
In the turbulent years following William the Silent’s death, the United Netherlands teeter on the brink of a fragile peace. The narrative opens amid exhausted armies and a Europe that has barely escaped catastrophe, as the Dutch and their English allies cling to hard‑won liberty while the Spanish Crown, bruised by recent defeats, plots its next move. Against this backdrop, the story zeroes in on the feverish campaigns of 1588‑89, revealing the political and personal stakes that drive both sides.
The centerpiece is the dramatic siege of Bergen‑op‑Zoom, where a daring amphibious assault led by Alexander and his packed flotilla meets the stubborn resistance of a well‑armed English‑Dutch garrison under Colonel Morgan. Readers hear the clash of pikemen and musketeers, the desperate crossing of the Vosmeer, and the fierce counter‑attacks of Maurice of Nassau and his comrades. Through vivid battlefield detail and the inner turmoil of the Duke of Parma, the account captures a pivotal moment when ambition, courage, and the lingering shadows of past triumphs collide on the flood‑touched banks of the Scheldt.
Language
en
Duration
~51 minutes (49K 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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