In the spring of 1575, Holland's Northern Quarter--the
waterlogged peninsula stretching from Amsterdam to the North
Sea--was threatened with imminent invasion by the Spanish army.
Since the outbreak of the Dutch Revolt a few years earlier, the
Spanish had repeatedly failed to expel the rebels under William of
Orange from this remote region, and now there were rumors that the
war-weary population harbored traitors conspiring to help the
Spanish invade. In response, rebel leaders arrested a number of
vagrants and peasants, put them on the rack, and brutally tortured
them until they confessed and named their principals--a witch-hunt
that eventually led to a young Catholic lawyer named Jan
Jeroenszoon.
"Treason in the Northern Quarter" tells how Jan Jeroenszoon,
through great personal courage and faith in the rule of law,
managed to survive gruesome torture and vindicate himself by
successfully arguing at trial that the authorities remained subject
to the law even in times of war. Henk van Nierop uses Jan
Jeroenszoon's exceptional story to give the first account of the
Dutch Revolt from the point of view of its ordinary victims--town
burghers, fugitive Catholic clergy, peasants, and vagabonds. For
them the Dutch Revolt was not a heroic struggle for national
liberation but an ordinary dirty war, something to be survived, not
won.
An enthralling account of an unsuspected story with surprising
modern resonance, "Treason in the Northern Quarter" presents a new
image of the Dutch Revolt, one that will fascinate anyone
interested in the nature of revolution and civil war or the fate of
law during wartime.
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