- Willem IV van den Bergh
Willem IV, Count van den Bergh (
's-Heerenberg ,December 24 ,1537 –Ulft ,November 6 ,1586 ) wasStadtholder of Guelders and Zutphen from 1581 until his arrest for suspected treason in 1583.Biography
Willem was the son of count Oswald II van den Bergh [The name "Van den Bergh" is a surname ("De Monte"); the name "Bergh" refers to the lordship
Bergh .] and Elisabeth van Dorth. He spent time at the court of the RegentMary of Austria (1505–1558) of theHabsburg Netherlands in Brussels at the same time that his contemporaryWilliam the Silent ,Prince of Orange was educated there. He married the elder sister of Orange, Maria of Nassau, onNovember 11 ,1556 atMoers .In 1566 he was a prominent member of the League of Nobles (also known as the Compromis) that presented a petition of grievances about the suppression of heresy to the Brussels government of the new Regent
Margaret of Parma (who acted for her brotherPhilip II of Spain ). They were derided asGeuzen ("Beggars") for their trouble by a courtier, which epithet would become a name of honor for the future rebels in theDutch Revolt . This prominence put him in the crosshairs whenFernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba succeeded Margaret as governor-general of the Netherlands in 1567 and started a program of repression. Together with a number of other "ringleaders", like Orange, Willem was indicted before theCouncil of Troubles , but he escaped with his family toBremen .In 1572 he commanded one of the little armies of mercenaries, financed by his brother-in-law the Prince of Orange, that invaded the Netherlands. He was successful initially, and conquered in short order
Doetinchem ,Zutphen ,Deventer ,Zwolle ,Kampen , andSteenwijk . However, he was not able to withstand the onslaught of the Spanish troops under Alba's sonFadrique Álvarez de Toledo, 4th Duke of Alba . Only after thePacification of Ghent , of whose amnesty he benefited, was he able to return to the Netherlands and regained his forfeited possessions.Though he hoped to be appointed stadtholder of Gelderland on behalf of the
States-General of the Netherlands , this ambition was initially thwarted when his other brother-in-law got the post. Disaffected by this disappointment he secretly approached the new royal governor-general of the Netherlands,Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma with the object of becoming the royal stadtholder of Guelders and Zutphen (which county at the time was still separate from the current province).However, John resigned the office in 1581 and now Willem was appointed stadtholder for the rebellious States-General after all. He remained in contact with Parma nevertheless, and stealthily sabotaged the military efforts of the Rebels, which may have contributed to the Spanish successes in the eastern provinces of the Netherlands in these years. His treasonous correspondence was discovered and he was arrested by the chancellor of Guelders,
Elbertus Leoninus onNovember 5 ,1583 [aut|Blok, P.J., (Translated by O.A.Bierstadt, R. Putnam) (1900) "History of the people of the Netherlands. Part III The War wit Spain", p. 170] . Soon thereafter he was released after he promised to retire to his castle in Ulft and remain neutral in the conflict. [http://www.oranje-nassau.org/on.asp?rubriek=Nieuwsbrief&ID=222]After his release, however, he defected to the royalist forces after all, together with his sons, who all became officers in the Spanish service, and performed important services for the Spanish cause.
References
ources
* aut|Aa, A.J. van der, "et al." (1869), "Willem van den Bergh" in: "Biographisch Woordenboek der Nederlanden II, eerste stuk", (Haarlem) pp. 386-390
External links
* [http://dutchrevolt.leidenuniv.nl/Nederlands/personen/b/bergh%20willem%20iv.htm Willem IV graaf van den Bergh]
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