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Two societies, two conceptions of justice, collaborated and
collided when French forces stormed Cartagena of the Indies in May
1697. For their commander, the baron de Pointis, a naval captain in
the mould of Drake, this bloody if strategically pointless success
fulfilled a long-postponed design "that might be both honourable
and advantageous", with ships lent and soldiers (but not seamen)
paid by the King, who in return would take the Crown's usual
one-fifth interest in such "preis de vaisseaux", the remaining
costs falling on private subscribers, in this case no less than 666
of them, headed by courtiers, financiers, naval contractors and
officers of both pen and sword.' According to Pointis, peace
rumours restricted the flow of advances and the expedition, nearly
4,000 strong when it sailed out of Brest, was weaker than he had
planned, especially if it should prove difficult to use the ships'
crews ashore.
AS Dr. Coen Tamse points out in the introductory essay specially
written for this volume, what we call myths are all too often the
errors and misconceptions of others. Time being short and human un
derstanding imperfect, it is wise to suppose that posterity will
convict us all of thinking and acting in some sort within
mythological uni verses; only a dead myth is by common consent
recognized as a false reading of reality. And yet, in our troubled
century, we have witnessed the deliberate fabrication of
mythologies, apart from the inheritance of earlier growths like
those which still feed nationalism and anti Semitism. It almost
looks as if mass democracies positively require neatly packaged and
emotionally charged explanations of the social and political
environment as a substitute for religion. At all events, the modern
science of public relations has advanced far enough for cer tain
regimes, or for those who seek to overthrow them, to make a
calculated appeal to the vanities, anxieties and frustrations of
ordinary people by offering highly simplified explanations of a
baffling world, often in easily grasped pictorial or dramatic
forms, whether the object is to condition obedience or incite to
'struggle'. The advent of the mass media is generally, if unfairly,
taken to have opened limitless new op portunities for the
manipulation of our thought-processes, even below the threshold of
consciousness.
During the past few years the worlds has reverberated of names like
Seveso, Love Canal, Lekkerkerk, Times Beach, just to name the most
publicized ones. All these names are connected with hazardous or
toxic waste, waste from business and industry, especially the
chemical industry. The list is endless because there are, all over
the world, many thousands of "points noirs" not yet discovered or
identified old lagoons and landfills, polluted rivers, estuaries,
and harbors needing remedial action, which undoubtedly will reveal
more unpleasant secrets of the chemical industry's past. It is not
an exaggerated statement that chemists of the past have paid too
much attention to the composition of new products while neglecting
the disposition of byproducts, i.e., chemical waste. Admittedly,
during the last decade this attitude has changed dramatically.
Although we cannot yet properly speak of a new science of peri
ontology (the theory of residues), we seem to be headed towards
substantiated rules, analyses, disposal protocols, definitions and
remedial practices in handling the problems of chemical waste.
Especially during the last two years comprehensive treatises of the
whole complex subject as well as monographs dealing with assorted
aspects of waste tech nology have appeared."
EXCEPT for chapter 8, an editorial foot-bridge across the con fused
years which separate the Dutch Republic from the King dom of the
Netherlands, the essays collected in this volume were originally
read and discussed at meetings of Dutch and British historians held
between 22 and 27 September 1969 in a number of delightful comers
of Groningen and Friesland. That this con ference took place at all
was due in the first instance to the initiative and organizing
genius of the Instituut voor Geschiedenis of the University of
Groningen: particular thanks are due to the Rector Magnificus and
his colleagues of that illustrious place of learning. On behalf of
those fortunate enough to take part, we also wish to place on
record our deep gratitude for the benevolent assistance of the
Netherlands Ministerie van Onderwijs, of the H. S. Kammingafonds
and of the Groninger Universiteitsfonds. As our sub-title strives
to hint, the conference papers were commissioned with a view to
stimulating historical awareness of a problem which is increasingly
forcing itself on the attention of contemporary statesmen,
administrators, sociologists and others - indeed of all who value
local character and the human scale in the age of mass
communications and socialized government.
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