that there had been a surfeit of hangings in Rotterdam.
It is moreover not easy to distinguish with exactness
the lines which in those days separated regular sea
belligerents, privateers, and pirates from each other.
It had been laid down by the archdukes that there
was no military law at sea, and that sick soldiers
captured on the water should be hanged. Accordingly
they were hanged. Admiral Fazardo, of the Spanish
royal navy, not only captured all the enemy’s
merchant vessels which came in his way, but hanged,
drowned, and burned alive every man found on board.
Admiral Haultain, of the republican navy, had just
been occupied in drowning a whole regiment of Spanish
soldiers, captured in English and German transports.
The complaints brought against the English cruisers
by the Hollanders for capturing and confiscating their
vessels, and banging, maiming, and torturing their
crews—not only when England was neutral,
but even when she was the ally of the republic—had
been a standing topic for diplomatic discussion, and
almost a standing joke. Why, therefore, these
Dunkirk sea-rovers should not on the same principle
be allowed to rush forth from their very convenient
den to plunder friend and foe, burn ships, and butcher
the sailors at pleasure, seems difficult to understand.
To expect from the inhabitants of this robbers’
cave—this “church on the downs”—a
code of maritime law so much purer and sterner than
the system adopted by the English, the Spaniards, and
the Dutch, was hardly reasonable. Certainly the
Dunkirkers, who were mainly Netherlanders—rebels
to the republic and partisans of the Spanish crown—did
their best to destroy the herring fishery and to cut
the throats of the fishermen, but perhaps they received
the halter more often than other mariners who had
quite as thoroughly deserved it. And this at
last appeared the prevailing opinion in Rotterdam.
ETEXT editor’s
bookmarks:
Abstinence from unproductive
consumption
Defeated garrison ever
deserved more respect from friend or foe
His own past triumphs
seemed now his greatest enemies
Hundred thousand men
had laid down their lives by her decree
John Castel, who had
stabbed Henry IV.
Looking down upon her
struggle with benevolent indifference
No retrenchments in
his pleasures of women, dogs, and buildings
Sick soldiers captured
on the water should be hanged
The small children diminished
rapidly in numbers
When all was gone, they
began to eat each other
HISTORY OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS
From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve
Year’s Truce—1609
By John Lothrop Motley
History United Netherlands, Volume 78, 1605-1607
CHAPTER XLV.