- Siege of Haarlem
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Siege of Haarlem
partof=theEighty Years' War
caption=
date=1572 -1573
place=Haarlem
result=Spanish victory
combatant1=Dutch rebels
combatant2=
commander1=Wigbolt Ripperda
commander2=Fadrique Alvarez de Toledo, Duke of Alva
strength1=2,550 infantry225 cavalry
strength2=17,000-18,000 Troops [Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World, 1494-1660 By Christopher Duffy pg 71 ]
casualties1=2,000 dead, wounded or captured
casualties2=1,700 dead or woundedIn the
Eighty Years' War the city ofHaarlem inthe Netherlands was put under a bloodysiege by a Spanish army that wanted to reclaim the rebellious city for Philip II, the Spanish king.Pretext
The city of Haarlem had a moderate view in the religious war that was going on in the Netherlands at that time. The city managed to escape from the
Reformed iconoclasm in1566 that affected other cities in theNetherlands . When the city ofBrielle was conquered by theGeuzen revolutionary army onApril 1 , the Haarlem municipality did not immediately start supporting theGeuzen . Initially, most city administrators -- unlike many citizens -- did not favor open revolution against Philip II of Spain, who had inherited rule of the Netherlands from his father, theHoly Roman Emperor Charles V. However, after much political debate the city officially turned against Philip II onJuly 4 ,1572 .The ruler of Spain was not pleased, and sent an army up north under command of Don Fadrique ("Don Frederick" in Dutch), son of the Duke of Alva. On
November 17 ,1572 all citizens of the city ofZutphen were murdered by the Spanish army, and onDecember 1 the city ofNaarden suffered the same fate.From
Amsterdam , still a pro-Spain city, the message came that perhaps negotiations with Don Fadrique were possible. The city administration sent a deputation of 4 people to Amsterdam. The cities defenses were commanded by city-governorWigbolt Ripperda , a commandor put in charge by theWilliam the Silent , thePrince of Orange . He strongly disapproved of negotiating with the Spanish army, and called the city guard together in De Doelen, and convinced them to stay loyal to the Prince of Orange. The city's administration was replaced with pro-Orange members. When the deputation came back from Amsterdam, they were convicted as traitors and sent to the Prince. TheSint-Bavokerk (Saint Bavo Church) was cleared ofRoman Catholic symbols the same day.Under siege
On
December 11 ,1572 the Spanish army put Haarlem under siege. The city was not very strong, military speaking. Although the city was completely surrounded by citywalls, they were not in a very good shape. The area around the city could not be inundated, and offered the enemy a lot of places the set up a camp. However, the existence of theHaarlemmermeer (a great lake) nearby, made it difficult for the enemy to cut off the transportation of food into the city completely.In the Middle Ages it was not usual to fight in the winter, but the city of Haarlem was crucial and Don Fadrique stayed and put the town under siege. The first two months of the siege the situation was in balance. The Spanish army was digging tunnels, to reach the city walls and blow them up. The defenders made tunnels to blow up the Spanish tunnels. The situation became worse for Haarlem on
March 29 ,1573 . TheAmsterdam army, faithful to the Spanish king, occupied theHaarlemmermeer and effectively blocked Haarlem from the outside world. The hunger in the city grew, and the situation became so tense that onMay 27 many (Spanish-loyal) prisoners were taken from the prison and murdered. In the early days of the battle, the Spanish army tried an assault of the city walls, but this attempt to quickly conquer the city failed due to the insufficient preparation by the Spanish army, which had not expected much resistance. This initial victory gave the defenders' morale a big boost.OnDecember 19 no less than 625 shots were fired at the defensive wall between the Janspoort to the Catherijnebridge. This forced the defenders to put up a completely new wall.Two city gates, the Kruispoort and the Janspoort collapsed from the fighting.
Kenau Simonsdochter Hasselaer , a very strong woman, helped defending the city.In the beginning of July
William I of Orange put together an army of 5000 soldiers near Leiden, to rescue Haarlem. However, the Spanish trapped them at the "Manpad" and defeated the army.urrender
After seven months the city surrendered on
July 13 ,1573 . Usually, after such a siege, there would be a period of time that the soldiers of the victoring army could pillage the city, but the citizens were allowed to buy themselves and the city free for 240,000guilder s.Many soldiers of the army that defended the city were slaughtered; many of them were drowned in the
Spaarne river. Governor Ripperda and his lieutenant were beheaded. Don Fadrique thanked God for his victory in the Sint-Bavokerk. The city would have to host a Spanishgarrison .Although ultimately the city could not be kept for the Prince of Orange, the siege showed other cities that the Spanish army was not invincible. This idea, and the great losses suffered by the Spanish army, helped the cities of
Leiden andAlkmaar in their sieges. The latter city would later defeat the Spanish army, a major breakthrough in the Dutch Revolt. In the Sint-Bavo church the following words can still be read:In dees grote nood, in ons uutereste ellent
Gaven wij de stadt op door hongers verbant
Niet dat hij se in creegh met stormender hant.
In this great need, in our uttermost misery,
we gave up the city, forced by hunger,
not that he took her by storm.External links
* [http://www.haarlemshuffle.com/history/topic.php?id=30 Haarlem Shuffle - The Siege of Haarlem]
Notes
References
* Het beleg van Haarlem; Haarlem's heldenstrijd in beeld en woord 1572-1572, F. De Witt Huberts, Oceanus, 1944, no ISBN
* Geschiedenis en beschrijving van Haarlem, van de vroegste tijden tot op onze dagen, F. Allan, J. J. van Brederode, Haarlem 1874
* Deugd boven geweld: een geschiedenis van Haarlem, 1245-1995, G.F. van der Ree-Scholtens (red), Uitgeverij Verloren, Hilversum 1995 (ISBN 90-6550-504-0)
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