The Duke of Alba
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
In
the sixteenth century, Europe was devastated by wars of religion,
a fact which gives that unhappy time some relevance to our own.
The foremost soldier and commander in sixteenth-century Europe was
the Duke of Alba. An
excellent new biography of the Duke by Henry Kamen offers some
less than encouraging lessons.
In
the 1560s, Spain faced a minor revolt in the Netherlands, which
were then controlled by the Spanish crown. Hundreds of Catholic
churches were sacked and desecrated by mobs of Calvinists. Philip
II of Spain decided to send an army, commanded by the Duke of Alba
despite the fact that by Spring, 1567, the Netherlands' regent
had put the rebellion down. In effect, Philip and Alba embarked
on a "war of choice," against the advice of both local
authorities and many of Philip’s counselors.
The
Duke of Alba’s arrival in Brussels on Friday, August 22, 1567, at
the head of an army of 10,000 men it was the first to follow
the famous "Spanish Road" created a problem where
none existed. Henry Kamen writes,
The duke
of Alba, observers guessed, was there to restore order, arrest
dissidents and check the growth of heresy. But the situation,
according to Margaret of Parma (the Regent), was under control,
so why was an army needed? It was in any case the first time that
heresy in another country had ever appeared to be a concern of
the Spanish crown.
Once
Alba got himself settled, he began arresting Flemish aristocrats,
including some of those who had helped Margaret suppress the previous
year’s rebellion. King Phillip wrote to Alba in November, 1567,
"you have a free hand." He did so despite some excellent
advice from Friar Lorenzo de Villavicencio, who had lived in the
Netherlands.
The situation,
Villavicencio insisted to the king, could not be resolved with
an army. Nor must force be used against the Netherlanders, for
that would unite them all against Spain . . . ‘Don’t let Your
Majesty be persuaded that the Flemings are beasts and drunks,
for they are human beings and if not so now they will be so one
day, standing together and in their own land and with neighbors
who will help them; and even if they kill one of ours and we kill
ten of theirs, in the end they will finish us.’ Spaniards could
not be allowed to govern in the country, ‘for they neither know
the language nor understand the laws and customs.’
Philip
and Alba ignored this advice; Alba’s motto was "Hombres muertos
no hazen guerra" dead men make no war. His army did
what armies do, kill people and break things, and the result was
a string of local victories. By the summer of 1570, Kamen writes,
Alba felt
he could congratulate himself on having achieved what no other
general in history had ever achieved: the pacification of a whole
province, "and without losing a single man, because I can
assure you that in the two campaigns barely a hundred soldiers
died."
But
that wasn’t the end of the story. The Dutch rebels adapted in a
way the Spanish had never imagined: they based themselves where
no Spanish troops could reach them, at sea. On April 1, 1572, the
Sea Beggars, as the maritime rebels called themselves, seized the
offshore port of Brill. On April 14, the Prince of Orange called
on the Dutch people to revolt against "cruel bloodthirsty,
foreign oppressors," and they did. The resulting war would
last for 80 years and result in Dutch independence and Spanish ruin.
As
to the Duke of Alba himself, and his policies in the Netherlands,
the best summary was offered by his successor there, Luis de Requesens.
As Henry Kamen quotes him,
All I know
is that when he came to this post he found the disturbances in
them settled and no territory lost, and everything so quiet and
secure that he could wield the knife as he wished. And by the
time he left all Holland and Zealand was in the power of the enemy,
as well as a good port of Guelderland and Brabant, and all the
opinion of these provinces, with the finances wholly ruined.
Whether
this epitaph will apply equally well to America’s invasion of Iraq,
time will tell. But it is all too possible that the Middle East
will end up being America’s Netherlands. In any event, I somehow
doubt that history will accept the Bush administration’s Newspeak
name for the invasion of Iraq, "Operation Iraqi Freedom."
Might "Operation Duke of Alba" be a more credible substitute?
July
28, 2005
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2005 William S. Lind
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