1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
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- MichelB
- Posts: 1689
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- Location: The Netherlands
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
The Dutch had no intent of ever 'reconquering' Belgium (which didn't exist in the 17th century: Flanders belonged to Spain, the Holy Roman Empire and Austria successively); the whole idea would be preposterous. The Dutch republic had a defensive posture on the European mainland, with an underfunded land army barely sufficient to man our border forts. There never was any war between the Republic and Belgium (which didn't exist): we had other things to do and completely diffirent internal issues on our minds. No supporters of reconcilliation were ever executed, no bellicose Calvinist church manipulated the population. You just have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.
Just one question: who taught you this? Where did you learn this?
Just one question: who taught you this? Where did you learn this?
If all else fails, a complete pig-headed refusal to see facts in the face will see us through. - General Melchett
- Filipe Ramires
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- Location: Lisbon, Portugal
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
From Emperor Palpatine?!?!?!?MichelB wrote:Just one question: who taught you this? Where did you learn this?
"Build few and build fast,
Each one better than the last"
John Fisher
Each one better than the last"
John Fisher
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henry4
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
I know in the XVII century the state of Belgium did not exist, nor the ATOMIUM ...MichelB wrote: You just have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.
But the name of Belgium has been known and used since the Romans.
Regarding the Dutch supporters of reconciliation (known as Remonstrants) were executed by the "Gomarists" and you can read about it in Wikipedia. But we must understand what we are reading .... Read it carefully. It is not religion, is political!
Regarding the religious manipulation, you need to read about "Gomarists" and new translations of the Bible used by them as war propaganda against Flanders (or Belgium, as you prefer) ...
Everything is in Wikipedia. With errors and misspelled, but it's there.
- MichelB
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- Location: The Netherlands
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
But you are taking a internal power struggle along religious/political lines, (which was fought in what, for 17th-century european standards would exceptionally mild manners (what, one execution? this is the 17th century...) and you are positioning it as a means in in an international conflict. That international conflict didn't exist. "War against Flanders"? Sorry, dude, but that's as farfetched as seeing the current Spanish political debates as a part of some warmongering against Portugal.
If all else fails, a complete pig-headed refusal to see facts in the face will see us through. - General Melchett
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henry4
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
It is evident that you are not well informed.MichelB wrote: no bellicose Calvinist church manipulated the population
Do you know who were the "Gomarists"?
They were the Calvinist Inquisition in Holland during XVII century and later. But with absollute political power.
They not only helped to promote and maintain the 80 years civil war in Netherlands, breaking the Netherlands in two forever ...
Also the Gomarists were busy sabotaging any possibility of peace and reconciliation, prosecuting the supporters of the truce in Flanders. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johan_van_Oldenbarnevelt )
At the same time, they developed the first anti-Semitic and racist theological thesis in the history of the cristianism. According Gomarists interpretation of the Bible, the Jews and blacks were predestined to be prosecuted and enslaved by Christians ... These theories were applied in the Dutch colonies like Surinam and South Africa, where the Dutch Church justified the slavary and the apartheid. In the twentieth century the Nazis adopted the Gomarists thesis to prosecute the jews.
I think is important recognize this here.
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Guest
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
I dont understand why the moderator dont block this thread too ...how much time more doo you need to realize that the user henry4 is only a provocative extremist lead only to glorify his beloved Spain
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EJFoeth
- Posts: 2909
- Joined: Wed Jan 21, 2009 1:51 pm
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Ah yes, the 80-year civil war , also known (from the side that didn't loose) as the Dutch war of independence against Spanish occupation.
- MichelB
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- Location: The Netherlands
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Maybe they call it the War of Northern Aggression?
(no jab to the South)
(no jab to the South)
If all else fails, a complete pig-headed refusal to see facts in the face will see us through. - General Melchett
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henry4
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Regarding the definition of "civil war":EJFoeth wrote:...the 80-year civil war ,... also known... as the Dutch war of independence
If you read about the "Union of Arras", and the "Union of Utrecht",
you come to the conclusion that
the name of "The Dutch War of Independence"
is only a false euphemism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_of_Arras
The "80 years war" really was between these two "Unions"
and NOT between two different states.
So we must conclude it was a civil/secesion war
Jokes apart...MichelB wrote:Maybe they call it
the War of Northern Aggression?![]()
From the peace of 1609,
the Union of Utrecht (Holland) sought
and promoted to start again the war
against the Union of Arras (Belgium).
And you know this better than me.
- Filipe Ramires
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- Location: Lisbon, Portugal
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Wouldn't make much sense such debate given that, as a defined border nation-state, Portugal is older then Spain.MichelB wrote:Sorry, dude, but that's as farfetched as seeing the current Spanish political debates as a part of some warmongering against Portugal.
"Build few and build fast,
Each one better than the last"
John Fisher
Each one better than the last"
John Fisher
- MichelB
- Posts: 1689
- Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2005 10:26 am
- Location: The Netherlands
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
In a way... yeah, I do!henry4 wrote:And you know this better than me.
If all else fails, a complete pig-headed refusal to see facts in the face will see us through. - General Melchett
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sandy
- Posts: 330
- Joined: Sun Nov 14, 2010 4:54 pm
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
It was all the fault of the Compte du Cunarde, who was, I believe, the inventor of spontaneous combustion in his later years.
He married the Duchess of Normandie but it all ended badly apparently.
There is some interesting stuff about him on wikipedia.
He married the Duchess of Normandie but it all ended badly apparently.
There is some interesting stuff about him on wikipedia.
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Pieter
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 9:19 am
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Baarle Nassau / Baarle Hertog can be real fun if you have a TomTom or a similar nav system in your car.
Hertog has it's own internal enclaves and exclaves so on some roads the nationality changes every hundred meters. Too much for my brothers' TomTom in any case. When we drove around Baarle last year we got the following results:
"You are entering Belgium"
"You are entering The Netherlands"
"You are entering Belgium"
"You are entering The Netherlands"
"You are entering ....Beeeeep..."
"Just a moment...just a moment.....just a moment..."
As we are 2001 fans we decided to switch it off and dig out the old fashioned road map.
Hertog has it's own internal enclaves and exclaves so on some roads the nationality changes every hundred meters. Too much for my brothers' TomTom in any case. When we drove around Baarle last year we got the following results:
"You are entering Belgium"
"You are entering The Netherlands"
"You are entering Belgium"
"You are entering The Netherlands"
"You are entering ....Beeeeep..."
"Just a moment...just a moment.....just a moment..."
As we are 2001 fans we decided to switch it off and dig out the old fashioned road map.
MichelB wrote: Interestingly, there are still small enclaves of Belgium within the Netherlands: Baarle-Hertog, following ancient lines of land divisions. It makes for interesting zoning and city planning, to say the least. However, the severest cross border incidents nowadays consist of passing out drunk on each others doorsteps during carnival.
Last edited by Pieter on Tue Jul 02, 2013 7:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Pieter
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 9:19 am
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Nope. All feudal borders in Europe were that way until things got rationalised in the 19th century, when things like nations and standard language were invented so borders actuallly acquired meaning. Clear borders between states became neccesary because of that. Baarle Nassau / Baarle Hertog sort of missed out. Like Andorra and San Marino they're a reminder of a time before rigid nation states and nationalism.
Portobelo wrote: It seems like the border between Flanders and the Netherlands has been very Balkan in the past.
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Pieter
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 9:19 am
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
The 1839 border treaty was definately rational for the powers who signed it, apart from the clauses on Baarle Hertog / Nassau and Neutral Moresnet. That's why these exceptions are so interesting. The 1839 treaty also included the Schelde clauses which are still active (do a google translate on Hedwige polder and have good laugh...let's say some dutch politicians have their own rationality issues) and gave Antwerp guaranteed access to the sea as the Great Powers wanted an economically viable buffer state to keep Louis Phillippe's France in check.
The 1648 treaty that made the Antwerp blockade permanent for 150 years was also rational. In 1648 neither the Spanish Empire nor the united provinces were able to risk another war to change the satus-quo. So the spanish empire left Antwerp and the Spanish Netherlands a backwater of the empire instead of the core of the Habsburg empire which Charles V had originally intended. This was a perfectly rational political decision by both powers. Treaties, like war, are politics by other means. Did the United provinces (who lost the original core city of calvinism in the Netherlands, Antwerp) or the Spanish Empire like this? No. Did the Spanish Empire like the result? Equally no. But both knew that they could not afford another war.
The 1648 treaty that made the Antwerp blockade permanent for 150 years was also rational. In 1648 neither the Spanish Empire nor the united provinces were able to risk another war to change the satus-quo. So the spanish empire left Antwerp and the Spanish Netherlands a backwater of the empire instead of the core of the Habsburg empire which Charles V had originally intended. This was a perfectly rational political decision by both powers. Treaties, like war, are politics by other means. Did the United provinces (who lost the original core city of calvinism in the Netherlands, Antwerp) or the Spanish Empire like this? No. Did the Spanish Empire like the result? Equally no. But both knew that they could not afford another war.
The border between Belgium and Netherland is far to be rational. /quote]Portobelo wrote:Pieter wrote:Nope. All feudal borders in Europe were that way until things got rationalised in the 19th century
Last edited by Pieter on Tue Jul 02, 2013 7:29 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Doug
Re: 1585 Naval Blockade to Antwerp.
Yes. But also the partition of Germany at the end of World War II or to build the Berlin Wall were both very rational agreements for those who signed it. But at the same time, for the population and for the country, both things were an absurd aberration.
There was no agreement to build the Berlin Wall. It was an unilateral act by the CCCP and it's puppet, the DDR.
There was no agreement to build the Berlin Wall. It was an unilateral act by the CCCP and it's puppet, the DDR.