Eighty Years War (Dutch War of Independence) (1568-1648)
Contemporary prints and maps of the battles and sieges of the Eighty Years War
View of Breda, 1590 (Breda, North Brabant, Netherlands) 51°35ʹ11ʺN 04°46ʹ33ʺE
c. 1601Etching and engraving; printed on paper; mounted on paper (Mount Type B); gilt edges left, bottom and right | 34.7 x 47.7 cm (image and sheet) | RCIN 721090
Four views of the capture on 4 March 1590 of Breda from Spanish forces, commanded by Paolo Lanzavecchia, by Dutch-English troops commanded by Maurice of Nassau (14 November 1567-23 April 1625) and Francis Vere (c.1560-18 August 1609). Eighty Years War (Dutch War of Independence) (1568-1648).
Breda was the northernmost Habsburg stronghold and it was the first in a long list of captures to be made by Maurice of Nassau over the next few years. The town was taken by subterfuge: the Dutch and English troops were hidden in turf barges and shipped in to the city. The soldiers are shown in the top left view, gathering on the banks of the River Mark, preparing to embark on a barge; the next scene, top right, depicts the barge entering the city. At daybreak on 4 March (a Sunday) the Dutch and English left the boats and are shown in the third scene, bottom left, divided into two groups, one attacking the guards while the other assaults the arsenal. Finally, bottom right, the main cavalry and infantry troops, with Maurice and Francis Vere arrive.
The date of 1599 which is given in the old heading and old catalogue is an error. The Monogram Hh is identified by Nägler No.1034 as Heinrich Hondius the Elder and Younger. An example of this print without the monogram has been catalogued by Muller (FMH 990-a; vol.I, p.119) as published by Henrick Haestens; however, the example which does have the monogram (FMH 990-b) is recorded by Muller as published by Hendrick Hondius I.
The numbers which are present on each of these four views are not explained in an accompanying text in this collection. The Breda Museum has an example [call number not given] of this print which has three columns of letterpress text, printed in Delft (no date), which have been mounted in two columns, one down each side of the print. The title of this text is Waerachtich / Verhael / Ende / Af-beeldinghe / Van het kloec-dadich feyt / en vant innemen des kasteels ende Stadt / van Breda onder tbevel des hoochgheboren Prins Maurits / van Nassau, int jaer 1590 den 4 Martii. This text does have a key which explains the nine numbers on the print.
Dolendo also made four very similar, small, rectangular etchings/engravings which were printed on one sheet. They were published in J.J. Orlers’s and H. van Haestens’s Den Nassauschen Lauren-Crans: Beschrijvinghe ende af-beeldinge van alle de victorien … de Staten der Vereenichde Nederlanden, Leiden, 1610 (see Rijksmuseum RP-P-OB-80.091). These four rectangular views also carry the same numbers which are explained in the letterpress text below the views:
1. Die stadt Seven-berghen
2. Het fort Nordam
3. Plaetsche daer die Soldaten by nacht int turfschip zijn ghegaen.
4. Plaetsche alwaer het Schip lach, na dat het vande Soldaten was inghehaelt.
5.Twee cordeguarden van dees scheeps-Soldaten overvallen.
6. Vyt-val ghedaen uyt het binnen-Hoff; gheresisteert, ende te rugghe-ghedreven.
7. Brugghe van’t Casteel, by die vande Stadt ende haere Soldaten verbrandt.
8. Poorte daer door zijn Excel. met ander ende meerder crijchs-volck is inghecomen.
9. T’vluchten der Italianen siende het Casteel verloren.
The Rijksmuseum (RP-P-OB-80.090) have assigned a date of c.1597-1601 for the state of the print which is catalogued here. This state is probably a later printing of the issue which lacks the Hh monogram. In either case, it can be said that, although Grotius had indeed published a couple of Latin verses by the time he was eight, in 1591, (the year after the events portrayed in the print) it is more likely that these verses were published at a later date and after his matriculation from University in 1597 by which time he had published one Greek ode and two other Latin poems.
? Bartholomeus Willemsz. Dolendo (c. 1560-1626) (engraver) [bottom right, inside the frame of bottom right oval, centre, a monogram:] BD.
Hendrik Hondius I (1573-1650) (publisher) [bottom left:] Cum Priuilegio Hh. exc.
Subject(s)
Army-NetherlandsArmy-EnglandMaurice, Prince of Orange (1567-1625)Sir Francis Vere (1560-1609)Watermark: Bunch of grapes with a fleur-de-lys on top, a cartouche with the letters T and I below that
Condition: considerable foxing on mount; remains of guard along top edge. Verso: waterstained patch top right corner which does not extend to the mount; some foxing on print; pressure marks from the mounts of items which were kept above and below this map/print in a different collection are present on the recto and verso
34.7 x 47.7 cm (image and sheet)
40.7 x 54.7 cm (mount)
Printed title:
ASPICIS ILIACAM, (QVID ENIM DISCRIMINIS?) ARCEM / NONNE, VIDES? LAXAT CLAVSTRA VIROSQVE SINON. / PRIMA NEOPTOLEMI HÆC NOSTRI VICTORIA: ACHILLE / QVI MAIOR, DICI SI PATIETVR, ERIT. H. Grotius. [four oval views, each with a poem by Grotius engraved around the perimeter, within an oval frame containing, in the interstices, five coats of arms (top centre: Seven United Provinces; right: Maurice of Nassau; bottom centre: Breda; left: Philip William, Prince of Orange; centre: Brabant); poem by Grotius around outer oval]
Printed title:
1. Hollandos non immerito mirabitur hospes / Ad Vulcani usum cespite posse frui. / Die mihi iam quanto melius mirabitur idem / Perficere Hollandos cespite Martis opus? H. Grotius. [poem around top left view]
Printed title:
2. Falleris hanc duci qui reris ab hoste carinam: / Fata ratim nobis semper amica trahunt. / Illa subit mediæq minans illabitur Arci: / Scilicet hæc hosti cymba Charoniis erit. H. Grotius. [poem around top right view]
Printed title:
3. Arx Bredana satis munita est: / causa sed, omni / Quæ munimento fortior > æqua deest. / Quid iuvat excubys non recte parta tueri? / Pro iustis Dominis excubat ipse Deus. [poem around bottom left view]
Printed title:
4. Tu quae sæpe alias improvida capta fuisti / Nunc quoq sic domino reddita Breda tuo es. / Res cessit semel illa tibi feliciter: at tu / Disce tuo post hæc cautior esse malo. H. Grotius. [poem around bottom right view]
Annotations:
George III heading: Breda 1599.
Other annotations: (Recto) [top right, black pencil:] 1599 Breda taken by Prince Maurice. [bottom right, black pencil:] 1599. (Verso) [top, left of centre, on view, black pencil:] I/86; [red pencil:] 1/81 [the ‘81’ is crossed out, in red pencil and replaced with, also red pencil:] 1/82 [and in ink:] -2; [top right, on mount, black pencil:] Breda.
George III catalogue entry:
Breda Four Views of Breda, taken by Prince Maurice in 1599; by BD (Bart. Dolendo) published by Hh (Henry Hondius).
Subject(s)
Breda, North Brabant, Netherlands (51°35ʹ11ʺN 04°46ʹ33ʺE)
Bibliographic reference(s)
M. ‘t Hart, The Dutch Wars of Independence: warfare and commerce in the Netherlands, 1570-1680, London & New York 2014, p. 21
C. Oman, A history of the art of war in the sixteenth century, London, reprinted 1989, pp. 545, 569
W.S.M. Knight, ‘The life and works of Hugo Grotius’, The Grotius Society Publications 4, London 1925, pp. 38-9
M. McDonald, The Print Collection of Cassiano dal Pozzo. Part II, Architecture, Topography and Military Maps, 3 vols, London 2019, cat. no. 2735
Page revisions
25 May 2024
Current version