fbpx
Wikipedia

Second Anglo-Dutch War

The Second Anglo-Dutch War or the Second Dutch War (4 March 1665 – 31 July 1667; Dutch: Tweede Engelse Oorlog "Second English War") was a conflict between England and the Dutch Republic partly for control over the seas and trade routes, where England tried to end the Dutch domination of world trade during a period of intense European commercial rivalry, but also as a result of political tensions. After initial English successes, the war ended in a Dutch victory. It was the second of a series of naval wars fought between the English and the Dutch in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Second Anglo-Dutch War
Part of the Anglo-Dutch Wars

The Four Days' Battle, 1–4 June 1666, by Abraham Storck
Date4 March 1665 – 31 July 1667 (1665-03-04 – 1667-07-31) (2 years, 4 months, 27 days)
Location
The North Sea and the English Channel; England and the Dutch Republic; North America and the Caribbean
Result

Dutch victory

Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Christoph Bernhard von Galen
Strength
  • Dutch Republic
  • 131 ships
  • Denmark–Norway
  • 250 men
  • 139 ships[1]
  • 21,000 men
  • 4,200 guns
Casualties and losses
  • Dutch Republic
  • 5,150 killed
  • 3,000 wounded
  • 2,500 captured
  • 23 ships lost
  • Denmark–Norway
  • 8 killed
[citation needed]
  • 7,210 killed
  • 7,000 wounded
  • 2,000 captured
  • 29 ships lost
  • 2 ships captured
[citation needed]

Background

Anglo-Dutch relations

Traditionally, many historians considered that the First and Second Anglo-Dutch Wars arose from commercial and maritime rivalry between England and the Netherlands.[2] Although continuing commercial tensions formed the background to the second war, a group of ambitious English politicians and naval officers frustrated diplomatic efforts to reach any accommodation between the parties.[3] Religious and political differences between the Anglican royalists in England and the Calvinist republicans that formed the ruling group in the Netherlands, each seeing the other as an ideological threat, also hampered agreement.[4]

The last major battle of the First Anglo-Dutch War was an English victory in the battle of Scheveningen in August 1653. However, after this the Dutch turned to using smaller warships and privateering and, by November, Cromwell was willing to make peace as the Dutch were capturing numerous English merchant ships.[5] His only stipulation was that no Prince of Orange or other member of the House of Orange should hold the office of stadtholder or any other public office in the Netherlands. When this demand was made public, it was strongly opposed by Orangists, so it was dropped from formal negotiations.[6] De Witt realised that he would not persuade most of the provinces to accept the exclusion of members of the House of Orange from public office as part of a peace treaty, so the public terms of the Treaty of Westminster made no mention of this. However, the two members of the negotiating team from Holland, unknown to their colleagues, agreed to a secret annexe providing, although the Netherlands would ratify the treaty without delay, England would only do so once the States of Holland had passed an Act of Seclusion, excluding the House of Orange from holding public office in the province of Holland.[6][7]

The States General of the United Provinces approved and ratified the Treaty of Westminster, unaware of the secret annexe attached to the version of the treaty that the English would ratify.[6] De Witt had to use his influence to persuade delegates from the towns of Holland, many initially unfavourable, to support Exclusion, and some of their pensionaries resisted to the end, although they did not try to involve other provinces. Holland passed its Act of Exclusion on 4 May 1654.[8] Adverse reactions from the public in other provinces was strong, but their provincial assemblies could neither overcome their own internal divisions nor act with other provinces to oppose it. However, any expectation that the other provinces would enact their own Act of Exclusion after Holland had passed its act was not realised in the short term, although in practice the policy was not opposed. Only after the war did four provinces besides Holland adopt the Perpetual Edict (1667) sanctioning Exclusion.[9]

The Commonwealth government of Oliver Cromwell wished to avoid further conflict with the Dutch Republic, as it was planning war with Spain, which began as the Anglo-Spanish War of 1654–1660 after the Treaty of Westminster was signed.[10] The English feared Dutch intervention in this war on the side of the Spanish, as the Republic contained an Orangist party hostile to Cromwell. However, Orangist sentiments were found more among the common people than those with political influence. The controversy over Exclusion strengthened de Witt's position in Holland and increased the influence of Holland over the other provinces.[11] De Witt's position was further strengthened by increasing Dutch dominance in international trade, which replaced English trade with Spain and its possessions in Italy and America during the Anglo-Spanish War. Once the Netherlands had supplanted England on these areas, its traders were very reluctant to see English rivals readmitted.[12]

After the First Anglo-Dutch War, Johan de Witt, who had been appointed Grand Pensionary of Holland, took over effective control of Netherlands' foreign policy until his death in 1672. He realised that the Netherlands could never win a war with England or France conclusively, and that even surviving a war with either power would only be possible at enormous cost. He therefore strove for a neutrality in which Dutch commerce could flourish, supported by sufficiently strong land and naval forces to deter either of these two nations from becoming an adversary.[13] Despite traditional Dutch hostility towards Spain, de Witt declined to join Cromwell in attacking it, but the Dutch had no desire to aid their hated former master, so remained neutral. De Witt was, however, prepared to act alone against Sweden in 1655 and, jointly with Denmark, again in 1658. Although the Commonwealth was an ally of Sweden, it did not come to the aid of its ally, even when the Dutch thwarted the Swedish attempt to conquer Denmark in the battle of the Sound on 8 November 1658.[14][10] De Witt's aim was to establish peace in the Baltic for the benefit of Dutch commerce there. With a similar aim, he attempted to end the long-running conflict with Portugal, allowing it to retain Brazil over the protests of two of the five Netherlands provinces in 1661.[15]

The Dutch used the years of peace to build up their commercial fleet again, following its devastation in the First Anglo-Dutch War. De Witt also achieved the post-war completion of many new warships, ordered during the war to augment the existing fleet, including several large ships comparable in armament to the all but the largest English ones. These had been given greater constructional strength and a wider beam to support heavier guns.[16] However, despite the pleas of the admirals for more of these powerful ships, many of those built were relatively small and designed as convoy escorts, protecting trade routes, not to fight in fleet actions.[17][18] In addition, the Dutch East India Company built hybrid ships that could be used for carrying cargo, as convoy escorts or in battle, although they were not as strongly built as pure warships.[19]

While the English had won the majority of naval battles and destroyed or captured a great many Dutch merchant ships during the First Anglo-Dutch War, they failed to win the war.[20] The Republic was in a better financial position than the Commonwealth of England, potentially enabling the Dutch to complete the fitting out of their naval fleet to replace their losses at faster pace than England.[21] However, de Witt was unable to put naval finances on a centralised basis, as each of the five admiralties and the three provinces that maintained them retained considerable independence.[22] In addition, as the Dutch navy did not rely on the press gang, securing sufficient manpower could be a problem,[23] although abandoning the practice of paying off seamen and laying up ships in the winter promoted a more professional and permanent body of sailors committed to naval service.[24]

While the war continued, the Dutch had also been free to expand their trade networks along the main sea routes outside English home waters without fear of English retaliation, as the majority of English warships were in home waters, with few available overseas. English commerce was grinding to a halt as they lost access to the Baltic and the Mediterranean Seas and, when the two sides signed the peace treaty in 1654, the English were in essentially the same position that they had begun: watching the Dutch Republic outstrip their economy to become the premier European trade power.[21]

England

Trade

To make matters worse for England, the conclusion of the First Anglo-Dutch War was immediately followed by the Anglo-Spanish War of 1654–1660, which disrupted the remnants of trade the Commonwealth had with Spain and southern Italy. The Dutch were left with free rein to expand their influence in the area: this period was one of the highest points in the Dutch Golden Age, and ironically the English interference was partly responsible.[12]

A major problem with the English trading system was that it was based on prohibitions, such as the Navigation Acts, tariffs and customs, and the regulation of manufacturing. All these measures, even tariffs which were originally designed to raise revenue, were directed to the protection of English trade.[25] Although the Dutch system was said to be based on free trade, this only applied to Europe, and not to Dutch trading settlements elsewhere. The prices of Dutch goods were more attractive around the world because the Dutch taxation system imposed excise duties on its own consumers, rather than customs duties on the foreign users of its exports.[26] The end of the First Anglo-Dutch War had not changed this dynamic. Indeed, the end of the war had set the United Provinces free to expand their trade while the English were still hindered by the same tariff system.[27] Thus, another war seemed inevitable to many people of the time, as the Commonwealth was unlikely to give up its naval and economic superiority without a fight.[citation needed]

Restoration

The Restoration of Charles II, in 1660, initially produced a general surge of optimism in England. Many hoped to reverse the Dutch dominance in world trade.[28] At first, however, Charles II sought to remain on friendly terms with the Republic, as he was personally greatly in debt to the House of Orange, which had lent large sums to Charles I during the First English Civil War.[29] Nevertheless, a conflict soon developed between the States of Holland and Mary over the education and future prospects of William III of Orange, the posthumous son of Dutch stadtholder William II of Orange and Charles' nephew. William was designated a "Child of State" in 1660, implying he would be trained for high office by the States-General. Mary died in 1661, after she had named Charles as a guardian of William, allowing England a measure of influence in Dutch politics.[30]

The Dutch, in a move coordinated by Cornelis and Andries de Graeff, tried to placate the king with prodigious gifts, such as the Dutch Gift of 1660.[31] Negotiations were started in 1661 to solve these issues, which ended in the treaty of 1662, in which the Dutch conceded on most points.[32] In 1663, Louis XIV of France stated his claim to portions of the Habsburg southern Netherlands, leading to a short rapprochement between England and the Republic.[33] During this time, Lord Clarendon, serving as chief minister to King Charles II of England, felt that France had become the greatest danger to England.[34]

In 1664, however, the situation quickly changed: Clarendon's enemy, Lord Arlington, became the favourite of the king, and he and his client Sir Thomas Clifford M.P., later Lord Clifford, began to cooperate with the king's brother James, Duke of York, the Lord High Admiral[35] James, Arlington and Clifford, who was chairman of a House of Commons committee investigating the supposed depression in English maritime commerce agreed that Dutch commercial competition had to be stifled, even if this led to war with the United Provinces,[36] as they considered the United Provinces were a greater threat to English interests than was France. They coordinated their efforts in order to reduce Dutch competition through a policy of reprisals against Dutch ships, which were captured in significant numbers.[37] and expected significant personal gain from this policy. James, the Duke of York, headed the Royal African Company and hoped to seize the possessions of the Dutch West India Company, including New Amsterdam.[38]

This aggressive policy was supported by the English ambassador in The Hague, Sir George Downing, who acted as agent for James, Arlington and Clifford[39] From his position in the Hague, Downing gave a full and detailed account of all the political affairs in the United Provinces to Charles as well as James and his associates. Downing reported back to London that the Republic was politically divided and that the Dutch would submit to English demands rather than go to war.[38] Even after the English fleet began seizing Dutch ships and an attack on Dutch possessions in West Africa, he reported in August 1664 that the Dutch would probably accept reducing their share of overseas trade in favour of England, although contemporary Dutch sources reported strengthening Dutch resistance to these provocations.[40] Since 1661, Downing had been in contact with the Orangists, who he believed would collaborate with England against their enemy, the republican States faction.[41] However, although some Orangists entered into treasonable correspondence with England in an attempt to end the war and overthrow de Witt, the rapid arrest and execution of de Buat showed their weakness.[42]

Charles was influenced by James and Arlington as he sought a popular and lucrative foreign war at sea to bolster his authority as king.[43] Many naval officers welcomed the prospect of a conflict with the Dutch as they expected to make their name and fortune in battles they hoped to win as decisively as in the previous war.[43]

War agitation

 
James, Duke of York, the Lord High Admiral of England and openly Catholic, argued in favour of war between England and the Dutch

As enthusiasm for war rose among the English populace, privateers began to join navy ships in attacking Dutch ships, capturing them and taking them to English harbours.[44] By the time that the United Provinces declared war on England, about two hundred Dutch ships had been brought to English ports.[45] Dutch ships were obligated by the new treaty to salute the English flag first. In 1664, English ships began to provoke the Dutch by not saluting in return. Though ordered by the Dutch government to continue saluting first, many Dutch commanders could not bear the insult.[citation needed]

Whether to secure concessions from the Dutch or provoke open conflict with them, James already in late 1663 had sent Robert Holmes, to protect the interests of the Royal African Company.[44] Holmes captured the Dutch trading post of Cabo Verde in June 1664 and confiscated several ships of the Dutch West India company in West Africa,[46] allegedly as reprisals for English ships captured by that company, and England refused any compensation for these captures, for disrupting that company's trading operations or for other hostile acts.[47] Slightly later, the English invaded the Dutch colony of New Netherland in North America on 24 June 1664, and had taken control of it by October.[48]

The States General responded by sending a fleet under Michiel de Ruyter that recaptured their African trading posts and captured most of the English trading stations there, then crossed the Atlantic for a punitive expedition against the English in North America.[49]

In December 1664, the English suddenly attacked the Dutch Smyrna fleet. Though the attack failed, the Dutch in January 1665 allowed their ships to open fire on English warships in the colonies when threatened.[50] Charles used this as a pretext to declare war on the Netherlands on 4 March 1665.

De Ruyter was repelled at Barbados in April 1665 and was forced to refit at Martinique. Sailing north from there, De Ruyter captured several English vessels and delivered supplies to the Dutch colony at Sint Eustatius. In view of the damage that his ships had sustained at Barbados, he decided against an assault on New York, formerly New Amsterdam which would have been necessary, had the Dutch wished to retake their former New Netherland colony. De Ruyter then proceeded to Newfoundland, capturing English merchant ships and taking the town of St. John's before returning to Europe, travelling around the north of Scotland as a precaution.[51][52]

 
Four Days' Battle of 1 to 4 June 1666
 
English propaganda in 1655: the Amboyna massacre of 1623, in which Dutch agents tortured and executed Englishmen

The war was supported in England by propaganda concerning the much earlier Amboyna Massacre of 1623. In that year, ten English factors, resident in the Dutch fortress of Victoria and ten Japanese and Portuguese employees of the Dutch East India Company on Ambon were executed by beheading following accusations of treason. After their arrest, many of the English prisoners were, according to the trial records, tortured by having a cloth placed over their faces, upon which water was poured to cause near suffocation, now called waterboarding. Other, more sadistic, tortures were alleged although denied by the Dutch. The incident provoked a major crisis in Anglo-Dutch relations at the time and continuing popular anger,[53] although the matter had been be officially settled with the Treaty of Westminster. The East India Company set out its case against the Dutch East India Company in a pamphlet published in 1631, which was used for anti-Dutch propaganda during the First Anglo-Dutch War and revived by pamphleteers as a second war neared. When De Ruyter recaptured the West African trading posts, many pamphlets were written about presumed new Dutch atrocities, although these contained no basis in fact.[54]

Another cause of conflict was mercantile competition. The major monopolistic English trading companies had suffered from a loss of trade on the 1650s, which they attributed to illegal contraband trading and Dutch competition. They wished the government to exclude the Dutch from trading with British colonies, and force those colonies to trade only with the licensed English trading companies.[55] The Dutch, whose maritime trade was substantially that of an intermediary, rejected the policies of Mercantilism in favour of the mare liberum where it was in their interest to do so, while enforcing a strict monopoly in the Dutch Indies, and attempted to expand it to their other settlements.[56]

Dutch Republic

Preparedness

 
Apart from Bergen, most fighting took place in the southern North Sea

After their defeat in the First Anglo-Dutch War, the Dutch became much better prepared. From 1653, De Witt began to make plans for a "New Navy" to be constructed, with a core of sixty-four new, heavier ships of the line with 40 to 60 guns and 90 smaller convoy escorts, and more professional captains were sought for these.[57] However, even the heavier Dutch ships were much lighter than the ten "big ships" of the English navy and, in 1664, when war threatened, the decision was taken to replace the Dutch fleet core by still heavier ships, although on the outbreak of war in 1665, these new vessels were mostly still under construction, and the Dutch only possessed four heavier ships of the line.[17] At the time of the Battle of Lowestoft, the Dutch fleet included eighteen older warships reactivated after being laid up after the First Anglo-Dutch war, and several very large Dutch East India Company built hybrid ships which could be used for carrying cargo or in battle, although not as strongly built as pure warships.[19] During the second war, the Dutch Republic was in a better financial position than England and quickly completed the new ships, with another twenty ordered and built, whereas England could only build a dozen ships, due to financial difficulties.[21] However, de Witt saw that men, not materiel, were critical, and attempted to deal with the insubordination, lack of discipline and apparent cowardice among captains at the start of the war.[58]

In 1665, England boasted a population about four times as large as that of the Dutch Republic. This population was dominated by poor peasants, however, and so the only source of ready cash were the cities. The Dutch urban population exceeded that of England in both proportional and absolute terms and the Republic would be able to spend more than twice the amount of money on the war as England, the equivalent of £11,000,000.[59] The outbreak of war was followed ominously by the Great Plague and the Great Fire of London, hitting the only major urban centre of the country. These events, occurring in such close succession, virtually brought England to its knees, as the English fleet had suffered from cash shortages even before these calamities, despite having been voted a record budget of £2,500,000 by the English parliament. However, as Charles lacked effective means of enforcing taxation; those taxes voted were collected neither in full nor quickly. For much of the war, Charles was dependent on loans raised in the City of London at interest rates which increased as the war progressed, to cover both collection delays and for expenditure in excess of the budget.[60] Although the Duke of York had attempted to reform the finances of the Navy Board, cash flow remained a problem, and sailors were not paid wholly in cash, but mainly with "tickets", or debt certificates, which were only redeemed after long delays when cash was available.[61] Receipts from the sale of goods carried by Dutch ships captured by Royal Navy warships and the ships themselves or, to a lesser extent, by privateers, were a valuable source of funds to finance for the Navy Board, and the attack on the Dutch East Indies fleet at Bergen had this as at least one of its objectives.[62] However, a large part of the proceeds of these captures was retained by the captors, either illegally or returned to them as prize money and, although it has been claimed that English financial penury made the war's outcome dependent on the fortunes of its privateers,[63] this was never more than an irregular windfall, and opportunities for capturing Dutch merchant vessels were greatest before and just after war was declared, diminishing as the war forced them to stay in port.[64] Far fewer prizes were taken by the Royal Navy than in the First Anglo-Dutch War and, overall and particularly after 1665, Dutch privateers would be the more successful.[65]

France

A Franco-Dutch treaty had been signed in 1662, which involved a defensive alliance between the two countries, giving the Netherlands protection against an English attack and assuring France that the Netherlands would not assist Spain in the Spanish Netherlands.[66] Although Louis XIV of France had signed this treaty, he considered that an Anglo-Dutch war was likely to obstruct his plans to acquire Habsburg territory there.[67] Charles' ambassador in France reported the French opposition to the outbreak of such a war gave him the hope that, if the Dutch were provoked into declaring war, the French would evade their treaty obligations, and refuse to be drawn into a naval war with England.[68] In the summer of 1664, Louis attempted to avert the threatened Anglo-Dutch war or, failing that, to confine it to Africa and America.[69] These efforts to mediate an agreement failed, and the war commenced with a declaration of war by the Dutch[citation needed] on 4 March 1665, following English attacks on two Dutch convoys off Cadiz and in the English Channel.[70]

Even after the war began, Louis attempted to evade his obligation by strengthening the French embassy in London with two envoys  under the name of the célèbre ambassade, which included an Ambassador Extraordinary in addition to the resident ambassador, to begin negotiations for a settlement of the Anglo-Dutch conflict. Its instructions were to offer terms including the restitution of each country's ships captured off America and Africa, and of their West African bases, and also financial compensation for English ships captured earlier in West Africa. However, the instructions did not propose that the New Netherlands should be included in any treaty, but settled by local fighting that would not involve a European War. The Dutch complained that these terms denied their rights to the New Netherlands.[71][72]

Hostilities

First year, 1665

 
The battle of Lowestoft on 13 June 1665, showing HMS Royal Charles and Eendracht

At the start of the war, both sides considered an early decisive battle was desirable, as English government finances could not sustain a long war, and an English blockade of Dutch ports and attacks on their merchant and fishing fleets would soon bring about their economic ruin.[73] De Witt and the States General put pressure on their commander Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam to seek out the English fleet and bring it into battle, although his fleet was inferior in organisation, training, discipline and firepower to the English fleet.[19][74] In their first at the Battle of Lowestoft on 13 June 1665, the Dutch suffered the worst defeat in the history the Dutch Republic's navy, with at least sixteen ships lost, and one-third of its personnel killed or captured.[75]

However, the English were unable to capitalise on their victory at Lowestoft, as the majority of the Dutch fleet escaped. The leading Dutch politician, the Grand Pensionary of Holland Johan de Witt, attempted to restore confidence by joining the fleet personally and dealt with failed or ineffective captains by executing three and exiling and dismissing others. Michiel de Ruyter was appointed to lead the Dutch fleet in July 1665, despite the previous appointment of Cornelis Tromp as acting commander in chief. Ruyter formalised new tactics.[76] The Spice Fleet from the Dutch East Indies managed to return home safely after the battle of Vågen, although it was at first blockaded at Bergen, causing the financial position to swing in favour of the Dutch.[77]

In the summer of 1665 the bishop of Münster, Bernhard von Galen, an old enemy of the Dutch, was induced by promises of English subsidies to invade the Republic.[42] At the same time, the English made overtures to Spain. Louis XIV was now concerned by the attack by Münster and the prospect of an English–Spanish coalition, and the effect this might have on his conquering the Spanish Netherlands. He first arranged for other German states to obstruct the passage of Munster troops and promised to send a French army corps to Germany.[78] Louis was still unwilling to act against England under the 1662 defensive treaty, so he revived his attempts to mediate a settlement.[67] The French ambassadors, with de Witt's assent, offered to accept the loss of the New Netherlands and of two West African posts seized by Holmes and to return a third post seized by de Ruyter. However, the English fleet's success at Lowestoft prompted Charles and his ministers to reject this offer and demand further surrenders of territory and a Dutch agreement to bear the costs of the war. When, in December 1665, Charles refused a French counter-offer, Louis withdrew both his ambassadors, signalling his intention to declare war.[79]

 
Attack on Bergen, Norway, on 12 August 1665

These events caused consternation at the English court. It now seemed that the Republic could end up as either a Habsburg possession or a French protectorate: either outcome would be disastrous for England's strategic position. Clarendon was ordered to make peace with the Dutch, quickly and without French mediation. Downing used his Orangist contacts to induce the province of Overijssel, whose countryside had been ravaged by Galen's troops, to ask the States General for a peace with England[42] The Orangists naively wished to gain peace by conceding the English demand that the young William III should be made captain-general and admiral-general of the republic, which would ensure his eventual appointment to the stadtholderate. De Witt's position was, however, too strong for this Orangist attempt to seize power to succeed.[42] In November, he promised Louis never to conclude a separate peace with England.[80] On 11 December he openly declared that the only acceptable peace terms would be either a return to the status quo ante bellum, or a quick end to hostilities under a uti possidetis clause.[81]

At the end of 1665, Henri Buat, a Frenchman with connections to the House of Orange, became involved in unofficial correspondence with Sir Gabriel Sylvius, who was acting on behalf of Lord Arlington, a minister of Charles II. Their correspondence was a means for the Dutch and English governments to explore possibilities of peace without commitment.[82] At an early stage, Buat made the Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt fully aware of this correspondence, and Buat added material provided by de Witt to his letter, including possible peace terms, although de Witt was unsure whether Charles was genuinely seeking peace.[42] Moreover, 1665 had seen Scotland enter the war, principally in a privateering capacity in which they proved to be particularly successful.[83] However, Scottish privateering activities in 1665 were limited, because of delays in the Scottish Admiral issuing regular Letters of marque at the start of the war.[84]

Second year, 1666

After Battle of Lowestoft, Louis XIV was concerned that the destruction of the Dutch fleet would allow the English fleet to interfere with his plans in the Spanish Netherlands, so he again offered mediation, but as his credibility as mediator been undermined, this offer was rejected by England. Louis declared war on England on 16 January 1666,[85] and the anti-English alliance was strengthened in the winter of 1666, when, in February, Frederick III of Denmark also declared war after receiving a large subsidy.[86] Next, Brandenburg which had earlier been prompted by France to offer mediation, threatened to attack Münster from the east: as the promised English subsidies had remained largely hypothetical, Von Galen made peace with the Republic in April at Cleves.[87]

By February 1666, the negotiations using Buat as an intermediary had progressed to the stage where de Witt invited Charles II to start formal peace negotiations.[88] An outline of the English peace proposals was forwarded through Buat but rejected by de Witt pending clarification of its terms. No clarification was provided, only repeated English insistence that someone duly authorised should be sent to London to negotiate peace. Both the States of Holland and the French ambassador rejected this proposal. During these negotiations, Buat was in contact with leading Orangists, including the Lord of Zuylestein and the Rotterdam regent Johan Kievit, although the Prince himself was not involved.[82]

By the spring of 1666, the Dutch had rebuilt their fleet with much heavier ships, thirty of them possessing more cannon than any Dutch ship available in early 1665, and threatened to join forces with the French.[89] The greater part of the French fleet was in the Mediterranean under the duc de Beaufort, and Louis intended that much of this would be brought into the Atlantic to join up with the Atlantic squadron commanded by Abraham Duquesne. The combined fleet would then, it was intended, link up with the Dutch in the English Channel and outnumber the English fleet.[90]

 

Despite administrative and logistic difficulties, an English fleet of some eighty ships, under the joint command of the Duke of Albemarle and Prince Rupert of the Rhine, set sail at the end of May 1666. The French intention to bring the bulk of their Mediterranean fleet to join the Dutch fleet at Dunkirk was known to Prince Rupert by 10 May and discussed by Charles and his Privy Council on 13 May. When the Duke of Albemarle was informed, he agreed to detach a squadron of 20 generally fast or well-armed ships under Prince Rupert to block the Strait of Dover,[91] provided he were left with at least 70 ships to fight the Dutch.[92] Rupert was detached on 29 May (Julian calendar) to prevent Beaufort passing through the English Channel to join the Dutch fleet.[93] In the event the French fleet did not appear, because Beaufort, who had left Toulon in April 1666 with 32 fighting ships, delayed at Lisbon for six weeks,[94] during which time the English and Dutch fleets fought the Four Days' Battle, one of the longest major naval engagements during the age of sail.[citation needed]

Leaving the Downs, Albemarle came upon De Ruyter's fleet of 85 ships at anchor, and he immediately engaged the nearest Dutch ship before the rest of the fleet could come to its assistance. The Dutch rearguard under Lieutenant-Admiral Cornelis Tromp withdrew upon a starboard tack, taking the battle toward the Flemish shoals, compelling Albemarle to turn about to prevent being outflanked by the Dutch rear and centre. This culminated in a ferocious unremitting battle that raged until nightfall.[95] At daylight on 2 June, Albemarle's strength of operable vessels was reduced to 44 ships, but with these, he renewed the battle tacking past the enemy four times in close action. With his fleet in too poor a condition to continue to challenge, he then retired towards the Thames Estuary with the Dutch in pursuit.[96] The following day Albemarle ordered the damaged ships to lead, protecting them from the Dutch fleet by stationing his most powerful ships as a rearguard on the 3rd, until Prince Rupert, returning with his twenty ships, joined him.[97][98] During this stage of the battle, Vice-Admiral George Ayscue, accidentally grounded in the Prince Royal, one of the nine remaining "big ships", and surrendered. This was the last time in history that an English admiral surrendered in battle.[99] After this loss and the return of several badly damaged ships to port, Albemarle, reinforced by Rupert's fresh squadron had 52 ships to face the Dutch with 57 ships.[100] After Rupert broke the Dutch line and, with Albemarle attacked Tromp with superior numbers,[101] de Ruyter decided the battle on the fourth day, by a surprise all-out attack when Tromp seemed about to be defeated.[102] When the English retreated, De Ruyter was reluctant to follow, perhaps because of lack of gunpowder.[citation needed]

The battle ended with both sides claiming victory: the English because they contended Dutch Lieutenant Admiral Michiel de Ruyter had retreated first, the Dutch because they had inflicted much greater losses on the English, who lost ten ships against the Dutch four.[103] Although the Dutch claim seems more valid, their rejoicing was out of proportion to what had been achieved. It had taken four days to force a weaker, and before Rupert's return much weaker, English opponent that had close to defeating them on the second and fourth days. and their belief that the English fleet was destroyed as a fighting force was shown to be false a few weeks later.[104]

 

One more major sea battle would be fought in the conflict. St. James's Day Battle of 4 and 5 August ended in English victory, but failed to decide the war as the Dutch fleet escaped annihilation, although suffering heavy casualties.[105] At this stage, simply surviving was sufficient for the Dutch, as the English could hardly afford to replace their losses even after a victory. Tactically indecisive, with the Dutch losing two ships and the English one, the battle would have enormous political implications. Cornelis Tromp, commanding the Dutch rear, had defeated his English counterpart, but was accused by De Ruyter of being responsible for the plight of the main body of the Dutch fleet by chasing the English rear squadron as far as the English coast. As Tromp was the champion of the Orange party, the conflict led to much party strife. Because of this, Tromp was fired by the States of Holland on August 13.[106]

In addition to proposing peace to de Witt, Arlington and Sylvius had plotted to provoke Orangist coup d'état against the Republic, to restore the stadtholderate, overthrow de Witt and end the war. Five days after St. James's Day Battle, Charles sent another peace offer, again using Buat as an intermediary. Sylvius also sent Buat details of the plot: these were for his contacts in the Orange party but were mistakenly included by Buat with the peace offer handed to the Grand Pensionary. Buat was arrested and those most involved in the conspiracy, including Kievit, fled to England. De Witt used the evidence of the plot to isolate the Orange movement and reaffirm his commitment to the French alliance. Buat was condemned for treason and beheaded in October 1666.[82]

The mood in the Republic now turned very belligerent, because on 19 August, the English Vice-Admiral Robert Holmes raided the Vlie estuary and destroyed up to 150 merchantmen sheltering there valued at around £1 million, with only ten escaping, in an action later known as Holmes's Bonfire. The next day Holmes' men also landed on the island of Terschelling and, finding little of value, they burnt the small town of West-Terschelling to the ground, an act regarded by the Dutch as senseless destruction of a harmless fishing village.[107] In this, he was assisted by a Dutch captain, Laurens Heemskerck, who had fled from the Netherlands for cowardice shown during the battle of Lowestoft, and was afterwards condemned in absentia to perpetual banishment from the Netherlands.[108]

After the Fire of London in September, the Navy Board was unable to pay the wages of the fleet and began to discharge many sailors without paying their wages, ensuring that it would be impossible to send out a major fleet in 1667.[109] Swedish mediation was offered in the autumn and informal discussions began, which led to the opening of formal negotiations in the following March. Charles was prepared to make some concessions, although he still required the return of the nutmeg island of Pulau Run and certain indemnities. The Dutch were unwilling to concede even his reduced demands, although discussions continued.[110][111]

The extent of Scottish privateering greatly increased in this year with the issue of twenty-five commissions in the three months from April 1666, the start of an intense 17-month period in which 108 Dutch, French and Danish vessels were recorded as captured by twenty or so Scottish privateers. Their success arose from the strategic position of Scotland, once most of the Atlantic seaborne trade of northern Europe was diverted around Scotland to avoid the English Channel, and the Dutch whaling and herring fleets operated in waters north and east of Scotland, so they were vulnerable to Scottish privateers. Apart from ships of the Dutch East India Company, many Dutch merchant ships and of its Danish ally were poorly armed and undermanned.[112]

Third year, 1667

 
Raid on the Medway of 9–14 June 1667

By early-1667, the financial position of the English crown had become desperate. The kingdom lacked sufficient funds to maintain their fleet's seaworthiness, so it was decided in February that the heavy ships were to remain laid up at Chatham, with only a small Flying Fleet manned to attack Dutch merchant shipping, which lowered morale in the fleet and prevented merchant ship from sailing and colliers from reaching London without fear of Dutch interception.[113] Clarendon informed Charles as to his only two options: to make very substantial concessions to Parliament, or to initiate peace talks with the Dutch under their conditions, which began in March. Charles had wished for peace talks to be held in England or, failing that, at The Hague, but the Dutch offered three other cities where support for the House of Orange was less and Charles selected Breda, in the southern Generality Lands.[114] In the meantime, a Dutch fleet was assembled in the Texel under the command of Willem van Ghent. One of the motives was to destroy the Scottish privateering fleet in the Firth of Forth. In a series of running encounters with Scottish privateers at sea, and various shore batteries (particularly at Burntisland) the Dutch were seen off with the loss of three ships damaged. [115] Thereafter, Scottish privateers followed the Dutch into the North Sea where they without any difficulty picked off stragglers. In the southern part of Britain, things did not go so well.[citation needed]

As England was also at war with France, Charles sent envoys to Paris in March for unofficial preliminary talks on peace terms.[116] In view of deteriorating Franco-Dutch relations, these talks turned to a third option not considered by Clarendon: a secret alliance with France.[117] In April, Charles concluded his first secret treaty with Louis, stipulating that England would not enter into alliances that might oppose a French conquest of the Spanish Netherlands.[118] In May, the French invaded, starting the War of Devolution.[116] Charles hoped, by means of stalling the talks at Breda, to gain enough time to ready his fleet to obtain concessions from the Dutch, using the French advance as leverage.[citation needed]

De Witt was aware of Charles's general intentions – though not of the secret treaty. He decided to attempt to end the war with a single stroke. Ever since its actions in Denmark in 1659, involving many landings to liberate the Danish Isles, the Dutch navy had made a special study of amphibious operations; the Dutch Marine Corps was established in 1665. After the Four Days' Battle, a Dutch marine contingent had been ready to land in Kent or Essex following a possible Dutch victory at sea. The Dutch fleet was, however, unable to force a safe passage into the Thames as navigational buoys had been removed and a strong English squadron was ready to dispute their passage.[119] But now there was no English fleet able to contest a similar attack. De Witt conceived the plan for a landing of marines, to be overseen by his brother Cornelius, at Chatham where the fleet lay effectively defenceless, to destroy it.[120]

 
The Dutch burn English ships during the expedition to Chatham by Jan van Leyden

In June, De Ruyter, with Cornelis de Witt supervising, launched the Dutch raid on the Medway at the mouth of the River Thames. After capturing the fort at Sheerness, the Dutch fleet went on to break through the massive chain protecting the entrance to the Medway and, on the 13th, attacked the laid up English fleet.[citation needed]

The daring raid remains one of the largest disasters in the history of the Royal Navy and its predecessors.[121] Fifteen of the Royal Navy's remaining ships were destroyed, either by the Dutch or by being scuttled by the English to block the river. Three of the eight remaining "big ships" were burnt: Royal Oak, the new Loyal London and Royal James. The largest English flagship, HMS Royal Charles, was abandoned by its skeleton crew, captured without a shot being fired, and towed back to the United Provinces as a trophy. Its counter decoration depicting the royal arms is on display in the Rijksmuseum. Fortunately for the English, the Dutch marines spared the Chatham Dockyard, at the time England's largest industrial complex; a land attack on the docks themselves would have set back English naval power for a generation.[122] A Dutch attack on the English anchorage at Harwich had to be abandoned however after the battle of Landguard Fort ended in Dutch failure.[citation needed]

The Dutch success made a major psychological impact throughout England, with London feeling especially vulnerable just a year after the Great Fire of London. However, for a second time, the Dutch had been unable to land substantial land forces in Britain, or even do substantial damage to the Chatham dockyard.[123] The raid did, together with the English financial crisis, speed up negotiations.[124][125] All this, together with the cost of the war, of the Great Plague and the extravagant spending of Charles's court, produced a rebellious atmosphere in London. Clarendon ordered the English envoys at Breda to sign a peace quickly, as Charles feared an open revolt.[126]

War in the Caribbean

 
French ships under attack at Martinique, 1667

The Second Anglo-Dutch war had spread to the Caribbean islands, and in late 1665 an English force, mainly consisting of buccaneers under the command of Lieutenant-colonel Edward Morgan, the Deputy Governor of Jamaica, assisted by his nephew Thomas Morgan, quickly captured the Dutch islands of Sint Eustatius and Saba. After his uncle's death in December 1665, Thomas Morgan was appointed as governor of these two islands.[127] Also in late 1665, an English force from Jamaica and Barbados captured the Dutch possession of Tobago.[128] The French declaration of war on the side of the Dutch altered the balance of power in the Caribbean and facilitated a Dutch counterattack. The first successes of the new allies were the French recapture of Tobago in August 1666, a joint Franco-Dutch recapture of Sint Eustatius in November 1666 and a French capture of the English island of Antigua in the same month.[129] The arrival of a French squadron under Joseph-Antoine de La Barre in January 1667 allowed the French to occupy the English half of St Kitts and Montserrat, leaving only Nevis of the Leeward Islands in English hands, together with Jamaica and Barbados to the west.[130][131]

A Dutch force under Admiral Abraham Crijnssen, organised by the province of Zeeland, not the States General, arrived at Cayenne in February 1667 and captured Suriname from the English in the same month.[132][131] Crijnssen delayed in Suriname until April, then sailed to Tobago, which had been vacated by the French after expelling the English garrison, where he rebuilt the fort and left a small garrison.[132] Although Crijnssen was instructed not to delay, it was not until early May that he and de La Barre combined forces, agreeing to a Franco-Dutch invasion of Nevis, which sailed on 17 May 1667. However, their attack was repelled in the Battle of Nevis on 17 May by a smaller English force. This confused naval action was the only one in this war where all three navies fought: it failed largely through de la Barre's incompetence.[133] After this failed attack, Crijnssen left in disgust and sailed to the north to attack the Virginia colony,[134] while the French, under de la Barre, moved to Martinique. The Battle of Nevis restored English naval control in the Caribbean and allowed the early recapture of Antigua and Montserrat and an unsuccessful attack on St Kitts soon after.[135]

In April, a new English squadron of nine warships and two fireships under the command of Rear-Admiral Sir John Harman sailed for the West Indies, reaching them in early June. Harman encountered the French with seven larger and 14 smaller warships and three fireships under la Barre anchored under the batteries of Fort St Pierre, Martinique. He attacked on 6 July and sunk, burnt or captured all but two the French ships.[135] With the French fleet neutralised, Harman then attacked the French at Cayenne on 15 September forcing its garrison to surrender. The English fleet then went on to recapture Fort Zeelandia in Suriname in October. News of these English victories only reached England in September, after the Treaty of Breda had been signed, and possessions captured after 31 July had to be returned.[136] Crijnssen sailed back to the Caribbean only to find the French fleet destroyed and the English back in possession of Suriname.[137]

Treaty of Breda

 
The conclusion of the Treaty of Breda, at Breda Castle

On 31 July 1667, what is generally known as the Treaty of Breda concluded peace between England and the Netherlands. The treaty allowed the English to keep possession of New Netherland, while the Dutch kept control over Pulau Run and the valuable sugar plantations of Suriname and regained Tobago, St Eustatius, and its West African trading posts.[138] This uti possidetis solution was later confirmed in the Treaty of Westminster.[139] The Act of Navigation was modified in favour of the Dutch by England agreeing to treat Germany as part of the Netherlands' commercial hinterland, so that Dutch ships would now be allowed to carry German goods to English ports.[138][140]

In the same date and also at Breda, a public treaty was concluded between England and France that stipulated the return to England of the former English part of St Christopher and the islands of Antigua and Montserrat, all of which the French had occupied in the war, and that England should surrender its claim to Acadia to France, although the extent of Acadia was not defined. This public treaty had been preceded by a secret treaty signed on 17 April in which, in addition to these exchanges of territory, Louis and Charles agreed not to enter into alliances opposed to the interests of the other, by which Louis secured the neutrality of England in the war he planned against Spain.[141]

The order of priorities whereby the Dutch preferred to give up what would become a major part of the United States, and instead retain a tropical colony, would seem strange by present-day standards. However, in the 17th century tropical colonies producing agricultural products which could not be grown in Europe were deemed more valuable than ones with a climate similar to that of Europe where Europeans could settle in comfort.[citation needed]

The peace was generally seen as a personal triumph for Johan de Witt and an embarrassment to the Orangists, who seemed reluctant to support the war and eager to accept a disadvantageous early peace.[142] The Republic was jubilant about the Dutch victory. De Witt used the occasion to induce four provinces to adopt the Perpetual Edict of 1667 abolishing the stadtholderate forever. He used the weak position of Charles II to force him into the Triple Alliance of 1668 which again forced Louis to temporarily abandon his plans for the conquest of the southern Netherlands. But de Witt's success would eventually produce his downfall and nearly that of the Republic with it. Both humiliated monarchs intensified their secret cooperation through the Secret Treaty of Dover and would, joined by the bishop of Münster, attack the Dutch in 1672 in the Third Anglo-Dutch War. De Witt was unable to counter this attack, as he could not create a strong Dutch army for lack of money and for fear that it would strengthen the position of the young William III.[citation needed] That same year de Witt was assassinated, and William became stadtholder.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 42.
  2. ^ Rommelse 2010, p. 492.
  3. ^ Rommelse 2010, p. 493.
  4. ^ Pincus 2002, pp. 246–262.
  5. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 721–722.
  6. ^ a b c Israel 1995, p. 722.
  7. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 23.
  8. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 722–723.
  9. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 723–724.
  10. ^ a b Rommelse 2006, p. 24.
  11. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 726–727.
  12. ^ a b Israel 1995, p. 727.
  13. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 23–24.
  14. ^ Israel 1995, p. 736.
  15. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 25, 31.
  16. ^ Bruijn 2011, pp. 64–66.
  17. ^ a b Bruijn 2011, p. 66.
  18. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 716–717.
  19. ^ a b c Bruijn 2011, p. 74.
  20. ^ Israel 1995, p. 717.
  21. ^ a b c Israel 1995, p. 721.
  22. ^ Bruijn 2011, p. 67.
  23. ^ Bruijn 2011, p. 32.
  24. ^ Bruijn 2011, pp. 71–72.
  25. ^ Vries 2015, p. 340.
  26. ^ Hughes 1934, p. 125.
  27. ^ Ashley 1961, p. 365.
  28. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 713–714.
  29. ^ Groenveld 1991, pp. 960, 963.
  30. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 751–753.
  31. ^ Israel 1995, p. 750.
  32. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 92.
  33. ^ Lynn 1999, pp. 33–34.
  34. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 49.
  35. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 101–102.
  36. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 102.
  37. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 105.
  38. ^ a b Rommelse 2006, p. 103.
  39. ^ Israel 1995, p. 2.
  40. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 105–106.
  41. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 83.
  42. ^ a b c d e Rommelse 2006, p. 168.
  43. ^ a b Rodger 2004, p. 65.
  44. ^ a b Rommelse 2006, p. 93.
  45. ^ Israel 1995, p. 766.
  46. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 67.
  47. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 93–94.
  48. ^ Pomfret 1973, p. 22.
  49. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 68.
  50. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 135, 139.
  51. ^ Kloster 2016, p. 103.
  52. ^ Staff writer (n.d.). . Archived from the original on 28 January 2016.
  53. ^ Armitage 2000, p. 87.
  54. ^ Pincus 2002, pp. 290–291.
  55. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 46–47.
  56. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 90–91.
  57. ^ Bruijn 2011, pp. 64–5.
  58. ^ Fox 2018, p. 127.
  59. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 79.
  60. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 43.
  61. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 42, 193.
  62. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 123–125.
  63. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 78.
  64. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 124–125, 149.
  65. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 175, 195.
  66. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 33–4.
  67. ^ a b Rommelse 2006, p. 109.
  68. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 69, 136.
  69. ^ Davenport 2004, p. 119.
  70. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 67–68.
  71. ^ Davenport 2004, pp. 119, 120.
  72. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 151, 152.
  73. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 69–70.
  74. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 83–85.
  75. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 126–127.
  76. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 125–127.
  77. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 70.
  78. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 143.
  79. ^ Davenport 2004, p. 120.
  80. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 146.
  81. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 151.
  82. ^ a b c Molhuysen & Blok 1911, p. 509.
  83. ^ Murdoch 2010, pp. 237–254.
  84. ^ Graham 1982, p. 68.
  85. ^ Fox 2018, p. 136.
  86. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 148, 152.
  87. ^ Rommelse 2006, pp. 147, 151–152.
  88. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 169.
  89. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 71.
  90. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 123–127.
  91. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 116–117.
  92. ^ Fox 2018, p. 143.
  93. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 72.
  94. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 173–175, 180.
  95. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 73.
  96. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 234–236.
  97. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 236–238.
  98. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 74.
  99. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 75.
  100. ^ Fox 2018, p. 248.
  101. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 254–256.
  102. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 263–264.
  103. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 276–277.
  104. ^ Fox 2018, p. 276.
  105. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 295–296.
  106. ^ "Monday 23 July 1666".
  107. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 296–297.
  108. ^ Van der Aa 1867, p. 349.
  109. ^ Fox 2018, pp. 299–300.
  110. ^ Fox 2018, p. 300.
  111. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 18.
  112. ^ Graham 1982, pp. 68–70.
  113. ^ Wilson 2012, p. 139.
  114. ^ Davenport 2004, pp. 121.
  115. ^ Murdoch 2010, pp. 247–251.
  116. ^ a b Rommelse 2006, p. 206.
  117. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 76.
  118. ^ Davenport 2004, p. 122.
  119. ^ Fox 2018, p. 287.
  120. ^ Fox 2018, p. 301.
  121. ^ Boxer 1974, p. 39.
  122. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 77.
  123. ^ Fox 2018, p. 302.
  124. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 175.
  125. ^ Wilson 2012, p. 140.
  126. ^ Hutton, Ronald (23 November 1989). "Charles's First Dutch War, 1664–1667": 214–253. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198229117.003.0009. ISBN 978-0-19-822911-7. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  127. ^ Goslinga 2012, pp. 38–39.
  128. ^ Goslinga 2012, p. 40.
  129. ^ Goslinga 2012, p. 41.
  130. ^ Goslinga 2012, pp. 41–42.
  131. ^ a b Jones 2013, p. 36.
  132. ^ a b Goslinga 2012, p. 42.
  133. ^ Goslinga 2012, pp. 42–3.
  134. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 183.
  135. ^ a b Goslinga 2012, p. 43.
  136. ^ Fox 2018, p. 303.
  137. ^ Rommelse 2006, p. 223.
  138. ^ a b Israel 1995, p. 774.
  139. ^ Goslinga 2012, p. 47.
  140. ^ MacInnes 2008, p. 114.
  141. ^ Davenport 2004, pp. 122, 132.
  142. ^ Israel 1995, pp. 774–775.

Bibliography

  • Armitage, D. (2000). The Ideological Origins of the British Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521789783.
  • Ashley, M. P. (1961). Great Britain to 1688: A Modern History. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. OCLC 875337369.
  • Boxer, C. R. (1974). The Anglo-Dutch Wars of the 17th Century, 1652–1674. London: H.M.S.O. ISBN 9780112901693.
  • Bruijn, J. R. (2011). The Dutch Navy of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780986497353.
  • Davenport, F. G. (2004). European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies. Clark, N.J.: The Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 9781584774228.
  • Fox, F. L. (2018). The Four Days' Battle of 1666. Barnsley: Seaforth. ISBN 9781526737274.
  • Goslinga, C. C. (2012). A Short History of the Netherlands Antilles and Surinam. The Hague: Springer. ISBN 9789400992894.
  • Graham, E. J. (1982). "The Scottish Marine during the Dutch Wars". The Scottish Historical Review. 61 (1): 67–74. JSTOR 25529449.
  • Groenveld, S. (1991). "Popery, Trade and Universal Monarchy". The Historical Journal. 34 (4): 955–972–29. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00017386. JSTOR 2639590. S2CID 153421486.
  • Hainsworth, D. R.; Churches, C. (1998). The Anglo-Dutch Naval Wars, 1652–1674. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 9780750917872.
  • Israel, J. I. (1995). The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall, 1477–1806. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198730729.
  • Hughes, E. (1934). Studies in Administration and Finance 1558-1825. Manchester University Press.
  • Jones, J. R. (2013). The Anglo-Dutch Wars of the Seventeenth Century. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781315845975.
  • Kloster, W. (2016). The Dutch Moment: War, Trade, and Settlement in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501706677.
  • Lynn, J. A. (1999). The Wars of Louis XIV, 1664–1714. London: Longman. ISBN 9780582056299.
  • MacInnes, A. I. (2008). "Scottish Circumvention". Making, Using and Resisting the Law in European History. Pisa: PUP. pp. 109–130. ISBN 9788884925497.
  • Molhuysen, P. C.; Blok, P. J. (1911). Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek. Leiden: Sijthoff.
  • Murdoch, Steve (2010). The Terror of the Seas? Scottish Maritime Warfare, 1513-1713. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 978900418568-5.
  • Ogg, D. (1934). England in the Reign of Charles II. Oxford University Press. pp. 357–388. OCLC 490944369.
  • Pincus, S. C. A. (1992). "Popery, Trade and Universal Monarchy". Engl. Hist. Rev. 107 (4): 1–29. doi:10.1093/ehr/CVII.CCCCXXII.1. JSTOR 575674.
  • Pincus, S. C. A. (2002). Protestantism and Patriotism: Ideologies and the Making of English Foreign Policy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521893688.
  • Pomfret, J. E. (1973). Colonial New Jersey: A History. New York: Scribner. ISBN 9780684133713.
  • Rodger, N. A. M. (2004). The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649–1815. London: Penguin. ISBN 9780713994117.
  • Rommelse, G. (2006). The Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–1667). Hilversum: Verloren. ISBN 9789065509079.
  • Rommelse, G. (2010). "The role of mercantilism in Anglo-Dutch political relations, 1650-74". The Economic History Review. 63 (3): 591–611. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0289.2009.00491.x. JSTOR 40929818. S2CID 145077506.
  • Van der Aa, A. J. (1867). Biographische Woordenboek der Nederlandenen. Allart.
  • Vries, P. (2015). State, Economy and the Great Divergence: Great Britain and China, 1680s–1850s. New York: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781472529183.
  • Wilson, C. W. (2012). Profit and Power: a Study of England and the Dutch Wars. The Hague: Springer. ISBN 9789401197625.

second, anglo, dutch, second, dutch, march, 1665, july, 1667, dutch, tweede, engelse, oorlog, second, english, conflict, between, england, dutch, republic, partly, control, over, seas, trade, routes, where, england, tried, dutch, domination, world, trade, duri. The Second Anglo Dutch War or the Second Dutch War 4 March 1665 31 July 1667 Dutch Tweede Engelse Oorlog Second English War was a conflict between England and the Dutch Republic partly for control over the seas and trade routes where England tried to end the Dutch domination of world trade during a period of intense European commercial rivalry but also as a result of political tensions After initial English successes the war ended in a Dutch victory It was the second of a series of naval wars fought between the English and the Dutch in the 17th and 18th centuries Second Anglo Dutch WarPart of the Anglo Dutch WarsThe Four Days Battle 1 4 June 1666 by Abraham StorckDate4 March 1665 31 July 1667 1665 03 04 1667 07 31 2 years 4 months 27 days LocationThe North Sea and the English Channel England and the Dutch Republic North America and the CaribbeanResultDutch victory Treaty of BredaBelligerents Dutch Republic Denmark Norway France England Scotland MunsterCommanders and leadersJohan de Witt Michiel de Ruyter Jacob van Wassenaer Pieter de Bitter Cornelis de Witt Willem van Ghent Claus von Ahlefeldt Antoine LefebvreCharles II Duke of York Duke of Albemarle Rupert of the Rhine Thomas Teddiman Christoph Bernhard von GalenStrengthDutch Republic131 shipsDenmark Norway250 men139 ships 1 21 000 men4 200 gunsCasualties and lossesDutch Republic5 150 killed3 000 wounded2 500 captured23 ships lostDenmark Norway8 killed citation needed 7 210 killed7 000 wounded2 000 captured29 ships lost2 ships captured citation needed Contents 1 Background 1 1 Anglo Dutch relations 1 2 England 1 2 1 Trade 1 2 2 Restoration 1 2 3 War agitation 1 3 Dutch Republic 1 3 1 Preparedness 1 4 France 2 Hostilities 2 1 First year 1665 2 2 Second year 1666 2 3 Third year 1667 2 4 War in the Caribbean 3 Treaty of Breda 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 BibliographyBackground EditAnglo Dutch relations Edit Traditionally many historians considered that the First and Second Anglo Dutch Wars arose from commercial and maritime rivalry between England and the Netherlands 2 Although continuing commercial tensions formed the background to the second war a group of ambitious English politicians and naval officers frustrated diplomatic efforts to reach any accommodation between the parties 3 Religious and political differences between the Anglican royalists in England and the Calvinist republicans that formed the ruling group in the Netherlands each seeing the other as an ideological threat also hampered agreement 4 The last major battle of the First Anglo Dutch War was an English victory in the battle of Scheveningen in August 1653 However after this the Dutch turned to using smaller warships and privateering and by November Cromwell was willing to make peace as the Dutch were capturing numerous English merchant ships 5 His only stipulation was that no Prince of Orange or other member of the House of Orange should hold the office of stadtholder or any other public office in the Netherlands When this demand was made public it was strongly opposed by Orangists so it was dropped from formal negotiations 6 De Witt realised that he would not persuade most of the provinces to accept the exclusion of members of the House of Orange from public office as part of a peace treaty so the public terms of the Treaty of Westminster made no mention of this However the two members of the negotiating team from Holland unknown to their colleagues agreed to a secret annexe providing although the Netherlands would ratify the treaty without delay England would only do so once the States of Holland had passed an Act of Seclusion excluding the House of Orange from holding public office in the province of Holland 6 7 The States General of the United Provinces approved and ratified the Treaty of Westminster unaware of the secret annexe attached to the version of the treaty that the English would ratify 6 De Witt had to use his influence to persuade delegates from the towns of Holland many initially unfavourable to support Exclusion and some of their pensionaries resisted to the end although they did not try to involve other provinces Holland passed its Act of Exclusion on 4 May 1654 8 Adverse reactions from the public in other provinces was strong but their provincial assemblies could neither overcome their own internal divisions nor act with other provinces to oppose it However any expectation that the other provinces would enact their own Act of Exclusion after Holland had passed its act was not realised in the short term although in practice the policy was not opposed Only after the war did four provinces besides Holland adopt the Perpetual Edict 1667 sanctioning Exclusion 9 The Commonwealth government of Oliver Cromwell wished to avoid further conflict with the Dutch Republic as it was planning war with Spain which began as the Anglo Spanish War of 1654 1660 after the Treaty of Westminster was signed 10 The English feared Dutch intervention in this war on the side of the Spanish as the Republic contained an Orangist party hostile to Cromwell However Orangist sentiments were found more among the common people than those with political influence The controversy over Exclusion strengthened de Witt s position in Holland and increased the influence of Holland over the other provinces 11 De Witt s position was further strengthened by increasing Dutch dominance in international trade which replaced English trade with Spain and its possessions in Italy and America during the Anglo Spanish War Once the Netherlands had supplanted England on these areas its traders were very reluctant to see English rivals readmitted 12 After the First Anglo Dutch War Johan de Witt who had been appointed Grand Pensionary of Holland took over effective control of Netherlands foreign policy until his death in 1672 He realised that the Netherlands could never win a war with England or France conclusively and that even surviving a war with either power would only be possible at enormous cost He therefore strove for a neutrality in which Dutch commerce could flourish supported by sufficiently strong land and naval forces to deter either of these two nations from becoming an adversary 13 Despite traditional Dutch hostility towards Spain de Witt declined to join Cromwell in attacking it but the Dutch had no desire to aid their hated former master so remained neutral De Witt was however prepared to act alone against Sweden in 1655 and jointly with Denmark again in 1658 Although the Commonwealth was an ally of Sweden it did not come to the aid of its ally even when the Dutch thwarted the Swedish attempt to conquer Denmark in the battle of the Sound on 8 November 1658 14 10 De Witt s aim was to establish peace in the Baltic for the benefit of Dutch commerce there With a similar aim he attempted to end the long running conflict with Portugal allowing it to retain Brazil over the protests of two of the five Netherlands provinces in 1661 15 The Dutch used the years of peace to build up their commercial fleet again following its devastation in the First Anglo Dutch War De Witt also achieved the post war completion of many new warships ordered during the war to augment the existing fleet including several large ships comparable in armament to the all but the largest English ones These had been given greater constructional strength and a wider beam to support heavier guns 16 However despite the pleas of the admirals for more of these powerful ships many of those built were relatively small and designed as convoy escorts protecting trade routes not to fight in fleet actions 17 18 In addition the Dutch East India Company built hybrid ships that could be used for carrying cargo as convoy escorts or in battle although they were not as strongly built as pure warships 19 While the English had won the majority of naval battles and destroyed or captured a great many Dutch merchant ships during the First Anglo Dutch War they failed to win the war 20 The Republic was in a better financial position than the Commonwealth of England potentially enabling the Dutch to complete the fitting out of their naval fleet to replace their losses at faster pace than England 21 However de Witt was unable to put naval finances on a centralised basis as each of the five admiralties and the three provinces that maintained them retained considerable independence 22 In addition as the Dutch navy did not rely on the press gang securing sufficient manpower could be a problem 23 although abandoning the practice of paying off seamen and laying up ships in the winter promoted a more professional and permanent body of sailors committed to naval service 24 While the war continued the Dutch had also been free to expand their trade networks along the main sea routes outside English home waters without fear of English retaliation as the majority of English warships were in home waters with few available overseas English commerce was grinding to a halt as they lost access to the Baltic and the Mediterranean Seas and when the two sides signed the peace treaty in 1654 the English were in essentially the same position that they had begun watching the Dutch Republic outstrip their economy to become the premier European trade power 21 England Edit Trade Edit To make matters worse for England the conclusion of the First Anglo Dutch War was immediately followed by the Anglo Spanish War of 1654 1660 which disrupted the remnants of trade the Commonwealth had with Spain and southern Italy The Dutch were left with free rein to expand their influence in the area this period was one of the highest points in the Dutch Golden Age and ironically the English interference was partly responsible 12 A major problem with the English trading system was that it was based on prohibitions such as the Navigation Acts tariffs and customs and the regulation of manufacturing All these measures even tariffs which were originally designed to raise revenue were directed to the protection of English trade 25 Although the Dutch system was said to be based on free trade this only applied to Europe and not to Dutch trading settlements elsewhere The prices of Dutch goods were more attractive around the world because the Dutch taxation system imposed excise duties on its own consumers rather than customs duties on the foreign users of its exports 26 The end of the First Anglo Dutch War had not changed this dynamic Indeed the end of the war had set the United Provinces free to expand their trade while the English were still hindered by the same tariff system 27 Thus another war seemed inevitable to many people of the time as the Commonwealth was unlikely to give up its naval and economic superiority without a fight citation needed Restoration Edit The Restoration of Charles II in 1660 initially produced a general surge of optimism in England Many hoped to reverse the Dutch dominance in world trade 28 At first however Charles II sought to remain on friendly terms with the Republic as he was personally greatly in debt to the House of Orange which had lent large sums to Charles I during the First English Civil War 29 Nevertheless a conflict soon developed between the States of Holland and Mary over the education and future prospects of William III of Orange the posthumous son of Dutch stadtholder William II of Orange and Charles nephew William was designated a Child of State in 1660 implying he would be trained for high office by the States General Mary died in 1661 after she had named Charles as a guardian of William allowing England a measure of influence in Dutch politics 30 The Dutch in a move coordinated by Cornelis and Andries de Graeff tried to placate the king with prodigious gifts such as the Dutch Gift of 1660 31 Negotiations were started in 1661 to solve these issues which ended in the treaty of 1662 in which the Dutch conceded on most points 32 In 1663 Louis XIV of France stated his claim to portions of the Habsburg southern Netherlands leading to a short rapprochement between England and the Republic 33 During this time Lord Clarendon serving as chief minister to King Charles II of England felt that France had become the greatest danger to England 34 In 1664 however the situation quickly changed Clarendon s enemy Lord Arlington became the favourite of the king and he and his client Sir Thomas Clifford M P later Lord Clifford began to cooperate with the king s brother James Duke of York the Lord High Admiral 35 James Arlington and Clifford who was chairman of a House of Commons committee investigating the supposed depression in English maritime commerce agreed that Dutch commercial competition had to be stifled even if this led to war with the United Provinces 36 as they considered the United Provinces were a greater threat to English interests than was France They coordinated their efforts in order to reduce Dutch competition through a policy of reprisals against Dutch ships which were captured in significant numbers 37 and expected significant personal gain from this policy James the Duke of York headed the Royal African Company and hoped to seize the possessions of the Dutch West India Company including New Amsterdam 38 This aggressive policy was supported by the English ambassador in The Hague Sir George Downing who acted as agent for James Arlington and Clifford 39 From his position in the Hague Downing gave a full and detailed account of all the political affairs in the United Provinces to Charles as well as James and his associates Downing reported back to London that the Republic was politically divided and that the Dutch would submit to English demands rather than go to war 38 Even after the English fleet began seizing Dutch ships and an attack on Dutch possessions in West Africa he reported in August 1664 that the Dutch would probably accept reducing their share of overseas trade in favour of England although contemporary Dutch sources reported strengthening Dutch resistance to these provocations 40 Since 1661 Downing had been in contact with the Orangists who he believed would collaborate with England against their enemy the republican States faction 41 However although some Orangists entered into treasonable correspondence with England in an attempt to end the war and overthrow de Witt the rapid arrest and execution of de Buat showed their weakness 42 Charles was influenced by James and Arlington as he sought a popular and lucrative foreign war at sea to bolster his authority as king 43 Many naval officers welcomed the prospect of a conflict with the Dutch as they expected to make their name and fortune in battles they hoped to win as decisively as in the previous war 43 War agitation Edit James Duke of York the Lord High Admiral of England and openly Catholic argued in favour of war between England and the Dutch As enthusiasm for war rose among the English populace privateers began to join navy ships in attacking Dutch ships capturing them and taking them to English harbours 44 By the time that the United Provinces declared war on England about two hundred Dutch ships had been brought to English ports 45 Dutch ships were obligated by the new treaty to salute the English flag first In 1664 English ships began to provoke the Dutch by not saluting in return Though ordered by the Dutch government to continue saluting first many Dutch commanders could not bear the insult citation needed Whether to secure concessions from the Dutch or provoke open conflict with them James already in late 1663 had sent Robert Holmes to protect the interests of the Royal African Company 44 Holmes captured the Dutch trading post of Cabo Verde in June 1664 and confiscated several ships of the Dutch West India company in West Africa 46 allegedly as reprisals for English ships captured by that company and England refused any compensation for these captures for disrupting that company s trading operations or for other hostile acts 47 Slightly later the English invaded the Dutch colony of New Netherland in North America on 24 June 1664 and had taken control of it by October 48 The States General responded by sending a fleet under Michiel de Ruyter that recaptured their African trading posts and captured most of the English trading stations there then crossed the Atlantic for a punitive expedition against the English in North America 49 In December 1664 the English suddenly attacked the Dutch Smyrna fleet Though the attack failed the Dutch in January 1665 allowed their ships to open fire on English warships in the colonies when threatened 50 Charles used this as a pretext to declare war on the Netherlands on 4 March 1665 De Ruyter was repelled at Barbados in April 1665 and was forced to refit at Martinique Sailing north from there De Ruyter captured several English vessels and delivered supplies to the Dutch colony at Sint Eustatius In view of the damage that his ships had sustained at Barbados he decided against an assault on New York formerly New Amsterdam which would have been necessary had the Dutch wished to retake their former New Netherland colony De Ruyter then proceeded to Newfoundland capturing English merchant ships and taking the town of St John s before returning to Europe travelling around the north of Scotland as a precaution 51 52 Four Days Battle of 1 to 4 June 1666 English propaganda in 1655 the Amboyna massacre of 1623 in which Dutch agents tortured and executed Englishmen The war was supported in England by propaganda concerning the much earlier Amboyna Massacre of 1623 In that year ten English factors resident in the Dutch fortress of Victoria and ten Japanese and Portuguese employees of the Dutch East India Company on Ambon were executed by beheading following accusations of treason After their arrest many of the English prisoners were according to the trial records tortured by having a cloth placed over their faces upon which water was poured to cause near suffocation now called waterboarding Other more sadistic tortures were alleged although denied by the Dutch The incident provoked a major crisis in Anglo Dutch relations at the time and continuing popular anger 53 although the matter had been be officially settled with the Treaty of Westminster The East India Company set out its case against the Dutch East India Company in a pamphlet published in 1631 which was used for anti Dutch propaganda during the First Anglo Dutch War and revived by pamphleteers as a second war neared When De Ruyter recaptured the West African trading posts many pamphlets were written about presumed new Dutch atrocities although these contained no basis in fact 54 Another cause of conflict was mercantile competition The major monopolistic English trading companies had suffered from a loss of trade on the 1650s which they attributed to illegal contraband trading and Dutch competition They wished the government to exclude the Dutch from trading with British colonies and force those colonies to trade only with the licensed English trading companies 55 The Dutch whose maritime trade was substantially that of an intermediary rejected the policies of Mercantilism in favour of the mare liberum where it was in their interest to do so while enforcing a strict monopoly in the Dutch Indies and attempted to expand it to their other settlements 56 Dutch Republic Edit Preparedness Edit Apart from Bergen most fighting took place in the southern North Sea After their defeat in the First Anglo Dutch War the Dutch became much better prepared From 1653 De Witt began to make plans for a New Navy to be constructed with a core of sixty four new heavier ships of the line with 40 to 60 guns and 90 smaller convoy escorts and more professional captains were sought for these 57 However even the heavier Dutch ships were much lighter than the ten big ships of the English navy and in 1664 when war threatened the decision was taken to replace the Dutch fleet core by still heavier ships although on the outbreak of war in 1665 these new vessels were mostly still under construction and the Dutch only possessed four heavier ships of the line 17 At the time of the Battle of Lowestoft the Dutch fleet included eighteen older warships reactivated after being laid up after the First Anglo Dutch war and several very large Dutch East India Company built hybrid ships which could be used for carrying cargo or in battle although not as strongly built as pure warships 19 During the second war the Dutch Republic was in a better financial position than England and quickly completed the new ships with another twenty ordered and built whereas England could only build a dozen ships due to financial difficulties 21 However de Witt saw that men not materiel were critical and attempted to deal with the insubordination lack of discipline and apparent cowardice among captains at the start of the war 58 In 1665 England boasted a population about four times as large as that of the Dutch Republic This population was dominated by poor peasants however and so the only source of ready cash were the cities The Dutch urban population exceeded that of England in both proportional and absolute terms and the Republic would be able to spend more than twice the amount of money on the war as England the equivalent of 11 000 000 59 The outbreak of war was followed ominously by the Great Plague and the Great Fire of London hitting the only major urban centre of the country These events occurring in such close succession virtually brought England to its knees as the English fleet had suffered from cash shortages even before these calamities despite having been voted a record budget of 2 500 000 by the English parliament However as Charles lacked effective means of enforcing taxation those taxes voted were collected neither in full nor quickly For much of the war Charles was dependent on loans raised in the City of London at interest rates which increased as the war progressed to cover both collection delays and for expenditure in excess of the budget 60 Although the Duke of York had attempted to reform the finances of the Navy Board cash flow remained a problem and sailors were not paid wholly in cash but mainly with tickets or debt certificates which were only redeemed after long delays when cash was available 61 Receipts from the sale of goods carried by Dutch ships captured by Royal Navy warships and the ships themselves or to a lesser extent by privateers were a valuable source of funds to finance for the Navy Board and the attack on the Dutch East Indies fleet at Bergen had this as at least one of its objectives 62 However a large part of the proceeds of these captures was retained by the captors either illegally or returned to them as prize money and although it has been claimed that English financial penury made the war s outcome dependent on the fortunes of its privateers 63 this was never more than an irregular windfall and opportunities for capturing Dutch merchant vessels were greatest before and just after war was declared diminishing as the war forced them to stay in port 64 Far fewer prizes were taken by the Royal Navy than in the First Anglo Dutch War and overall and particularly after 1665 Dutch privateers would be the more successful 65 France Edit A Franco Dutch treaty had been signed in 1662 which involved a defensive alliance between the two countries giving the Netherlands protection against an English attack and assuring France that the Netherlands would not assist Spain in the Spanish Netherlands 66 Although Louis XIV of France had signed this treaty he considered that an Anglo Dutch war was likely to obstruct his plans to acquire Habsburg territory there 67 Charles ambassador in France reported the French opposition to the outbreak of such a war gave him the hope that if the Dutch were provoked into declaring war the French would evade their treaty obligations and refuse to be drawn into a naval war with England 68 In the summer of 1664 Louis attempted to avert the threatened Anglo Dutch war or failing that to confine it to Africa and America 69 These efforts to mediate an agreement failed and the war commenced with a declaration of war by the Dutch citation needed on 4 March 1665 following English attacks on two Dutch convoys off Cadiz and in the English Channel 70 Even after the war began Louis attempted to evade his obligation by strengthening the French embassy in London with two envoys under the name of the celebre ambassade which included an Ambassador Extraordinary in addition to the resident ambassador to begin negotiations for a settlement of the Anglo Dutch conflict Its instructions were to offer terms including the restitution of each country s ships captured off America and Africa and of their West African bases and also financial compensation for English ships captured earlier in West Africa However the instructions did not propose that the New Netherlands should be included in any treaty but settled by local fighting that would not involve a European War The Dutch complained that these terms denied their rights to the New Netherlands 71 72 Hostilities EditFirst year 1665 Edit Main article Battle of Lowestoft The battle of Lowestoft on 13 June 1665 showing HMS Royal Charles and Eendracht At the start of the war both sides considered an early decisive battle was desirable as English government finances could not sustain a long war and an English blockade of Dutch ports and attacks on their merchant and fishing fleets would soon bring about their economic ruin 73 De Witt and the States General put pressure on their commander Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam to seek out the English fleet and bring it into battle although his fleet was inferior in organisation training discipline and firepower to the English fleet 19 74 In their first at the Battle of Lowestoft on 13 June 1665 the Dutch suffered the worst defeat in the history the Dutch Republic s navy with at least sixteen ships lost and one third of its personnel killed or captured 75 However the English were unable to capitalise on their victory at Lowestoft as the majority of the Dutch fleet escaped The leading Dutch politician the Grand Pensionary of Holland Johan de Witt attempted to restore confidence by joining the fleet personally and dealt with failed or ineffective captains by executing three and exiling and dismissing others Michiel de Ruyter was appointed to lead the Dutch fleet in July 1665 despite the previous appointment of Cornelis Tromp as acting commander in chief Ruyter formalised new tactics 76 The Spice Fleet from the Dutch East Indies managed to return home safely after the battle of Vagen although it was at first blockaded at Bergen causing the financial position to swing in favour of the Dutch 77 In the summer of 1665 the bishop of Munster Bernhard von Galen an old enemy of the Dutch was induced by promises of English subsidies to invade the Republic 42 At the same time the English made overtures to Spain Louis XIV was now concerned by the attack by Munster and the prospect of an English Spanish coalition and the effect this might have on his conquering the Spanish Netherlands He first arranged for other German states to obstruct the passage of Munster troops and promised to send a French army corps to Germany 78 Louis was still unwilling to act against England under the 1662 defensive treaty so he revived his attempts to mediate a settlement 67 The French ambassadors with de Witt s assent offered to accept the loss of the New Netherlands and of two West African posts seized by Holmes and to return a third post seized by de Ruyter However the English fleet s success at Lowestoft prompted Charles and his ministers to reject this offer and demand further surrenders of territory and a Dutch agreement to bear the costs of the war When in December 1665 Charles refused a French counter offer Louis withdrew both his ambassadors signalling his intention to declare war 79 Attack on Bergen Norway on 12 August 1665 These events caused consternation at the English court It now seemed that the Republic could end up as either a Habsburg possession or a French protectorate either outcome would be disastrous for England s strategic position Clarendon was ordered to make peace with the Dutch quickly and without French mediation Downing used his Orangist contacts to induce the province of Overijssel whose countryside had been ravaged by Galen s troops to ask the States General for a peace with England 42 The Orangists naively wished to gain peace by conceding the English demand that the young William III should be made captain general and admiral general of the republic which would ensure his eventual appointment to the stadtholderate De Witt s position was however too strong for this Orangist attempt to seize power to succeed 42 In November he promised Louis never to conclude a separate peace with England 80 On 11 December he openly declared that the only acceptable peace terms would be either a return to the status quo ante bellum or a quick end to hostilities under a uti possidetis clause 81 At the end of 1665 Henri Buat a Frenchman with connections to the House of Orange became involved in unofficial correspondence with Sir Gabriel Sylvius who was acting on behalf of Lord Arlington a minister of Charles II Their correspondence was a means for the Dutch and English governments to explore possibilities of peace without commitment 82 At an early stage Buat made the Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt fully aware of this correspondence and Buat added material provided by de Witt to his letter including possible peace terms although de Witt was unsure whether Charles was genuinely seeking peace 42 Moreover 1665 had seen Scotland enter the war principally in a privateering capacity in which they proved to be particularly successful 83 However Scottish privateering activities in 1665 were limited because of delays in the Scottish Admiral issuing regular Letters of marque at the start of the war 84 Second year 1666 Edit Main article Four Days Battle After Battle of Lowestoft Louis XIV was concerned that the destruction of the Dutch fleet would allow the English fleet to interfere with his plans in the Spanish Netherlands so he again offered mediation but as his credibility as mediator been undermined this offer was rejected by England Louis declared war on England on 16 January 1666 85 and the anti English alliance was strengthened in the winter of 1666 when in February Frederick III of Denmark also declared war after receiving a large subsidy 86 Next Brandenburg which had earlier been prompted by France to offer mediation threatened to attack Munster from the east as the promised English subsidies had remained largely hypothetical Von Galen made peace with the Republic in April at Cleves 87 By February 1666 the negotiations using Buat as an intermediary had progressed to the stage where de Witt invited Charles II to start formal peace negotiations 88 An outline of the English peace proposals was forwarded through Buat but rejected by de Witt pending clarification of its terms No clarification was provided only repeated English insistence that someone duly authorised should be sent to London to negotiate peace Both the States of Holland and the French ambassador rejected this proposal During these negotiations Buat was in contact with leading Orangists including the Lord of Zuylestein and the Rotterdam regent Johan Kievit although the Prince himself was not involved 82 By the spring of 1666 the Dutch had rebuilt their fleet with much heavier ships thirty of them possessing more cannon than any Dutch ship available in early 1665 and threatened to join forces with the French 89 The greater part of the French fleet was in the Mediterranean under the duc de Beaufort and Louis intended that much of this would be brought into the Atlantic to join up with the Atlantic squadron commanded by Abraham Duquesne The combined fleet would then it was intended link up with the Dutch in the English Channel and outnumber the English fleet 90 The Four Days Battle as depicted by Abraham Storck Despite administrative and logistic difficulties an English fleet of some eighty ships under the joint command of the Duke of Albemarle and Prince Rupert of the Rhine set sail at the end of May 1666 The French intention to bring the bulk of their Mediterranean fleet to join the Dutch fleet at Dunkirk was known to Prince Rupert by 10 May and discussed by Charles and his Privy Council on 13 May When the Duke of Albemarle was informed he agreed to detach a squadron of 20 generally fast or well armed ships under Prince Rupert to block the Strait of Dover 91 provided he were left with at least 70 ships to fight the Dutch 92 Rupert was detached on 29 May Julian calendar to prevent Beaufort passing through the English Channel to join the Dutch fleet 93 In the event the French fleet did not appear because Beaufort who had left Toulon in April 1666 with 32 fighting ships delayed at Lisbon for six weeks 94 during which time the English and Dutch fleets fought the Four Days Battle one of the longest major naval engagements during the age of sail citation needed Leaving the Downs Albemarle came upon De Ruyter s fleet of 85 ships at anchor and he immediately engaged the nearest Dutch ship before the rest of the fleet could come to its assistance The Dutch rearguard under Lieutenant Admiral Cornelis Tromp withdrew upon a starboard tack taking the battle toward the Flemish shoals compelling Albemarle to turn about to prevent being outflanked by the Dutch rear and centre This culminated in a ferocious unremitting battle that raged until nightfall 95 At daylight on 2 June Albemarle s strength of operable vessels was reduced to 44 ships but with these he renewed the battle tacking past the enemy four times in close action With his fleet in too poor a condition to continue to challenge he then retired towards the Thames Estuary with the Dutch in pursuit 96 The following day Albemarle ordered the damaged ships to lead protecting them from the Dutch fleet by stationing his most powerful ships as a rearguard on the 3rd until Prince Rupert returning with his twenty ships joined him 97 98 During this stage of the battle Vice Admiral George Ayscue accidentally grounded in the Prince Royal one of the nine remaining big ships and surrendered This was the last time in history that an English admiral surrendered in battle 99 After this loss and the return of several badly damaged ships to port Albemarle reinforced by Rupert s fresh squadron had 52 ships to face the Dutch with 57 ships 100 After Rupert broke the Dutch line and with Albemarle attacked Tromp with superior numbers 101 de Ruyter decided the battle on the fourth day by a surprise all out attack when Tromp seemed about to be defeated 102 When the English retreated De Ruyter was reluctant to follow perhaps because of lack of gunpowder citation needed The battle ended with both sides claiming victory the English because they contended Dutch Lieutenant Admiral Michiel de Ruyter had retreated first the Dutch because they had inflicted much greater losses on the English who lost ten ships against the Dutch four 103 Although the Dutch claim seems more valid their rejoicing was out of proportion to what had been achieved It had taken four days to force a weaker and before Rupert s return much weaker English opponent that had close to defeating them on the second and fourth days and their belief that the English fleet was destroyed as a fighting force was shown to be false a few weeks later 104 St James s Day Battle 4 August 1666 One more major sea battle would be fought in the conflict St James s Day Battle of 4 and 5 August ended in English victory but failed to decide the war as the Dutch fleet escaped annihilation although suffering heavy casualties 105 At this stage simply surviving was sufficient for the Dutch as the English could hardly afford to replace their losses even after a victory Tactically indecisive with the Dutch losing two ships and the English one the battle would have enormous political implications Cornelis Tromp commanding the Dutch rear had defeated his English counterpart but was accused by De Ruyter of being responsible for the plight of the main body of the Dutch fleet by chasing the English rear squadron as far as the English coast As Tromp was the champion of the Orange party the conflict led to much party strife Because of this Tromp was fired by the States of Holland on August 13 106 In addition to proposing peace to de Witt Arlington and Sylvius had plotted to provoke Orangist coup d etat against the Republic to restore the stadtholderate overthrow de Witt and end the war Five days after St James s Day Battle Charles sent another peace offer again using Buat as an intermediary Sylvius also sent Buat details of the plot these were for his contacts in the Orange party but were mistakenly included by Buat with the peace offer handed to the Grand Pensionary Buat was arrested and those most involved in the conspiracy including Kievit fled to England De Witt used the evidence of the plot to isolate the Orange movement and reaffirm his commitment to the French alliance Buat was condemned for treason and beheaded in October 1666 82 Holmes s Bonfire by Willem van de Velde the Elder The mood in the Republic now turned very belligerent because on 19 August the English Vice Admiral Robert Holmes raided the Vlie estuary and destroyed up to 150 merchantmen sheltering there valued at around 1 million with only ten escaping in an action later known as Holmes s Bonfire The next day Holmes men also landed on the island of Terschelling and finding little of value they burnt the small town of West Terschelling to the ground an act regarded by the Dutch as senseless destruction of a harmless fishing village 107 In this he was assisted by a Dutch captain Laurens Heemskerck who had fled from the Netherlands for cowardice shown during the battle of Lowestoft and was afterwards condemned in absentia to perpetual banishment from the Netherlands 108 After the Fire of London in September the Navy Board was unable to pay the wages of the fleet and began to discharge many sailors without paying their wages ensuring that it would be impossible to send out a major fleet in 1667 109 Swedish mediation was offered in the autumn and informal discussions began which led to the opening of formal negotiations in the following March Charles was prepared to make some concessions although he still required the return of the nutmeg island of Pulau Run and certain indemnities The Dutch were unwilling to concede even his reduced demands although discussions continued 110 111 The extent of Scottish privateering greatly increased in this year with the issue of twenty five commissions in the three months from April 1666 the start of an intense 17 month period in which 108 Dutch French and Danish vessels were recorded as captured by twenty or so Scottish privateers Their success arose from the strategic position of Scotland once most of the Atlantic seaborne trade of northern Europe was diverted around Scotland to avoid the English Channel and the Dutch whaling and herring fleets operated in waters north and east of Scotland so they were vulnerable to Scottish privateers Apart from ships of the Dutch East India Company many Dutch merchant ships and of its Danish ally were poorly armed and undermanned 112 Third year 1667 Edit Main article Raid on the Medway Raid on the Medway of 9 14 June 1667 By early 1667 the financial position of the English crown had become desperate The kingdom lacked sufficient funds to maintain their fleet s seaworthiness so it was decided in February that the heavy ships were to remain laid up at Chatham with only a small Flying Fleet manned to attack Dutch merchant shipping which lowered morale in the fleet and prevented merchant ship from sailing and colliers from reaching London without fear of Dutch interception 113 Clarendon informed Charles as to his only two options to make very substantial concessions to Parliament or to initiate peace talks with the Dutch under their conditions which began in March Charles had wished for peace talks to be held in England or failing that at The Hague but the Dutch offered three other cities where support for the House of Orange was less and Charles selected Breda in the southern Generality Lands 114 In the meantime a Dutch fleet was assembled in the Texel under the command of Willem van Ghent One of the motives was to destroy the Scottish privateering fleet in the Firth of Forth In a series of running encounters with Scottish privateers at sea and various shore batteries particularly at Burntisland the Dutch were seen off with the loss of three ships damaged 115 Thereafter Scottish privateers followed the Dutch into the North Sea where they without any difficulty picked off stragglers In the southern part of Britain things did not go so well citation needed As England was also at war with France Charles sent envoys to Paris in March for unofficial preliminary talks on peace terms 116 In view of deteriorating Franco Dutch relations these talks turned to a third option not considered by Clarendon a secret alliance with France 117 In April Charles concluded his first secret treaty with Louis stipulating that England would not enter into alliances that might oppose a French conquest of the Spanish Netherlands 118 In May the French invaded starting the War of Devolution 116 Charles hoped by means of stalling the talks at Breda to gain enough time to ready his fleet to obtain concessions from the Dutch using the French advance as leverage citation needed De Witt was aware of Charles s general intentions though not of the secret treaty He decided to attempt to end the war with a single stroke Ever since its actions in Denmark in 1659 involving many landings to liberate the Danish Isles the Dutch navy had made a special study of amphibious operations the Dutch Marine Corps was established in 1665 After the Four Days Battle a Dutch marine contingent had been ready to land in Kent or Essex following a possible Dutch victory at sea The Dutch fleet was however unable to force a safe passage into the Thames as navigational buoys had been removed and a strong English squadron was ready to dispute their passage 119 But now there was no English fleet able to contest a similar attack De Witt conceived the plan for a landing of marines to be overseen by his brother Cornelius at Chatham where the fleet lay effectively defenceless to destroy it 120 The Dutch burn English ships during the expedition to Chatham by Jan van Leyden In June De Ruyter with Cornelis de Witt supervising launched the Dutch raid on the Medway at the mouth of the River Thames After capturing the fort at Sheerness the Dutch fleet went on to break through the massive chain protecting the entrance to the Medway and on the 13th attacked the laid up English fleet citation needed The daring raid remains one of the largest disasters in the history of the Royal Navy and its predecessors 121 Fifteen of the Royal Navy s remaining ships were destroyed either by the Dutch or by being scuttled by the English to block the river Three of the eight remaining big ships were burnt Royal Oak the new Loyal London and Royal James The largest English flagship HMS Royal Charles was abandoned by its skeleton crew captured without a shot being fired and towed back to the United Provinces as a trophy Its counter decoration depicting the royal arms is on display in the Rijksmuseum Fortunately for the English the Dutch marines spared the Chatham Dockyard at the time England s largest industrial complex a land attack on the docks themselves would have set back English naval power for a generation 122 A Dutch attack on the English anchorage at Harwich had to be abandoned however after the battle of Landguard Fort ended in Dutch failure citation needed The Dutch success made a major psychological impact throughout England with London feeling especially vulnerable just a year after the Great Fire of London However for a second time the Dutch had been unable to land substantial land forces in Britain or even do substantial damage to the Chatham dockyard 123 The raid did together with the English financial crisis speed up negotiations 124 125 All this together with the cost of the war of the Great Plague and the extravagant spending of Charles s court produced a rebellious atmosphere in London Clarendon ordered the English envoys at Breda to sign a peace quickly as Charles feared an open revolt 126 War in the Caribbean Edit Main article Battle of Martinique 1667 French ships under attack at Martinique 1667 The Second Anglo Dutch war had spread to the Caribbean islands and in late 1665 an English force mainly consisting of buccaneers under the command of Lieutenant colonel Edward Morgan the Deputy Governor of Jamaica assisted by his nephew Thomas Morgan quickly captured the Dutch islands of Sint Eustatius and Saba After his uncle s death in December 1665 Thomas Morgan was appointed as governor of these two islands 127 Also in late 1665 an English force from Jamaica and Barbados captured the Dutch possession of Tobago 128 The French declaration of war on the side of the Dutch altered the balance of power in the Caribbean and facilitated a Dutch counterattack The first successes of the new allies were the French recapture of Tobago in August 1666 a joint Franco Dutch recapture of Sint Eustatius in November 1666 and a French capture of the English island of Antigua in the same month 129 The arrival of a French squadron under Joseph Antoine de La Barre in January 1667 allowed the French to occupy the English half of St Kitts and Montserrat leaving only Nevis of the Leeward Islands in English hands together with Jamaica and Barbados to the west 130 131 A Dutch force under Admiral Abraham Crijnssen organised by the province of Zeeland not the States General arrived at Cayenne in February 1667 and captured Suriname from the English in the same month 132 131 Crijnssen delayed in Suriname until April then sailed to Tobago which had been vacated by the French after expelling the English garrison where he rebuilt the fort and left a small garrison 132 Although Crijnssen was instructed not to delay it was not until early May that he and de La Barre combined forces agreeing to a Franco Dutch invasion of Nevis which sailed on 17 May 1667 However their attack was repelled in the Battle of Nevis on 17 May by a smaller English force This confused naval action was the only one in this war where all three navies fought it failed largely through de la Barre s incompetence 133 After this failed attack Crijnssen left in disgust and sailed to the north to attack the Virginia colony 134 while the French under de la Barre moved to Martinique The Battle of Nevis restored English naval control in the Caribbean and allowed the early recapture of Antigua and Montserrat and an unsuccessful attack on St Kitts soon after 135 In April a new English squadron of nine warships and two fireships under the command of Rear Admiral Sir John Harman sailed for the West Indies reaching them in early June Harman encountered the French with seven larger and 14 smaller warships and three fireships under la Barre anchored under the batteries of Fort St Pierre Martinique He attacked on 6 July and sunk burnt or captured all but two the French ships 135 With the French fleet neutralised Harman then attacked the French at Cayenne on 15 September forcing its garrison to surrender The English fleet then went on to recapture Fort Zeelandia in Suriname in October News of these English victories only reached England in September after the Treaty of Breda had been signed and possessions captured after 31 July had to be returned 136 Crijnssen sailed back to the Caribbean only to find the French fleet destroyed and the English back in possession of Suriname 137 Treaty of Breda EditMain article Treaty of Breda 1667 The conclusion of the Treaty of Breda at Breda Castle On 31 July 1667 what is generally known as the Treaty of Breda concluded peace between England and the Netherlands The treaty allowed the English to keep possession of New Netherland while the Dutch kept control over Pulau Run and the valuable sugar plantations of Suriname and regained Tobago St Eustatius and its West African trading posts 138 This uti possidetis solution was later confirmed in the Treaty of Westminster 139 The Act of Navigation was modified in favour of the Dutch by England agreeing to treat Germany as part of the Netherlands commercial hinterland so that Dutch ships would now be allowed to carry German goods to English ports 138 140 In the same date and also at Breda a public treaty was concluded between England and France that stipulated the return to England of the former English part of St Christopher and the islands of Antigua and Montserrat all of which the French had occupied in the war and that England should surrender its claim to Acadia to France although the extent of Acadia was not defined This public treaty had been preceded by a secret treaty signed on 17 April in which in addition to these exchanges of territory Louis and Charles agreed not to enter into alliances opposed to the interests of the other by which Louis secured the neutrality of England in the war he planned against Spain 141 The order of priorities whereby the Dutch preferred to give up what would become a major part of the United States and instead retain a tropical colony would seem strange by present day standards However in the 17th century tropical colonies producing agricultural products which could not be grown in Europe were deemed more valuable than ones with a climate similar to that of Europe where Europeans could settle in comfort citation needed The peace was generally seen as a personal triumph for Johan de Witt and an embarrassment to the Orangists who seemed reluctant to support the war and eager to accept a disadvantageous early peace 142 The Republic was jubilant about the Dutch victory De Witt used the occasion to induce four provinces to adopt the Perpetual Edict of 1667 abolishing the stadtholderate forever He used the weak position of Charles II to force him into the Triple Alliance of 1668 which again forced Louis to temporarily abandon his plans for the conquest of the southern Netherlands But de Witt s success would eventually produce his downfall and nearly that of the Republic with it Both humiliated monarchs intensified their secret cooperation through the Secret Treaty of Dover and would joined by the bishop of Munster attack the Dutch in 1672 in the Third Anglo Dutch War De Witt was unable to counter this attack as he could not create a strong Dutch army for lack of money and for fear that it would strengthen the position of the young William III citation needed That same year de Witt was assassinated and William became stadtholder References EditFootnotes Edit Rommelse 2006 p 42 Rommelse 2010 p 492 Rommelse 2010 p 493 Pincus 2002 pp 246 262 Israel 1995 pp 721 722 a b c Israel 1995 p 722 Rommelse 2006 p 23 Israel 1995 pp 722 723 Israel 1995 pp 723 724 a b Rommelse 2006 p 24 Israel 1995 pp 726 727 a b Israel 1995 p 727 Rommelse 2006 pp 23 24 Israel 1995 p 736 Rommelse 2006 pp 25 31 Bruijn 2011 pp 64 66 a b Bruijn 2011 p 66 Israel 1995 pp 716 717 a b c Bruijn 2011 p 74 Israel 1995 p 717 a b c Israel 1995 p 721 Bruijn 2011 p 67 Bruijn 2011 p 32 Bruijn 2011 pp 71 72 Vries 2015 p 340 Hughes 1934 p 125 Ashley 1961 p 365 Israel 1995 pp 713 714 Groenveld 1991 pp 960 963 Israel 1995 pp 751 753 Israel 1995 p 750 Rommelse 2006 p 92 Lynn 1999 pp 33 34 Rommelse 2006 p 49 Rommelse 2006 pp 101 102 Rommelse 2006 p 102 Rommelse 2006 p 105 a b Rommelse 2006 p 103 Israel 1995 p 2 Rommelse 2006 pp 105 106 Rommelse 2006 p 83 a b c d e Rommelse 2006 p 168 a b Rodger 2004 p 65 a b Rommelse 2006 p 93 Israel 1995 p 766 Rodger 2004 p 67 Rommelse 2006 pp 93 94 Pomfret 1973 p 22 Rodger 2004 p 68 Rommelse 2006 pp 135 139 Kloster 2016 p 103 Staff writer n d History of St john s Archived from the original on 28 January 2016 Armitage 2000 p 87 Pincus 2002 pp 290 291 Rommelse 2006 pp 46 47 Rommelse 2006 pp 90 91 Bruijn 2011 pp 64 5 Fox 2018 p 127 Rodger 2004 p 79 Rommelse 2006 p 43 Rommelse 2006 pp 42 193 Rommelse 2006 pp 123 125 Rodger 2004 p 78 Rommelse 2006 pp 124 125 149 Rommelse 2006 pp 175 195 Rommelse 2006 pp 33 4 a b Rommelse 2006 p 109 Fox 2018 pp 69 136 Davenport 2004 p 119 Fox 2018 pp 67 68 Davenport 2004 pp 119 120 Rommelse 2006 pp 151 152 Fox 2018 pp 69 70 Fox 2018 pp 83 85 Fox 2018 pp 126 127 Fox 2018 pp 125 127 Rodger 2004 p 70 Rommelse 2006 p 143 Davenport 2004 p 120 Rommelse 2006 p 146 Rommelse 2006 p 151 a b c Molhuysen amp Blok 1911 p 509 Murdoch 2010 pp 237 254 Graham 1982 p 68 Fox 2018 p 136 Rommelse 2006 pp 148 152 Rommelse 2006 pp 147 151 152 Rommelse 2006 p 169 Rodger 2004 p 71 Fox 2018 pp 123 127 Fox 2018 pp 116 117 Fox 2018 p 143 Rodger 2004 p 72 Fox 2018 pp 173 175 180 Rodger 2004 p 73 Fox 2018 pp 234 236 Fox 2018 pp 236 238 Rodger 2004 p 74 Rodger 2004 p 75 Fox 2018 p 248 Fox 2018 pp 254 256 Fox 2018 pp 263 264 Fox 2018 pp 276 277 Fox 2018 p 276 Fox 2018 pp 295 296 Monday 23 July 1666 Fox 2018 pp 296 297 Van der Aa 1867 p 349 Fox 2018 pp 299 300 Fox 2018 p 300 Rommelse 2006 p 18 Graham 1982 pp 68 70 Wilson 2012 p 139 Davenport 2004 pp 121 Murdoch 2010 pp 247 251 a b Rommelse 2006 p 206 Rodger 2004 p 76 Davenport 2004 p 122 Fox 2018 p 287 Fox 2018 p 301 Boxer 1974 p 39 Rodger 2004 p 77 Fox 2018 p 302 Rommelse 2006 p 175 Wilson 2012 p 140 Hutton Ronald 23 November 1989 Charles s First Dutch War 1664 1667 214 253 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198229117 003 0009 ISBN 978 0 19 822911 7 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Goslinga 2012 pp 38 39 Goslinga 2012 p 40 Goslinga 2012 p 41 Goslinga 2012 pp 41 42 a b Jones 2013 p 36 a b Goslinga 2012 p 42 Goslinga 2012 pp 42 3 Rommelse 2006 p 183 a b Goslinga 2012 p 43 Fox 2018 p 303 Rommelse 2006 p 223 a b Israel 1995 p 774 Goslinga 2012 p 47 MacInnes 2008 p 114 Davenport 2004 pp 122 132 Israel 1995 pp 774 775 Bibliography Edit Armitage D 2000 The Ideological Origins of the British Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521789783 Ashley M P 1961 Great Britain to 1688 A Modern History Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press OCLC 875337369 Boxer C R 1974 The Anglo Dutch Wars of the 17th Century 1652 1674 London H M S O ISBN 9780112901693 Bruijn J R 2011 The Dutch Navy of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780986497353 Davenport F G 2004 European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies Clark N J The Lawbook Exchange ISBN 9781584774228 Fox F L 2018 The Four Days Battle of 1666 Barnsley Seaforth ISBN 9781526737274 Goslinga C C 2012 A Short History of the Netherlands Antilles and Surinam The Hague Springer ISBN 9789400992894 Graham E J 1982 The Scottish Marine during the Dutch Wars The Scottish Historical Review 61 1 67 74 JSTOR 25529449 Groenveld S 1991 Popery Trade and Universal Monarchy The Historical Journal 34 4 955 972 29 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00017386 JSTOR 2639590 S2CID 153421486 Hainsworth D R Churches C 1998 The Anglo Dutch Naval Wars 1652 1674 Stroud Sutton ISBN 9780750917872 Israel J I 1995 The Dutch Republic Its Rise Greatness and Fall 1477 1806 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198730729 Hughes E 1934 Studies in Administration and Finance 1558 1825 Manchester University Press Jones J R 2013 The Anglo Dutch Wars of the Seventeenth Century New York Routledge ISBN 9781315845975 Kloster W 2016 The Dutch Moment War Trade and Settlement in the Seventeenth Century Atlantic World Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501706677 Lynn J A 1999 The Wars of Louis XIV 1664 1714 London Longman ISBN 9780582056299 MacInnes A I 2008 Scottish Circumvention Making Using and Resisting the Law in European History Pisa PUP pp 109 130 ISBN 9788884925497 Molhuysen P C Blok P J 1911 Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek Leiden Sijthoff Murdoch Steve 2010 The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978900418568 5 Ogg D 1934 England in the Reign of Charles II Oxford University Press pp 357 388 OCLC 490944369 Pincus S C A 1992 Popery Trade and Universal Monarchy Engl Hist Rev 107 4 1 29 doi 10 1093 ehr CVII CCCCXXII 1 JSTOR 575674 Pincus S C A 2002 Protestantism and Patriotism Ideologies and the Making of English Foreign Policy Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521893688 Pomfret J E 1973 Colonial New Jersey A History New York Scribner ISBN 9780684133713 Rodger N A M 2004 The Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 London Penguin ISBN 9780713994117 Rommelse G 2006 The Second Anglo Dutch War 1665 1667 Hilversum Verloren ISBN 9789065509079 Rommelse G 2010 The role of mercantilism in Anglo Dutch political relations 1650 74 The Economic History Review 63 3 591 611 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0289 2009 00491 x JSTOR 40929818 S2CID 145077506 Van der Aa A J 1867 Biographische Woordenboek der Nederlandenen Allart Vries P 2015 State Economy and the Great Divergence Great Britain and China 1680s 1850s New York Bloomsbury ISBN 9781472529183 Wilson C W 2012 Profit and Power a Study of England and the Dutch Wars The Hague Springer ISBN 9789401197625 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Anglo Dutch War amp oldid 1131443610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.