
In the early 1560s the Low Countries were a restless patchwork of provinces under the rule of Spain’s King Philip II. A coalition of leading nobles—including the Prince of Orange, the Count of Egmont, and the Count of Horn—break their silence with a bold letter demanding the removal of Cardinal Granvelle, whose grip on administration they deem oppressive. Their plea sets the stage for a tense showdown between local aristocracy and the distant monarch, exposing the fragile balance between loyalty and dissent.
The volume draws directly from the surviving letters, royal directives, and diplomatic reports of the period, letting listeners hear the heated arguments as they unfolded. Through these documents, the narrative captures the anxiety of provincial elites, the king’s calculated responses, and the early rumblings of what would become the Dutch Revolt. Listeners gain a vivid sense of the political chessboard that defined the Republic’s emergence, all while staying within the initial confrontations.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (121K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1814–1877
Best known for sweeping, dramatic histories of the Dutch Republic, this American writer brought 16th-century Europe vividly to life for generations of readers. He also moved through politics and diplomacy, serving the United States abroad while building a reputation as a serious historian.
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