Oldenbarnevelt's peace initiatives meet with stringent opposition …
Years: 1608 - 1608
Oldenbarnevelt's peace initiatives meet with stringent opposition from Maurice, Amsterdam, and Zeeland for different reasons (Zeeland, for instance, is making good money in the "trade with the enemy" across the blockaded Scheldt, and stands to lose from a truce during which trade relations would be normalized).
The opposition engages in a lively pamphlet war to influence public opinion, but Oldenbarnevelt manages to persuade the Holland regents.
He points out that a truce would lessen the fiscal pressures; help revive Dutch commerce with the Iberian Peninsula, which had by default fallen almost exclusively into English hands, after the peace James I of England concluded in 1604 with Spain; and free the hands of the Dutch elsewhere in Europe (as in the Sound, where Denmark at this time is hindering the Dutch Baltic trade) to defend their commercial interests by force if necessary.
He argues also that the loss of trade with the Indies would be outweighed by the positive effects on European trade of a lifting of the embargoes.
Locations
People
Groups
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Protestantism
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
- Geuzen, or Sea Beggars
- Netherlands, Southern (Spanish)
- Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
Topics
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Eighty Years War (Netherlands, or Dutch, War of Independence)
