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Dutch States Navy

The Dutch States Navy (Dutch: Staatse Vloot) was the navy of the Dutch Republic from 1588 to 1795. Coming into existence during the Eighty Years' War, the States Navy played a major role in expanding and protecting the Dutch colonial empire, in addition to participating in numerous conflicts with rival European powers. The States Navy consisted of five admiralties, which were respectively based in Amsterdam, Friesland, the Noorderkwartier, Rotterdam and Zeeland. This organisational structure contributed to the decentralised nature of the States Navy, which heavily relied upon privateers and armed merchantmen in times of war.

Dutch States Navy
Staatse Vloot
The naval jack of the Dutch States Navy. It consists of seven stripe, one for each of province of the Dutch Republic.
Active1588–1795
Country Dutch Republic
BranchNavy
Size~10,500 active duty personnel
~850 reserve personnel
~70–100 ships of the line
~100 frigates
~100 other tall ships
Part ofNaval Committee of the States General
Headquarters1 per admiralty, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Middelburg, Dokkum and Harlingen, Hoorn and Enkhuizen
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Piet Pieterszoon Hein, Maarten Tromp, Michiel de Ruyter, Cornelis Tromp
Insignia
Naval ensign
Prince's Flag (1588–1630)

Statenvlag (1630–1795)
Naval jack
Coat of arms (1588–1665)
Coat of arms (1665–1795)
Escutcheon

In addition to the Eighty Years' War, the States Navy also participated in the Anglo-Dutch Wars, the Dutch–Portuguese War, the Northern Wars, the Franco-Dutch War and various conflicts of the French–Habsburg rivalry. It also played a major role in protecting Dutch overseas trade, including Dutch involvement in the triangular trade and the Atlantic slave trade.[1] As a result of the War of the First Coalition, the Dutch Republic ceased to exist in 1795, being succeeded by the Batavian Republic; the States Navy was correspondingly transformed into the Batavian Navy. The current navy of the Netherlands, the Royal Netherlands Navy, is the modern successor of the States Navy and inherited many of its traditions.

Genesis edit

Naval policy in the Netherlands was originally decentralized. Each port area would fit out fleets to combat pirates and other threats to navigation paid for by the local merchants. The title of Admiral (from the Arab emir-al-bahr), for naval commanders of ships which protected commercial convoys against piracy already existed temporary in the different parts of the Low Countries. It was Louis II of Flanders who first appointed a permanent government official called admiral in Flanders at Dunkirk in 1383 with responsibilities and funding from the central government.

The Burgundian and Habsburg rulers started a central policy of a naval organization, defense and offense. In 1488 they established an Admiralty of the Netherlands at Veere by the Ordinance on the Admiralty issued 8 January. The admiralty of Flanders was made a vice-admiralty and subordinated to the Admiralty at Veere.

Still, the interests of the central government did not always match those of the regions, so that the regions regularly sent our their own fleets.

Uprising edit

The Dutch Navy began with and traces its roots back to the Sea Beggars.

 
Capture of Brielle, 1 April 1572 (Frans Hogenberg).

In 1569 William of Orange, who had now openly placed himself at the head of the party of revolt, granted letters of marque as monarch of the sovereign Principality of Orange, to a number of vessels manned by crews of desperadoes drawn from all nationalities. Eighteen ships received letters of marque, which were equipped under his brother, Louis of Nassau, in the French Huguenot port of La Rochelle. They were called "Sea Beggars", "Gueux de mer" in French, or "Watergeuzen" in Dutch. The Sea Beggars continued to use La Rochelle as a base, as well as English Ports.[2][3] By the end of 1569, already 84 Sea Beggars ships were in action.[2] The Sea Beggars were also adept at land borne operations, which made capturing coastal cities attractive.

They were under the command of a succession of daring and reckless leaders, the best-known of whom is William de la Marck, Lord of Lumey, At first they were content merely to plunder both by sea and land, carrying their booty to the English ports where they were able to refit and replenish their stores. However, in 1572, Queen Elizabeth I of England, seeking to placate Philip II of Spain, abruptly refused to admit the Sea Beggars to her harbours. No longer having refuge, the Sea Beggars, under the command of Willem Bloys van Treslong, made a desperate attack upon Brielle, which they seized by surprise in the absence of the Spanish garrison on 1 April 1572. Encouraged by this success, they now sailed to the larger port of Vlissingen, which was also taken by a coup de main. The capture of these two towns prompted several nearby towns to declare for revolt, starting a chain reaction that resulted in the majority of Holland joining in a general revolt of the Netherlands, and is regarded as the real beginning of Dutch independence.

In 1573 the Sea Beggars defeated a Spanish squadron under the command of Admiral Bossu off the port of Hoorn in the Battle on the Zuiderzee. Mixing with the native population, they quickly sparked rebellions against Spanish Rule and the Spanish Governor-General of the Netherlands,the Duke of Alba, in town after town and spread the resistance southward.

Some of the forefathers of the Dutch naval heroes began their naval careers as Sea Beggars, such as Evert Heindricxzen, the grandfather of Cornelis Evertsen the Elder.

Admiralities edit

see Admiralties (Dutch)

 
Map of the Haringvliet in 1690
 
's Lands Zeemagazijn (English "the arsenal"), former arsenal of the Admiralty of Amsterdam

The success of the Dutch Revolt required a better system of naval governance. In 1586, the then governor-general, Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, established a new instruction for the Admiralty. Based on this new instruction, the admiralty councils in Veere, Rotterdam and Hoorn were founded. An admiralty council was also founded in Ostend. Ostend, however, was since 1572 under the influence of Zeeland, and under pressure from Zeeland, this admiralty was abolished in the following year. After the three-year Siege of Ostend, the city's admiralty was put under the Dunkirk Admiralty founded by Parma in 1583.

In 1596 there was an attempt by the States-General to centralize the administration of the navy in the form of one College of Admiralty consisting of delegates from all the provinces. Provincial particularism, however, ensured that months later this was cast aside. The competition between the differing admiralties became so grim that Zeeland and Holland impounded each other's ships, and Elizabeth I of England tried to broker a reconciliation. On 13 August 1597 the States-General issued an Instruction for the Admiralties which established the management of naval affairs for the Republic until 1795. Within a few years there were five different admiralty colleges located at[4]: 121 

The Admiralty colleges were governed by the Lord Councils in Admiralty or just Council of the Admiralty.[4]: 121  As Stadholder, the princes of Orange that succeeded Maurice were also appointed to his offices and so were Admiral General of the Union and chairman of the colleges. Through this mechanism they were able to provide central control and coordination to naval affairs. The prince was represented in each college by a lieutenant-admiral, who was assisted by a judge-advocate and a secretary. If there was no Stadholder - as between 1650 and 1672 - the States-General had the final responsibility. In practice, therefore, this concentrated that supervisory power in the Grand Pensionary. Although the Admiralty colleges were organs of the Union and thus accountable to the State-General, the bodies were regional. The regions had a lot of influence, despite the joint meetings in The Hague and the influence of the Prince of Orange and/or the Grand Pensionary. As the admiralty with the most money and fitting out the most ships, the Admiralty of Amsterdam had the most influence.

The Admiralty colleges had the task of protecting coastal waters and the commercial fleet, which included the Dutch East India Company fleet. To support this, they had the power to levy tax funds through convoys and licenses (import and export duties) and thus pay for the equipment of the navy. The other main task of the admiralties was to build, maintain and equip the navy. The admiralties were also entitled to act as judge in disputes and as a prize court. The admiralties independently nominated and commissioned junior officers. Flag officers and captains were appointed by the States-General, on the recommendation of the Admiralty. Originally, the admiralty ships were leased or advanced by merchant companies. Later in the 17th century, in order to meet the heavier ships of the line of the Royal Navy on equal terms, ships were built to purpose as heavy warships/ships of the line for continuous naval service. This innovation is due mainly to Johan de Witt. To carry out their duties, the admiralties possessed yards, warehouses and offices.

In 1795 the admiralties were replaced by a central Admiralty in the Batavian Republic and later the Kingdom of Holland. After the French period (1814), it became the Department of the Navy of the Royal Netherlands Navy that is the direct successor to the Dutch Fleet.

Commander-in-Chief of the Dutch Navy edit

see Lieutenant Admiral-General

In 1588 Supreme Command of the Fleet was given by the States General to Prince Maurits as commander in chief of the army and navy. In the case of the navy, his rank was "Admiral General". Maurice's successors as princes of Orange, as Stadholder of Holland, Zealand, etc., were appointed, in addition to their role as Captain General of the Army, Admiral General of the Navy. The Admiral General was commander-in-chief of the fleet and chairman of the Admiralty colleges. In this capacity he was able to provide central direction to naval policy over the 5 separate admiralties. In practice, as the Stadholder/Admiral General never fought in person with fleet, his day-to-day supreme command of the fleet devolved upon the leading lieutenant-admiral from among the several of that rank from the different admiralties. This officer functioned as a joint commander ("gezamenlijke bevelvoerder") of the naval admirals, a chief or as he came to be called the Chef of Ghemaghtigde der Staeten op 's-Landts Vloot (Chief Representative of the States on the Nation's Fleet). During the Stadholderless times when no Admiral General was appointed the supreme authority of the fleet was the States-General in the person of the Chef. From time to time, especially during the Stadholderless periods, the States General also appointed one or several deputies to accompany the fleet. It was in this capacity that Cornelis de Witt accompanied the fleet in the Second Anglo-Dutch War and the Raid on the Medway.

The lieutenant-admirals of each admiralty were appointed on the basis of experience and expertise. Those from the Admiralty of the Maas, as the oldest admiralty, had a claim to command and precedence over those from the other admiralties. Similarly, the lieutenant-admirals of the Amsterdam Admiralty had a claim to precedence as the representatives of the largest and richest admiralty that fitted out the largest part of the fleet. The Chef was usually appointed from one of those admiralties. That role fell first Maarten Tromp. When de Ruyter was given command of the fleet, his commission as lieutenant-admiral was transferred from Zealand to Amsterdam.

 
Michiel de Ruyter by Ferdinand Bol in 1667. He wears his Order of Saint Michael.
 
Replica of the Sternpiece of the Zeven Provinciën showing the arms of the Union and each of the member States.

The rank of Lieutenant Admiral General in the Netherlands was created in February 1673 by the Stadholder William III for Michiel de Ruyter to cement his authority and prestige above the other lieutenant-admirals of the Navy and ensure undivided command of the fleet. De Ruyter had functioned since the Second Anglo-Dutch War with the rank of lieutenant-admiral as commander in chief, without rank to be higher than other lieutenant-admirals. To put an end to this situation, but also in recognition of his great achievements, De Ruyter received a new grade of Lieutenant Admiral General. He was not Admiral-General, to emphasize that the authority of the 1672 appointment of Stadholder Prince William III was not affected.

After the death of De Ruyter in 1676 this rank was offered to Cornelis Tromp on 6 February 1679 to persuade him to be commander in chief of the Dutch navy. The delay was due to the fact that Tromp was in the Danish service as their Admiral General. After the death of Cornelis Tromp in 1691, the rank was not assigned to any other naval officer. Formally Tromp never held this rank. He died before he could occupy this rank in Dutch service. The Stadholder-King William III then ordered that this rank may no longer be used. Possible reasons for this were because on the one hand the rank of Lieutenant-Admiral-General of the fallen De Ruyter looked too much like his role of Admiral General of the Dutch fleet and, secondly, William had earlier sent De Ruyter with an inadequate fleet to the Mediterranean against a much larger French fleet.

A Fleet Guardian ("Vlootvoogd") was generally also appointed and functioned as a deputy fleet commander. Although the concept admiral is used in many books, this is not an official rank or title. It was the name popularly given to commanders of a naval fleet or part of it, whose actual rank could be: admiral, lieutenant-admiral, vice admiral, or Rear-Admiral .

Financing edit

Though usually the aspect of financing of a military force is seen as "derivative," in the case of the States Navy, as with the States Army it played an important formative role, and influenced the peculiarities of the organisation also. Unlike the Army, which was made up primarily of mercenaries, the Navy was made up primarily of Dutch natives.

The financial institutions of the Dutch Republic, including its banking system that allowed it raise large amounts of capital at small rates of interest (see Financial history of the Dutch Republic), allowed the Republic to "punch above its weight" in military matters. Without the international "open market" for money the Republic, with its population of about 1.5 million in the 17th century, would simply have lacked the manpower base to compete with countries like Spain (10 million inhabitants in the period in question) and France (20 million).

Seventeenth century edit

 
Johan de Witt, Portrait by Adriaen Hanneman, 1652

In the early 17th century, the States fleet was reinforced with armed merchant ships. The introduction of the line tactics but made agility, sailing capacity, speed and uniformity of the vessels increasingly important. In 1653 the States-General at the initiative of Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt to the construction of sixty ships. The Seven Provinces was one of these ships were built for the war with England.

Johan de Witt, the councilor pensionary of Holland and leading statesman of the Republic, worked closely with Michiel de Ruyter, who was in command on behalf of the States General of the fleet, and the Amsterdam merchant and member of the Admiralty College David Wildt, who had to provide the money.

In the 1660s a second series of sixty ships was commissioned. Thus, a large standing war fleet of a hundred ships of the line, frigates and lighter vessels formed in the second half of the 17th century. The largest charter, including the 7 Provinces, the flagship of De Ruyter, was equipped with 80 to 96 guns.

The navy had normally about three to four thousand seamen. When war threatened thousands of sailors were mustered. This was generally just for one campaign. Flag officers and captains were responsible for the recruitment of persons on board. Officers of the fleet constituted an exception. Already in the early 17th century a couple of experienced captains were in the permanent employment of the Navy at a salary. These were called the extraordinary captains. These captains were also responsible for the victualing of the fleet. Every captain of a ship bought the supplies from these extraordinary captains at a discount subsidized by the different Admiralties. The extraordinary captains thus acted as a victualing service. While cheap to buy, with the subsidy from the Admiralites, the profit on the supplies to the extraordinary captains could amount to thousands of guilders. The cost and profit on these supplies were the main income of these extraordinary captains.

The sailors came mainly from the proletariat and the multinational population of the port cities. In 1665 a regiment of soldiers aboard the ship was instituted under Baron Willem Joseph van Ghent. These later became the nucleus of the Netherlands Marine Corps.

Strategic Mission edit

 
Main battle sites of the Second Anglo-Dutch War: as in the other Anglo-Dutch Wars, apart from Bergen, most fighting took place in the southern North Sea astride the trade routes in and out of the Dutch Republic.

During the 17th century the Republic was involved in numerous battles. The main goal was keeping open the trade routes at sea and the defense of the territory.

Until 1648, Spain was the enemy. A States fleet destroyed in 1607 the entire Spanish fleet at the Battle of Gibraltar. Partly as a result of the destruction of the Spanish fleet in 1608, peace talks launched in 1609 resulted in the Twelve Years' Truce.

The Battle of the Downs in 1639 - in which Lieutenant-Admiral Maarten Tromp and Vice-Admiral Witte de With defeated a Spanish fleet of 55 ships, put an end to the Spanish domination at sea.

In addition, the fleet blockaded the Flemish coast and escorted the merchant fleet towards the Baltic Sea. The close relations between the Swedes and the Dutch angered the Danes. Many Dutch merchants had settled in Sweden, where they had a large share in the structure of trade and industry. One of them was Louis de Geer in 1644 a complete naval yield from the Republic, 23 ships with sailors and officers so Fehmarn could be occupied by the Swedes[clarification needed]. The Danes banned in 1640 the export of timber from Norway. The Netherlands and Sweden began a war against the Danes, which this the Sound ENDED.[clarification needed] In 1644 and 1645 forced Witte de With, therefore, the Brederode with a huge convoy merchantmen - 702 fleet in the return of the last year - the Sound and thus force a favorable tolverdrag.[clarification needed]

Anglo-Dutch Wars edit

See: First Anglo-Dutch War, Second Anglo-Dutch War, Third Anglo-Dutch War, Glorious Revolution, Fourth Anglo-Dutch War

 
The Battle of Scheveningen, 10 August 1653 by Jan Abrahamsz Beerstraaten, painted c. 1654, depicts the final battle of the First Anglo-Dutch War.

During the 17th century the Republic's maritime expansion aroused more and more envy, especially the English. Besides bulk trade there was an increasing focus on luxury goods. The textile industry focused increasingly on refining wool imported from England. In 1614 the English attempted to begin refining the wool themselves in the Cockayne Project, this failed, however, because the States General banned the import of finished textiles from England. The English textile industry this was a backlog of decades.[clarification needed] In 1617 England lifted the ban, but the Dutch ban remained in effect.

After the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, the Dutch took the traditional trade of England with Spain and Portugal, which caused huge resentment. The Netherlands had a huge merchant fleet (with more ships than all other countries in Europe put together) and now had a dominant position in the European market in general, and the Baltic trade in particular. They had further conquered most of the Portuguese territories in the East Indies, including its monopoly on the highly profitable spice trade, and gained more and more influence on maritime trade between England and its North American colonies.

Under the English Navigation Acts vessels flying the Dutch flag was denied access to English ports as they were carrying goods not coming from the Netherlands. Because this was the lion's share of the Dutch shipping in England, these laws undermined enormously the commercial position of the Netherlands. This led to the Anglo-Dutch Wars. During the First Anglo-Dutch War ( 1652 - 1654 ) the British fleet operations were aimed primarily at the Dutch merchantmen to obstruct free passage. One example was the Battle of Dungeness in December 1652, in which Maarten Tromp managed to keep the Channel open to Dutch shipping. The Battle of Livorno in 1653 under Commander Johan van Galen where the Dutch prevailed in the Mediterranean Sea, the English trade with the Levant was greatly disrupted as a result. In the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665-1667) five major actions took place, almost all the English coast. In 1667 the Dutch under Michiel de Ruyter undertook the Raid on the Medway .

 
The Royal Prince and other vessels at the Four Days Fight, 11–14 June 1666 (Abraham Storck) depicts a battle of the Second Anglo-Dutch War. In the foreground the Swiftsure with Admiral Berkeley surrenders. On the right the grounded Prince Royal with Admiral George Ayscue surrenders by releasing white smoke; de Ruyter on the De Zeven Provinciën accepts. In between the Royal Charles can just be seen with a broken mast.
 
Dutch Attack on the Medway, June 1667 the decisive victory by the Dutch in the Second Anglo-Dutch War by Pieter Cornelisz van Soest, painted c. 1667. The captured ship Royal Charles is right of center.

The Third Anglo-Dutch War ( 1672 - 1674 ) was part of the Franco-Dutch War (1672-1678). In that year England, France, Cologne and Münster declared war on the Republic, as they were threatened by its rise in power. Facing the large Anglo-French force majeure at sea, the States fleet was soon on the defensive. De Ruyter did however hold the enemy off from the Dutch coast thanks to his tactical ingenuity. During these wars de Ruyter distinguished himself further, becoming the greatest Dutch naval hero.

 
The Battle of the Texel, the decisive sea battle in the Third Anglo-Dutch War on 11/21 August 1673 by Willem van de Velde, the younger, painted 1683. The ship at the centre is Dutch Admiral Cornelis Tromp's flagship Gouden Leeuw, 82 guns.

The conclusion of the Treaty of Westminster (1674) brought an end to the trade wars between the rival navies. After Stadtholder William III of Orange-Nassau was proclaimed king of England in the Glorious Revolution, England and the Republic fought as allies against France in the Nine Years' War and War of the Spanish Succession. The battle shifted from the North Sea and the English Channel to the French coast and the Mediterranean, where the Dutch fleet sailed against the squadrons of Louis XIV and the Barbary pirates.

Downturn edit

In the 18th century the States fleet could no longer compete against Britain and France. An ambitious building program in the 1780s was disrupted by the disastrous course of the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War (1780-1784). Although the Battle of Dogger Bank (1781), led by Admiral Johan Zoutman, ended in a draw was in fact a strategic defeat. At the Treaty of Paris (1783) Britain was given freedom of navigation in the East Indian waters.

After the French edit

Under the Batavian Republic the five admiralties were replaced by a central organization, later ministry. Under William I the force was re-established as the Royal Netherlands Navy, from 1905 officially the Royal Navy.

References edit

  1. ^ Ormrod, David; Rommelse, Gijs (2020). War, Trade and the State: Anglo-Dutch Conflict, 1652-89. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 9781783273249.
  2. ^ a b Pratt, Fletcher; Gorey, Edward (27 March 2000). The Battles That Changed History by Fletcher Pratt p.155. Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486411293. Retrieved 2013-08-11.
  3. ^ Wernham, R. B. (November 1968). The new Cambridge modern history: The Counter-Reformation by R. B. Wernham p.288. CUP Archive. ISBN 9780521045438. Retrieved 2013-08-11.
  4. ^ a b Temple, Sir William (1705), Observations upon the United Provinces of the Netherlands, orig published 1668 (7th ed.), London: Jacob Tonfon within Grays-Inn Gate next Grays-Inn Lane, and Awnfoam and John Churchill at the Black Swan in Tater-No/ler-Row*, ISBN 9780598006608

Sources edit

  • Bas, François de (1887). Prins Frederik Der Nederlanden en Zijn Tijd, vol. 1 (in Dutch). H. A. M. Roelants. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  • Glete, J. (2002) War and the State in Early Modern Europe. Spain, the Dutch Republic and Sweden as Fiscal-Military States, 1500–1660. New York, ISBN 0-415-22645-7
  • (in Dutch) Nimwegen, O. van (2006) "Deser landen crijchsvolck" Het Staatse leger en de militaire revoluties (1588–1688). Amsterdam, ISBN 90-351-2941-5
  • Roberts, K. (2010) Pike and Shot Tactics, 1590–1660. Botley, ISBN 978-1-84603-469-5
  • (in Dutch) Swart, E. (2006) Krijgsvolk. Militaire professionalisering en het ontstaan van het Staatse leger, 1568–1590. Dissertation, Amsterdam, ISBN 978-90-5356-876-7
  • Tracy, J.D. (2008) The Founding of the Dutch Republic. War, Finance, and Politics in Holland, 1572–1588. Oxford, ISBN 978-0-19-920911-8
  • (in Dutch) Het staatsche leger, 1568–1795, bewerkt door F.J.G. ten Raa en F. de Bas (J.W. Wijn) Eight vols. Breda, 1910–1950
  • (in Dutch) Zwitzer, H.L. (1991) "De militie van den staat" : het leger van de Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden. Amsterdam, ISBN 90-6881-020-0
  • Asaert, G., Bosscher, Ph.M., Bruijn, J.R., Hoboken, W.J., van et al (1976-1978): Maritieme geschiedenis der Nederlanden, De Boer Maritiem, Bussum
  • Charles Ralph Boxer: The Anglo-Dutch Wars of the 17th Century, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London 1974.
  • Alfred Thayer Mahan: Der Einfluß der Seemacht auf die Geschichte 1660–1812, Herford 1967.
  • N.A.M. Rodger: The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain 1649—1815, New York, 2004 ISBN 0-393-32847-3
  • P. G. Rogers: The Dutch on the Medway Oxford University Press, Oxford 1970, ISBN 0-19-215185-1.
  • Geyl, Pieter. Orange & Stuart 1641-1672 (1969)
  • Israel, Jonathan Ie. The Dutch Republic: its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 (1995), pp 713–26, 766–76, 796–806. The Dutch political perspective.
  • Herbert H. Rowen, John de Witt, Grand Pensionary of Holland, 1625-1672. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1978, which is summarized in
  • Herbert H. Rowen, "John de Witt: Statesman of the "True Freedom"". Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • Herbert H. Rowen, The Princes of Orange: the Stadholders in the Dutch Republic. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988.
  • Herbert H. Rowen, The Princes of Orange: the Stadholders in the Dutch Republic. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • Petrus Johannes Blok, "History of the People of the Netherlands". New York: G. P. Putnam's sons, 1898.
  • Pieter Geyl, "Orange and Stuart, 1641-1672". Scribner, 1970.
  • Jonathan I. Israel, "The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall, 1477–1806" Oxford University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-19-820734-4
  • Peter de la Court: de la Court, Peter (1746) [1662]. MEMOIRS OF Cornelius de Witt and John de Witt, - Pieter de la Court, The True Interest and Political Maxims, of the Republic of Holland. London: London: John Campbell, Esq. Retrieved October 18, 2011.

External links edit

  • 3decks - Naval Sailing Warfare History, Dutch First Rates
  • History Bruzelius.info

dutch, states, navy, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, decemb. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dutch States Navy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The Dutch States Navy Dutch Staatse Vloot was the navy of the Dutch Republic from 1588 to 1795 Coming into existence during the Eighty Years War the States Navy played a major role in expanding and protecting the Dutch colonial empire in addition to participating in numerous conflicts with rival European powers The States Navy consisted of five admiralties which were respectively based in Amsterdam Friesland the Noorderkwartier Rotterdam and Zeeland This organisational structure contributed to the decentralised nature of the States Navy which heavily relied upon privateers and armed merchantmen in times of war Dutch States NavyStaatse VlootThe naval jack of the Dutch States Navy It consists of seven stripe one for each of province of the Dutch Republic Active1588 1795Country Dutch RepublicBranchNavySize 10 500 active duty personnel 850 reserve personnel 70 100 ships of the line 100 frigates 100 other tall shipsPart ofNaval Committee of the States GeneralHeadquarters1 per admiralty Rotterdam Amsterdam Middelburg Dokkum and Harlingen Hoorn and EnkhuizenEngagementsEighty Years War Dutch Portuguese War Anglo Dutch Wars Northern Wars Franco Dutch War Nine Years War War of the Spanish Succession War of the Austrian Succession War of the First CoalitionCommandersNotablecommandersPiet Pieterszoon Hein Maarten Tromp Michiel de Ruyter Cornelis TrompInsigniaNaval ensignPrince s Flag 1588 1630 Statenvlag 1630 1795 Naval jackCoat of arms 1588 1665 Coat of arms 1665 1795 Escutcheon In addition to the Eighty Years War the States Navy also participated in the Anglo Dutch Wars the Dutch Portuguese War the Northern Wars the Franco Dutch War and various conflicts of the French Habsburg rivalry It also played a major role in protecting Dutch overseas trade including Dutch involvement in the triangular trade and the Atlantic slave trade 1 As a result of the War of the First Coalition the Dutch Republic ceased to exist in 1795 being succeeded by the Batavian Republic the States Navy was correspondingly transformed into the Batavian Navy The current navy of the Netherlands the Royal Netherlands Navy is the modern successor of the States Navy and inherited many of its traditions Contents 1 Genesis 2 Uprising 3 Admiralities 4 Commander in Chief of the Dutch Navy 5 Financing 6 Seventeenth century 6 1 Strategic Mission 6 2 Anglo Dutch Wars 7 Downturn 8 After the French 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksGenesis editFor Admiral of Flanders 1383 1483 and Admiral of the Netherlands 1485 1573 see Admiral of Flanders Further information Naval history of the Netherlands Further information Politics and government of the Dutch Republic Naval policy in the Netherlands was originally decentralized Each port area would fit out fleets to combat pirates and other threats to navigation paid for by the local merchants The title of Admiral from the Arab emir al bahr for naval commanders of ships which protected commercial convoys against piracy already existed temporary in the different parts of the Low Countries It was Louis II of Flanders who first appointed a permanent government official called admiral in Flanders at Dunkirk in 1383 with responsibilities and funding from the central government The Burgundian and Habsburg rulers started a central policy of a naval organization defense and offense In 1488 they established an Admiralty of the Netherlands at Veere by the Ordinance on the Admiralty issued 8 January The admiralty of Flanders was made a vice admiralty and subordinated to the Admiralty at Veere Still the interests of the central government did not always match those of the regions so that the regions regularly sent our their own fleets Uprising editThe Dutch Navy began with and traces its roots back to the Sea Beggars nbsp Capture of Brielle 1 April 1572 Frans Hogenberg In 1569 William of Orange who had now openly placed himself at the head of the party of revolt granted letters of marque as monarch of the sovereign Principality of Orange to a number of vessels manned by crews of desperadoes drawn from all nationalities Eighteen ships received letters of marque which were equipped under his brother Louis of Nassau in the French Huguenot port of La Rochelle They were called Sea Beggars Gueux de mer in French or Watergeuzen in Dutch The Sea Beggars continued to use La Rochelle as a base as well as English Ports 2 3 By the end of 1569 already 84 Sea Beggars ships were in action 2 The Sea Beggars were also adept at land borne operations which made capturing coastal cities attractive They were under the command of a succession of daring and reckless leaders the best known of whom is William de la Marck Lord of Lumey At first they were content merely to plunder both by sea and land carrying their booty to the English ports where they were able to refit and replenish their stores However in 1572 Queen Elizabeth I of England seeking to placate Philip II of Spain abruptly refused to admit the Sea Beggars to her harbours No longer having refuge the Sea Beggars under the command of Willem Bloys van Treslong made a desperate attack upon Brielle which they seized by surprise in the absence of the Spanish garrison on 1 April 1572 Encouraged by this success they now sailed to the larger port of Vlissingen which was also taken by a coup de main The capture of these two towns prompted several nearby towns to declare for revolt starting a chain reaction that resulted in the majority of Holland joining in a general revolt of the Netherlands and is regarded as the real beginning of Dutch independence In 1573 the Sea Beggars defeated a Spanish squadron under the command of Admiral Bossu off the port of Hoorn in the Battle on the Zuiderzee Mixing with the native population they quickly sparked rebellions against Spanish Rule and the Spanish Governor General of the Netherlands the Duke of Alba in town after town and spread the resistance southward Some of the forefathers of the Dutch naval heroes began their naval careers as Sea Beggars such as Evert Heindricxzen the grandfather of Cornelis Evertsen the Elder Admiralities editsee Admiralties Dutch nbsp Map of the Haringvliet in 1690 nbsp s Lands Zeemagazijn English the arsenal former arsenal of the Admiralty of Amsterdam The success of the Dutch Revolt required a better system of naval governance In 1586 the then governor general Robert Dudley 1st Earl of Leicester established a new instruction for the Admiralty Based on this new instruction the admiralty councils in Veere Rotterdam and Hoorn were founded An admiralty council was also founded in Ostend Ostend however was since 1572 under the influence of Zeeland and under pressure from Zeeland this admiralty was abolished in the following year After the three year Siege of Ostend the city s admiralty was put under the Dunkirk Admiralty founded by Parma in 1583 In 1596 there was an attempt by the States General to centralize the administration of the navy in the form of one College of Admiralty consisting of delegates from all the provinces Provincial particularism however ensured that months later this was cast aside The competition between the differing admiralties became so grim that Zeeland and Holland impounded each other s ships and Elizabeth I of England tried to broker a reconciliation On 13 August 1597 the States General issued an Instruction for the Admiralties which established the management of naval affairs for the Republic until 1795 Within a few years there were five different admiralty colleges located at 4 121 Admiralty of the Maas Rotterdam Admiralty of Amsterdam Admiralty of Zeeland Middleburg Admiralty of Friesland Dokkum after 1645 Harlingen Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier alternating Hoorn and Enkhuizen The Admiralty colleges were governed by the Lord Councils in Admiralty or just Council of the Admiralty 4 121 As Stadholder the princes of Orange that succeeded Maurice were also appointed to his offices and so were Admiral General of the Union and chairman of the colleges Through this mechanism they were able to provide central control and coordination to naval affairs The prince was represented in each college by a lieutenant admiral who was assisted by a judge advocate and a secretary If there was no Stadholder as between 1650 and 1672 the States General had the final responsibility In practice therefore this concentrated that supervisory power in the Grand Pensionary Although the Admiralty colleges were organs of the Union and thus accountable to the State General the bodies were regional The regions had a lot of influence despite the joint meetings in The Hague and the influence of the Prince of Orange and or the Grand Pensionary As the admiralty with the most money and fitting out the most ships the Admiralty of Amsterdam had the most influence The Admiralty colleges had the task of protecting coastal waters and the commercial fleet which included the Dutch East India Company fleet To support this they had the power to levy tax funds through convoys and licenses import and export duties and thus pay for the equipment of the navy The other main task of the admiralties was to build maintain and equip the navy The admiralties were also entitled to act as judge in disputes and as a prize court The admiralties independently nominated and commissioned junior officers Flag officers and captains were appointed by the States General on the recommendation of the Admiralty Originally the admiralty ships were leased or advanced by merchant companies Later in the 17th century in order to meet the heavier ships of the line of the Royal Navy on equal terms ships were built to purpose as heavy warships ships of the line for continuous naval service This innovation is due mainly to Johan de Witt To carry out their duties the admiralties possessed yards warehouses and offices In 1795 the admiralties were replaced by a central Admiralty in the Batavian Republic and later the Kingdom of Holland After the French period 1814 it became the Department of the Navy of the Royal Netherlands Navy that is the direct successor to the Dutch Fleet Commander in Chief of the Dutch Navy editsee Lieutenant Admiral GeneralIn 1588 Supreme Command of the Fleet was given by the States General to Prince Maurits as commander in chief of the army and navy In the case of the navy his rank was Admiral General Maurice s successors as princes of Orange as Stadholder of Holland Zealand etc were appointed in addition to their role as Captain General of the Army Admiral General of the Navy The Admiral General was commander in chief of the fleet and chairman of the Admiralty colleges In this capacity he was able to provide central direction to naval policy over the 5 separate admiralties In practice as the Stadholder Admiral General never fought in person with fleet his day to day supreme command of the fleet devolved upon the leading lieutenant admiral from among the several of that rank from the different admiralties This officer functioned as a joint commander gezamenlijke bevelvoerder of the naval admirals a chief or as he came to be called the Chef of Ghemaghtigde der Staeten op s Landts Vloot Chief Representative of the States on the Nation s Fleet During the Stadholderless times when no Admiral General was appointed the supreme authority of the fleet was the States General in the person of the Chef From time to time especially during the Stadholderless periods the States General also appointed one or several deputies to accompany the fleet It was in this capacity that Cornelis de Witt accompanied the fleet in the Second Anglo Dutch War and the Raid on the Medway The lieutenant admirals of each admiralty were appointed on the basis of experience and expertise Those from the Admiralty of the Maas as the oldest admiralty had a claim to command and precedence over those from the other admiralties Similarly the lieutenant admirals of the Amsterdam Admiralty had a claim to precedence as the representatives of the largest and richest admiralty that fitted out the largest part of the fleet The Chef was usually appointed from one of those admiralties That role fell first Maarten Tromp When de Ruyter was given command of the fleet his commission as lieutenant admiral was transferred from Zealand to Amsterdam nbsp Michiel de Ruyter by Ferdinand Bol in 1667 He wears his Order of Saint Michael nbsp Replica of the Sternpiece of the Zeven Provincien showing the arms of the Union and each of the member States Piet Hein chef 26 March 1629 18 June 1629 Philips van Dorp chef 1632 1653 Maarten Harpertszoon Tromp chef 1637 1653 Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam chef 1653 1665 Michiel de Ruyter chef 1665 1676 Lieutenant Admiral General rank created for him by William III of Orange February 1673 1676 Cornelis Tromp chef 1676 1684 Lieutenant Admiral General 6 February 1679 1691 Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest chef 1 April 1684 1690 Cornelis Tromp chef 1690 1691 Philips van Almonde chef 1691 1711 The rank of Lieutenant Admiral General in the Netherlands was created in February 1673 by the Stadholder William III for Michiel de Ruyter to cement his authority and prestige above the other lieutenant admirals of the Navy and ensure undivided command of the fleet De Ruyter had functioned since the Second Anglo Dutch War with the rank of lieutenant admiral as commander in chief without rank to be higher than other lieutenant admirals To put an end to this situation but also in recognition of his great achievements De Ruyter received a new grade of Lieutenant Admiral General He was not Admiral General to emphasize that the authority of the 1672 appointment of Stadholder Prince William III was not affected After the death of De Ruyter in 1676 this rank was offered to Cornelis Tromp on 6 February 1679 to persuade him to be commander in chief of the Dutch navy The delay was due to the fact that Tromp was in the Danish service as their Admiral General After the death of Cornelis Tromp in 1691 the rank was not assigned to any other naval officer Formally Tromp never held this rank He died before he could occupy this rank in Dutch service The Stadholder King William III then ordered that this rank may no longer be used Possible reasons for this were because on the one hand the rank of Lieutenant Admiral General of the fallen De Ruyter looked too much like his role of Admiral General of the Dutch fleet and secondly William had earlier sent De Ruyter with an inadequate fleet to the Mediterranean against a much larger French fleet A Fleet Guardian Vlootvoogd was generally also appointed and functioned as a deputy fleet commander Although the concept admiral is used in many books this is not an official rank or title It was the name popularly given to commanders of a naval fleet or part of it whose actual rank could be admiral lieutenant admiral vice admiral or Rear Admiral Financing editThough usually the aspect of financing of a military force is seen as derivative in the case of the States Navy as with the States Army it played an important formative role and influenced the peculiarities of the organisation also Unlike the Army which was made up primarily of mercenaries the Navy was made up primarily of Dutch natives The financial institutions of the Dutch Republic including its banking system that allowed it raise large amounts of capital at small rates of interest see Financial history of the Dutch Republic allowed the Republic to punch above its weight in military matters Without the international open market for money the Republic with its population of about 1 5 million in the 17th century would simply have lacked the manpower base to compete with countries like Spain 10 million inhabitants in the period in question and France 20 million Seventeenth century edit nbsp Johan de Witt Portrait by Adriaen Hanneman 1652 In the early 17th century the States fleet was reinforced with armed merchant ships The introduction of the line tactics but made agility sailing capacity speed and uniformity of the vessels increasingly important In 1653 the States General at the initiative of Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt to the construction of sixty ships The Seven Provinces was one of these ships were built for the war with England Johan de Witt the councilor pensionary of Holland and leading statesman of the Republic worked closely with Michiel de Ruyter who was in command on behalf of the States General of the fleet and the Amsterdam merchant and member of the Admiralty College David Wildt who had to provide the money In the 1660s a second series of sixty ships was commissioned Thus a large standing war fleet of a hundred ships of the line frigates and lighter vessels formed in the second half of the 17th century The largest charter including the 7 Provinces the flagship of De Ruyter was equipped with 80 to 96 guns The navy had normally about three to four thousand seamen When war threatened thousands of sailors were mustered This was generally just for one campaign Flag officers and captains were responsible for the recruitment of persons on board Officers of the fleet constituted an exception Already in the early 17th century a couple of experienced captains were in the permanent employment of the Navy at a salary These were called the extraordinary captains These captains were also responsible for the victualing of the fleet Every captain of a ship bought the supplies from these extraordinary captains at a discount subsidized by the different Admiralties The extraordinary captains thus acted as a victualing service While cheap to buy with the subsidy from the Admiralites the profit on the supplies to the extraordinary captains could amount to thousands of guilders The cost and profit on these supplies were the main income of these extraordinary captains The sailors came mainly from the proletariat and the multinational population of the port cities In 1665 a regiment of soldiers aboard the ship was instituted under Baron Willem Joseph van Ghent These later became the nucleus of the Netherlands Marine Corps Strategic Mission edit nbsp Main battle sites of the Second Anglo Dutch War as in the other Anglo Dutch Wars apart from Bergen most fighting took place in the southern North Sea astride the trade routes in and out of the Dutch Republic During the 17th century the Republic was involved in numerous battles The main goal was keeping open the trade routes at sea and the defense of the territory Until 1648 Spain was the enemy A States fleet destroyed in 1607 the entire Spanish fleet at the Battle of Gibraltar Partly as a result of the destruction of the Spanish fleet in 1608 peace talks launched in 1609 resulted in the Twelve Years Truce The Battle of the Downs in 1639 in which Lieutenant Admiral Maarten Tromp and Vice Admiral Witte de With defeated a Spanish fleet of 55 ships put an end to the Spanish domination at sea In addition the fleet blockaded the Flemish coast and escorted the merchant fleet towards the Baltic Sea The close relations between the Swedes and the Dutch angered the Danes Many Dutch merchants had settled in Sweden where they had a large share in the structure of trade and industry One of them was Louis de Geer in 1644 a complete naval yield from the Republic 23 ships with sailors and officers so Fehmarn could be occupied by the Swedes clarification needed The Danes banned in 1640 the export of timber from Norway The Netherlands and Sweden began a war against the Danes which this the Sound ENDED clarification needed In 1644 and 1645 forced Witte de With therefore the Brederode with a huge convoy merchantmen 702 fleet in the return of the last year the Sound and thus force a favorable tolverdrag clarification needed Anglo Dutch Wars edit Main article Anglo Dutch Wars See First Anglo Dutch War Second Anglo Dutch War Third Anglo Dutch War Glorious Revolution Fourth Anglo Dutch War nbsp The Battle of Scheveningen 10 August 1653 by Jan Abrahamsz Beerstraaten painted c 1654 depicts the final battle of the First Anglo Dutch War During the 17th century the Republic s maritime expansion aroused more and more envy especially the English Besides bulk trade there was an increasing focus on luxury goods The textile industry focused increasingly on refining wool imported from England In 1614 the English attempted to begin refining the wool themselves in the Cockayne Project this failed however because the States General banned the import of finished textiles from England The English textile industry this was a backlog of decades clarification needed In 1617 England lifted the ban but the Dutch ban remained in effect After the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 the Dutch took the traditional trade of England with Spain and Portugal which caused huge resentment The Netherlands had a huge merchant fleet with more ships than all other countries in Europe put together and now had a dominant position in the European market in general and the Baltic trade in particular They had further conquered most of the Portuguese territories in the East Indies including its monopoly on the highly profitable spice trade and gained more and more influence on maritime trade between England and its North American colonies Under the English Navigation Acts vessels flying the Dutch flag was denied access to English ports as they were carrying goods not coming from the Netherlands Because this was the lion s share of the Dutch shipping in England these laws undermined enormously the commercial position of the Netherlands This led to the Anglo Dutch Wars During the First Anglo Dutch War 1652 1654 the British fleet operations were aimed primarily at the Dutch merchantmen to obstruct free passage One example was the Battle of Dungeness in December 1652 in which Maarten Tromp managed to keep the Channel open to Dutch shipping The Battle of Livorno in 1653 under Commander Johan van Galen where the Dutch prevailed in the Mediterranean Sea the English trade with the Levant was greatly disrupted as a result In the Second Anglo Dutch War 1665 1667 five major actions took place almost all the English coast In 1667 the Dutch under Michiel de Ruyter undertook the Raid on the Medway nbsp The Royal Prince and other vessels at the Four Days Fight 11 14 June 1666 Abraham Storck depicts a battle of the Second Anglo Dutch War In the foreground the Swiftsure with Admiral Berkeley surrenders On the right the grounded Prince Royal with Admiral George Ayscue surrenders by releasing white smoke de Ruyter on the De Zeven Provincien accepts In between the Royal Charles can just be seen with a broken mast nbsp Dutch Attack on the Medway June 1667 the decisive victory by the Dutch in the Second Anglo Dutch War by Pieter Cornelisz van Soest painted c 1667 The captured ship Royal Charles is right of center The Third Anglo Dutch War 1672 1674 was part of the Franco Dutch War 1672 1678 In that year England France Cologne and Munster declared war on the Republic as they were threatened by its rise in power Facing the large Anglo French force majeure at sea the States fleet was soon on the defensive De Ruyter did however hold the enemy off from the Dutch coast thanks to his tactical ingenuity During these wars de Ruyter distinguished himself further becoming the greatest Dutch naval hero nbsp The Battle of the Texel the decisive sea battle in the Third Anglo Dutch War on 11 21 August 1673 by Willem van de Velde the younger painted 1683 The ship at the centre is Dutch Admiral Cornelis Tromp s flagship Gouden Leeuw 82 guns The conclusion of the Treaty of Westminster 1674 brought an end to the trade wars between the rival navies After Stadtholder William III of Orange Nassau was proclaimed king of England in the Glorious Revolution England and the Republic fought as allies against France in the Nine Years War and War of the Spanish Succession The battle shifted from the North Sea and the English Channel to the French coast and the Mediterranean where the Dutch fleet sailed against the squadrons of Louis XIV and the Barbary pirates Downturn editIn the 18th century the States fleet could no longer compete against Britain and France An ambitious building program in the 1780s was disrupted by the disastrous course of the Fourth Anglo Dutch War 1780 1784 Although the Battle of Dogger Bank 1781 led by Admiral Johan Zoutman ended in a draw was in fact a strategic defeat At the Treaty of Paris 1783 Britain was given freedom of navigation in the East Indian waters After the French editMain articles Batavian Navy and Royal Netherlands Navy Under the Batavian Republic the five admiralties were replaced by a central organization later ministry Under William I the force was re established as the Royal Netherlands Navy from 1905 officially the Royal Navy References edit Ormrod David Rommelse Gijs 2020 War Trade and the State Anglo Dutch Conflict 1652 89 Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 9781783273249 a b Pratt Fletcher Gorey Edward 27 March 2000 The Battles That Changed History by Fletcher Pratt p 155 Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486411293 Retrieved 2013 08 11 Wernham R B November 1968 The new Cambridge modern history The Counter Reformation by R B Wernham p 288 CUP Archive ISBN 9780521045438 Retrieved 2013 08 11 a b Temple Sir William 1705 Observations upon the United Provinces of the Netherlands orig published 1668 7th ed London Jacob Tonfon within Grays Inn Gate next Grays Inn Lane and Awnfoam and John Churchill at the Black Swan in Tater No ler Row ISBN 9780598006608Sources editBas Francois de 1887 Prins Frederik Der Nederlanden en Zijn Tijd vol 1 in Dutch H A M Roelants Retrieved 31 March 2013 Glete J 2002 War and the State in Early Modern Europe Spain the Dutch Republic and Sweden as Fiscal Military States 1500 1660 New York ISBN 0 415 22645 7 in Dutch Nimwegen O van 2006 Deser landen crijchsvolck Het Staatse leger en de militaire revoluties 1588 1688 Amsterdam ISBN 90 351 2941 5 Roberts K 2010 Pike and Shot Tactics 1590 1660 Botley ISBN 978 1 84603 469 5 in Dutch Swart E 2006 Krijgsvolk Militaire professionalisering en het ontstaan van het Staatse leger 1568 1590 Dissertation Amsterdam ISBN 978 90 5356 876 7 Tracy J D 2008 The Founding of the Dutch Republic War Finance and Politics in Holland 1572 1588 Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 920911 8 in Dutch Het staatsche leger 1568 1795 bewerkt door F J G ten Raa en F de Bas J W Wijn Eight vols Breda 1910 1950 in Dutch Zwitzer H L 1991 De militie van den staat het leger van de Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden Amsterdam ISBN 90 6881 020 0 Asaert G Bosscher Ph M Bruijn J R Hoboken W J van et al 1976 1978 Maritieme geschiedenis der Nederlanden De Boer Maritiem Bussum Charles Ralph Boxer The Anglo Dutch Wars of the 17th Century Her Majesty s Stationery Office London 1974 Alfred Thayer Mahan Der Einfluss der Seemacht auf die Geschichte 1660 1812 Herford 1967 N A M Rodger The Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 New York 2004 ISBN 0 393 32847 3 P G Rogers The Dutch on the Medway Oxford University Press Oxford 1970 ISBN 0 19 215185 1 Geyl Pieter Orange amp Stuart 1641 1672 1969 Israel Jonathan Ie The Dutch Republic its rise greatness and fall 1477 1806 1995 pp 713 26 766 76 796 806 The Dutch political perspective Herbert H Rowen John de Witt Grand Pensionary of Holland 1625 1672 Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1978 which is summarized in Herbert H Rowen John de Witt Statesman of the True Freedom Cambridge University Press 2003 Herbert H Rowen The Princes of Orange the Stadholders in the Dutch Republic Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press 1988 Herbert H Rowen The Princes of Orange the Stadholders in the Dutch Republic Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press 2003 Petrus Johannes Blok History of the People of the Netherlands New York G P Putnam s sons 1898 Pieter Geyl Orange and Stuart 1641 1672 Scribner 1970 Jonathan I Israel The Dutch Republic Its Rise Greatness and Fall 1477 1806 Oxford University Press 1995 ISBN 0 19 820734 4 Peter de la Court de la Court Peter 1746 1662 MEMOIRS OF Cornelius de Witt and John de Witt Pieter de la Court The True Interest and Political Maxims of the Republic of Holland London London John Campbell Esq Retrieved October 18 2011 External links edit3decks Naval Sailing Warfare History Dutch First Rates History Bruzelius info Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dutch States Navy amp oldid 1220691480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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