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Contents

   



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1 Personal details  





2 Career  





3 Notes  





4 References  





5 Sources  














Hendrik van den Bergh (count)






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Count
Hendrik van den Bergh
Lord of Stevensweert
Hendrik van den Bergh by Van Dyck, around 1628, shown holding a commander's baton; this may have been painted to celebrate his promotion as Maestre de campo[1]
StadtholderofUpper Guelders
In office
1618–1637
Preceded byFrederik van den Bergh
Succeeded byGuillaume de Bette
Maestre de campo, Army of Flanders
In office
1628–1632
Personal details
Born1573
Bremen, Germany
Died22 May 1638(1638-05-22) (aged 64)
Elburg, Gelderland
Spouse(s)(1) Unknown
(2) 1612–1627 Margaretha van Wittem (Her death)
(3) 1629–1638 Hiëronyma Catharina (His death)
Children(1) Anna Maria (1600-1653); Herman Frederik (1600-1669)
(2) Maria Van den Bergh (1613-1671); Herman Oswald (1614-1622)
(3) Elisabeth Catharina (1632-1681); Amalia Lucia (1633-1711); Mary Agnes; Anna Carolina; Wilhelmina Juliana (1638-1714)
Parent(s)Willem IV van den Bergh; Maria of Nassau
OccupationSoldier and statesman
Military service
AllegianceHabsburg Spain until 1632
Dutch Republic 1632–1638
Battles/wars
  • Siege of Jülich (1621–1622)
  • Breda
  • Siege of Groenlo (1627)
  • Siege of 's-Hertogenbosch
  • Hendrik van den Bergh (German: Heinrich von dem Bergh), 1573 to 22 May 1638, was a Flemish noble and professional soldier. Hereditary lord of Stevensweert, from 1618 to 1637 he was also stadtholderofUpper Guelders, the only part of Guelders to remain loyal to Habsburg Spain during the Eighty Years War. Known as a brave and resourceful cavalry commander, he spent most of his career with the Spanish Army of Flanders and became its Maestre de campo in 1628. Accused of treachery after the loss of Den Bosch in 1629, he defected to the Dutch Republic following the 1632 Conspiracy of Nobles.[2]

    Personal details[edit]

    Hendrik was born in 1573, sixth surviving son of Willem IV van den Bergh (1537—1586) and Maria of Nassau (1539—1599), eldest sister of William the Silent. One of nine sons and eight daughters, his siblings included Herman (1558—1611), Frederik (1559—1618), Oswald (1561—1586), Adam (1563—1590), Adolf (1571—1609), Lodewijk (1572—1592) and Catharina (1578—1640).[3]

    Before his marriage in 1612 to Margaretha van Wittem (1580—1627), Hendrik had two children, Anna Maria Elisabeth (1600—1653) and Herman Frederik (1600—1669); although he acknowledged both, they do not appear in the family genealogy, so may have been illegitimate.
    He and Margaretha had

    Two years after her death in 1627, he married again, this time to Hiëronyma Catharina, Countess of Spaur-Flavon (1600—1683), and they had five daughters; Elisabeth Catharina (1632—1681), Amalia Lucia (1633—1711), Mary Agnes, Anna Carolina, and Wilhelmina Juliana (1638—1714).[4]

    Career[edit]

    At the beginning of the Dutch Revolt against Spain in 1566, his father Willem IV was among those who supported Protestant demands for greater religious freedom. Charged by the Spanish government with treason and heresy, his estates were seized and Willem fled to Bremen, where Hendrik was born in 1573. Willem returned home in 1576 after an amnesty and in 1581 was appointed stadtholderofGuelders by the States General of the Netherlands. Arrested by the Dutch for suspected treason in 1583, he joined the Spanish in 1584 and died in 1586.[5]

    Hendrik van den Bergh (count) is located in Netherlands
    Roermond

    Roermond

    Maastricht

    Maastricht

    Den Bosch

    Den Bosch

    Steenwijk

    Steenwijk

    Venlo

    Venlo

    Brussels

    Brussels

    Liège

    Liège

    Groenlo

    Groenlo

    Breda

    Breda

    Boksum

    Boksum

    Geldern

    Geldern

    Elburg

    Elburg

    Groeningen

    Groeningen

    The Spanish Netherlands and Dutch Republic; key locations in article (Note; using modern borders)

    Hendrik followed his father into the Spanish Army of Flanders, as did his brothers, four of whom died on active service; Oswald at Boksum in 1586, Adam at Groningen in 1590, Lodewijk at Steenwijk in 1592, and Adolf in 1609.[3] In 1595, he was seized by Dutch troops outside Weert, and released only after paying a large ransom; he later took part in the 1606 capture of Groenlo, but was taken prisoner again in 1607 near Roermond. In 1618, he succeeded his elder brother Fredrik as StadtholderofUpper Guelders, which along with its capital Geldern [a] was the only part of Guelders that remained loyal to Spain, rather than joining the Dutch province of Gelderland.[6]

    When the Dutch War resumed in 1621 following the end of the Twelve Years' Truce, Hendrik served as deputy to the Spanish commander Ambrogio Spinola and took part in the sieges of Jülich, Breda and Groenlo. Frustrated by what he perceived as Madrid's failure to provide enough money and men, Spinola resigned in January 1628 and Hendrik was appointed Maestre de campo of the Army of Flanders. The promotion of a Flemish "native" was intended to placate critics of the Spanish administration in Brussels, but Hendrik also acquired numerous enemies, many of them disappointed competitors.[7]

    The Spanish garrison leave Den Bosch after its surrender in 1629; Van der Bergh was blamed for its loss
    Hendrik van den Bergh in Nederlandtsche Jaerboeken

    His financial problems worsened when a Dutch squadron captured the Spanish treasure fleetatMatanzas in September 1628; this meant Spanish troops went unpaid, while the Dutch used the windfall to fund an attack on Den Bosch in 1629. Deciding their siege lines were too strong to assault directly, Hendrik tried to force Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, to lift the siege through a series of diversionary attacks, including an invasion of the Veluwe which he led in person. These achieved little and Den Bosch surrendered in August 1629, a significant setback for the Spanish cause.[8]

    Dutch military success, plus growing discontent with Spanish management of the war and its cost, meant elements within the Southern Netherlands now began seeking to end it. Hendrik had several incentives for joining them, one being that his domestic opponents blamed him for the loss of Den Bosch, while estates owned by his wife outside the city had been confiscated by the Dutch.[7] The plotters originally planned to re-unite the largely Catholic and loyalist south with the Protestant dominated rebels in the north, but support for this option crumbled due to the mistreatment of Catholics in Den Bosch by their Calvinist conquerors.[9]

    In April 1632, Hendrik and René de Renesse, 1st Count of Warfusée, organised an alternative plot known as the Conspiracy of Nobles. This would have divided the Spanish Netherlands between the Dutch Republic and France, simultaneously ousting the Spanish and ending the war, while protecting Catholic rights in the south. The plotters published a manifesto explaining their ideas but could not rally sufficient support to threaten the Brussels government.[10] They also held secret talks with Frederick Henry, who was persuaded to abandon plans to attack Antwerp, and move instead against Maastricht. The town surrendered on 26 August 1632, an outcome made considerably easier when Hendrik made no attempt to defend Roermond or Venlo.[11]

    By engineering the loss of Maastricht, Hendrik and Warfusée had hoped to increase discontent with the Spanish and thus support for a negotiated solution, but while a serious blow, it failed to achieve this.[11] Hendrik fled to neutral Liège, where he unsuccessfully continued his attempts to incite a revolt and joined the Dutch States Army in 1633.[12] However, his past record and that of his father meant the Dutch did not fully trust him, while he was replaced as Stadtholder of Upper Guelders by Guillaume de Bette, a Spanish loyalist. He retired to Elburg in 1634, where he died on 22 May 1638.[2]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Now in the modern German state of North Rhine-Westphalia

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Count Hendrik van den Bergh 1627 - 1632". El Prado Museum. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  • ^ a b Steen 2017.
  • ^ a b Molhuysen & Blok 1930, p. 84.
  • ^ Molhuysen & Blok 1930, pp. 77–78.
  • ^ Lem.
  • ^ Molhuysen & Blok 1930, pp. 73–74.
  • ^ a b Steen 2015, p. 163.
  • ^ Lem 2018, p. 183.
  • ^ Limm 1989, p. 83.
  • ^ Steen 2015, p. 174.
  • ^ a b Steen 2015, p. 164.
  • ^ Molhuysen & Blok 1930, p. 74.
  • Sources[edit]


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    This page was last edited on 30 November 2023, at 19:31 (UTC).

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