ofLneveu- resolved upon strong measures. Six leading mem]
the highest abilities and of soaring ambition. He was totally opposed to the-peace with Spain, and wished to bring about a speedy resumption of the war With this view he Zf;, f':, ;', f'n entered into secret negotiations for a French alliance ¢, ,¢;, , which as far as can be gathered from extant records, the had for its objects the conquest and partition by the g1zfwes allies of the Belgic provinces, and joint action in England on behalf of Charles II. As a preliminary step William aimed at a centralization of the powers of government in the United Provinces in his own person. He saw clearly the inherent defects of the existing federation, and he wished to remedy a system which was so complicated as to be at times almost unworkable The States-General were but the delegates, the s tad holders the servants, of a number of sovereign provinces, each of which had different historical traditions and a different form of government, and one of which-Holland-in wealth and importance outweighed the other six taken together. Between of Holland and the States-General there was constant jealousy and friction And yet strangely enough the States
Z, ':f)';s" the States of Holland themselves were not really Hgllgnd representative of the people of that province, but only and of the limited, self-coopting burgher aristocracies of
- '
- :"" certain towns, each of which with its rights andhberties
had a quasi-independence of its own. Foremost ainong these was the great commercial capital, Amsterdam whose r1ch J
burgher patriciate did not scruple on occasion to defy the authority of the States-General the s tad holder and even of the States of Holland themselves.
The States of Holland had, in the years that followed the truce of 1609, measured their strength with that of the States-General, but the issue had been decided conclusively g)'°lf°-9" in favour of the federal authority by the sword of 65; '" Maurice. The party and the principles of Oldenbarneveldt, however, though crushed, were not extinguished and though Frederick Henry by his ersonal influence and prudent statesmanship had been able to surmount the; difficulties placed in lns way, he had had to encounter at times strong opposition, and had been much hampered in the conduct both of his campaigns and of his policy. With the conclusion of the peace of Munster and the death of the veteran s tad holder the struggle for predominance in the Union between the Orangefederahst and the Hollander States-rights parties was certain to be renewed The moment seemed to be favourable for the assertion of provincial sovereignty because of the youth and inexperience of the new prince of Orange. But William II., though little more than aboy, was endowed with singular capacity and great strength of will, and he was intent upon projects, the scope of which has been already indicated ambitious
The collision came, v hich was perhaps inevitable. The States-General in the disbanding of the forces wished to retain the cad; es ot the regiments complete in case of a The question of
aisband- renewal of the war. The States of Holland objected, and. although the army was a federal force, gave orders for the general disband mg of the troops in the pay of the province The othcers refused to obey any orders but those of the council of State of the Union. The provincial states, on their part, threatened them with loss of pay. At this juncture the States-General, as in 1613, appointed a commission headed by the prince of Orange to visit the towns of Hclland, and provide for the maintenance of order and the upholding of the Union Both parties put themselves in the wrong, the province bv refusing its quota to the federal war-sheet, the generality by dealing with individual towns lnstead of with the states of the province The visitation was a failure. The town councils, though most of them willing to receive William in his capacity as s tad holder, declined to give a hearing to the commission The Amsterdam refused absolutely to admit either stadp, ; s, ,, , e, s hold-rorcomm1ss1on. In these cir cums tan es 'ill S” ”' bers of the States of Holland were seized (goth of July 16;o) and imprisoned in Locvenstein Castle, and troops under the command of llll3T1l Fredcrfcli s tad holder of lries1579 land, were sent to surprise Amsterdam. But the town council had been warned, and the gates were shut and guarded. The coup d, éflll nevertheless was completely successful. The anti-Orange party, remembering the fate of Oldenbarneveldt, were stricken with pamc at the imprisonment of their leaders. The States of Holland and the town council of Amsterdam gave in their submission. The prisoners were released, and public thanks were rendered to the prince by the various provincial states for “ his great trouble, care and prudence. ' William appeared to be master of the situation but his plans for future action were never to be carried into effect. Busily engaged in sudden secret negotiations with France, he had retired to his Deam of hunting seat at Dieren, when he fell ill with smallpox Wllllffm on the 27th of October. A few days later he expired ” at the Hague (6th of November), aged but twenty-four years. A week after his death, his widow, the princess Mary of England, gave birth to a son who, as William III., was to give added lustre to the house of Orange
The anti-Orange particulari st party, which had just suffered decisive defeat, now lifted up its head again. At the instance of Holland a Grand Assembly was summoned, consisting of delegates from all the provinces, to consider the 7"" state of the Union, the army and religion. It met at j;;;', ':, bb, the Hague on the 18th of January 1651. The conclusions arrived at were that all sovereign powers resided in the provinces, and that to them severally, each within its own borders, belonged the control of the military forces and of religion There was to be no captain-general of the Union All the provinces, except F riesland and Groningen, which remained true to William Frederick of Nassau-Dietz, agreed to leave the office of s tad holder vacant. The practical result was the establishment ot the hegemony of Holland in the Union, and the handing over of the control of its policy to the patrician oligarchies who formed the town councils of that province. Such a system would have been unworkable but for the fact that with the revival of the political principles of Oldenbarneveldt, there was found a statesman of commanding The umm ability to fill the office in which the famous advocate gfg, - md of Holland had for so many years been “ minister of Pensionall affairs ” in the forming state. The title of advocate a'~" had indeed been replaced by that of grand pensionary (Raed Pensionarzs), but the duties assigned to the office remained the same, the only change of importance being that the advocate was appointed for life, the grand pensionary for a term of five years. The grand pensionary was nominally the paid servant of the States of Holland, but his functions were such as to permit a man of talent and industry in the s tad holder less republic to exercise control in all departments of policy and of government. All correspondence passed through his hands, he wrote all dispatches, conducted the debates over which he presided, kept the minutes, drafted the resolutions, and was ex ojirio the leader and spokesman of the delegates who represented the Province of Holland in the States-General. Such was the position to which John de Witt, a young man of twenty-eight years of age, belonging to one of the de most influential patrician families of Dordrecht (his father, Jacob de Witt, was one of the prisoners of Loevenstein) was appointed in 1653. From that date until 1672 it was his brain and his will that guided the affairs of theUnited Netherlands. He was supreme in the States of Holland, and Holland was dominant in the States-General (see JOHN DE WITT). . The death of William II had left the Dutch republic at the very highest point of commercial prosperity, based almost universal carrying trade, and the strictest upon an
system of monopoly Friction and disputes had gzifxfj frequently arisen between the Dutch and the English English tradeis in different parts of the world, and especially in the East Indies, culminating in the so-called “Massacre of Amboyna ”; and the strained relation and Dutch
Traders.
s between
the two nations would, but for the civil discords in England, have probably led to active hostilities during the reign of
Charles l. With the accession of Cromwell to power the breach