royal
Adventurers Trading to Africa by its 1660 Charter, it was granted a monopoly by
the King over all English trade with West Africa, which was primarily the slave
trade. With the help of the British army
and navy, it established forts on the West African coast that served as staging
and trading stations and was responsible for seizing any English ships that
attempted to operate in violation of the company's monopoly. In the prize
court, the King received half of the proceeds and the company half. As tension between England and the Netherlands
grew, the momentum shifted to these coasts. In 1664, the Company’s ships under
Admiral Robert Holmes attacked the Dutch African trade posts and seized a Dutch
settlement on the African coast. This
prompted a response from the Dutch fleet, under Admiral Michiel de Ruyter, who
set out with a fleet to Africa to seek revenge. The English government declared
war on The Netherlands and moved on the American colonies. At that time, the Dutch colony of Nieuw
Amsterdam, or Nieuw-Nederland, claimed territory from Cape Cod to
Chesapeake Bay. When a British fleet appeared off the coast of New Amsterdam,
its governor, Pieter Stuyvesant surrendered the town. The new British colony was named after the
Duke, New York.
James Stuart, Duke of York and eventually King James II of England
The war that followed
lasted approximately two years and ended in the disastrous defeat of England at
the Medway, in June 1667. It is a war characterized by catastrophic English
defeats on the sea. During the battle of
the Four Days in 1666, which is the subject of a famous painting by Willem van
de Velde, the Dutch captured the Prince Royal, one of England’s prize
battleships.
Willem van de Velde II (1633-1707), The Surrender of the Royal Prince, oil on canvas, c. 1670-75. In June 1666, the Dutch and English fleets
fought a ferocious battle on the southern North Sea. With his usual eye for detail and a sense of
drama, Willem van de Velde portrayed the moment when the English flagship Royal
Prince (at left) ran aground on a sandbank and was taken by the Dutch. To signal their surrender the English crew
hauled down their flags.
But the worst English
defeat was the famous Raid on the Medway, in June 1667, which ended the war
with a Dutch victory. It is considered one of the most humiliating defeats in
British military history: a flotilla of ships led by Admiral de Ruyter sailed
up the river Thames and to the heart of England itself, broke through the
defensive chains guarding the Medway, burned part of the English fleet docked
at Chatham, and towed away the ships Unity
and Royal Charles, the pride and customary
flagship of the English fleet. At this point, the Dutch Republic was at the
zenith of its power, despite the losses and damages caused by two years of war
and the damage to Dutch trade and industry they entailed. But the Dutch traders
benefited from the absence of an English fleet.
The Raid on the Medway
Pieter Cornelisz Van Soest, Attack on the Medway (1667)
THE THIRD ANGLO-DUTCH WAR (1672–1674)
The third Anglo-Dutch
war also lasted two years, but it was a war without defeat and without
glory. King Charles was bound by the
secret Treaty of Dover to assist France in the France in Louis XIV’s war
against the Dutch Republic. When the
French army was halted at the line of the great rivers, threatened by the
prospect of strategic flooding by the Dutch, an attempt was made to invade the
Republic by sea, which directly engaged the English navy. De Ruyter gained four
strategic victories against the Anglo-French fleet and prevented invasion.
After these failures the English Parliament forced the hand of the King, and Charles
sued for peace.
A
SAMPLE OF PAINTINGS DEPICTING BATTLES AND ARMAMENT IN THE ANGLO-DUTCH WARS AND OTHER NAVAL EPISODES
The naval battle of Texel, also known as Kijkduin, took
place on August 21, 1673, in the course of the Third Anglo-Dutch War, which was
itself part of the Franco-Dutch War of 1672-1678, during which King Louis XIV
of France invaded the Dutch Republic intending to control both shores of the
big rivers. England became involved because
of the secret Treaty of Dover.
Ludolf Bakhuysen, The Man of War Brielle on
the River Maas off Rotterdam (1689).
Ludolf Bakhuysen was a Dutch painter who lived from 1631 to 1708. The ship depicted in this painting is the ship
that carried the Stadtholder of Holland, William, Prince of Orange, to England
in 1688. There he became King William
III, upon the invitation of the Whig Lords, and helped drive the Catholic King,
James II, to exile and to the triumph of the Protestant cause in England. He
was crowned with his wife Mary Stuart, as William and Mary, in 1689, the year
Sibelius painted this work.
Willem van de Velde (1611-1693) The Battle of the Downs, (1659). To commemorate the Dutch naval commander
Maerten Harpertsz Tromp, his family commissioned a series of pen paintings of
Tromp’s best-known battles from Willem van de Velde. This is one in that series, depicting in this
instance the Dutch action in support of England’s defeat of the Spanish Armada
in 1639. The Spanish attempted to
transport troops and supplies to Flanders with a large fleet. The Spanish
armada was intercepted in the English Channel by Maerten Harpertsz Tromp, who
commanded a much smaller force. His spectacular victory and his capture of the Santa Teresa – the large Spanish warship
burning on the left – established the Dutch fleet’s formidable reputation.
Willem van de Velde (1611-1693), The Battle of Terheide, (1657). Another in the series of pen paintings
commissioned to commemorate the Dutch naval commander Maerten Harpertsz Tromp. The artist used pen and ink on canvas for
these works, which resemble meticulous accurate engravings. Van de Velde witnessed the Battle of Terheide
in 1653. He used the sketches that he produced
on board as studies for this pen painting.
The battle between English and Dutch fleets took place in 1653. He used the sketches that he produced on
board as studies for this pen painting.
The battle between English and Dutch fleets took place
Willem van de Velde, (1611-1693), The Battle of Dunkirk, ink on canvas,
1659. In 1639 Maerten Harpertsz Tromp
prevented the Spanish fleet from leaving the harbor at Dunkirk with a blockade
of twelve ships. Van de Velde has
depicted most of the Dutch vessels with their prows pointing towards the enemy
armada. With a remarkable eye for
detail, he rendered the ship in pen the ship’s counters or transoms – the stern
carvings from which the individual vessels can be identified.
Willem van de Velde II (1633-1707), Nocturnal
Encounter during the Battle of Kijkduin, oil on canvas, c. 1675. This
painting is traditionally called the Nocturnal Battle. However, the naval battle at Kijksduin,
between Cornelis Tromp on the Gouden Leeuw and Sir Edward Spragg on the Royal
Prince, actually took place in daylight hours on the 21st of August,
1675. It looks like night only because
the encounter is shown partially hidden behind clouds of smoke and gunpowder
fumes. While the Dutch flagship is
sinking at the right, Tromp battles on from a captured ship.
Willem van de Velde II (1633-1707), The
Cannon Shot, oil on canvas, c. 1680. A
Dutch warship in a calm, with its sails loosed, fires a cannon shot. Two sloops float to either side of the
man-of-war, and another Dutch ship with lowered sails can be seen in the
distance. The tranquility of this scene
contrasts starkly with The Gust, in which a storm-battered English warship
drifts rudderless on the high waves.
- Boxer, Charles Ralph. The Anglo-Dutch Wars of the 17th Century (1974)
- Hainsworth, D. R., et al. The Anglo-Dutch Naval Wars 1652-1674 (1998)
- Jones, James Rees. The Anglo-Dutch wars of the seventeenth century (1996) online
- Konstam, Angus, and Tony Bryan. Warships of the Anglo-Dutch Wars 1652-74 (2011)
- Levy, Jack S., and Salvatore Ali. "From commercial competition to strategic rivalry to war: The evolution of the Anglo-Dutch rivalry, 1609-52." in The dynamics of enduring rivalries (1998) pp: 29-63.
- Ogg, David. England in the Reign of Charles II (2nd ed. 1936), pp 283-321 (Second War); 357-88 (Third War
- Rommelse, Gijs "Prizes and Profits: Dutch Maritime Trade during the Second Anglo-Dutch War," International Journal of Maritime History (2007) 19#2 pp 139-159.
Thank you so much for re-acquinting me with Dutch history. It is a fine read in which your overview and clear observations make them both valuable and exciting to read.
ReplyDeleteTwxel is one of 5 Wadden islands: Terschelling, Vlieland, Schiermonnikoog and Ameland.
Kijkduin is a small coastal village south of Scheveningen (the geographical place where I was born).
Warfare is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very well done, a good read.