The Rise of the Dutch Republic — Volume 25: 1577, part II
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About This Book
The narrative recounts a ceremonial reception for a newly arrived governor whose public triumph conceals deep contempt for the provinces and a scheme to use his post for secret purposes. Private correspondence with a royal secretary entangles the governor and his aide in a treacherous network of intrigue, betrayals, and misinterpreted letters that inflame royal suspicions. Political maneuvering, divided loyalties, and debates over military measures set the governor against the leading provincial prince, whose cautious, tolerant stance draws criticism. Negotiations at Gertruydenberg, clerical-and-state tensions culminating in a heresy execution, and the emergence of three distinct political factions illustrate the era's instability and the governor's fear of losing liberty.
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