Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Foreword
- Chap. I The Failure of Diplomacy—Spring 1687 to October 2nd, 1688
- Chap. II Hostilities begun; the Prince's False Start—October 3rd to 29th
- Chap. III The Successful Sailing of the Prince—October 30th to November 7th
- Chap. IV Dartmouth's Attempt on Torbay—November 7th to 22nd
- Chap. V Inaction in the Royal Fleet—November 22nd to December 1st
- Chap. VI The Surrender of the Royal Fleet—December 2nd to 14th
- Chap. VII From December 14th, 1688, to February 13th, 1688/9
- Appendix to Chapter I: The English Navy—Administration, Matériel and Personnel; a brief survey of the Dutch Naval Organisation; remarks upon the Navy of Louis XIV
- List of Authorities
- Note
- Index
- Plate section
Chap. I - The Failure of Diplomacy—Spring 1687 to October 2nd, 1688
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- Foreword
- Chap. I The Failure of Diplomacy—Spring 1687 to October 2nd, 1688
- Chap. II Hostilities begun; the Prince's False Start—October 3rd to 29th
- Chap. III The Successful Sailing of the Prince—October 30th to November 7th
- Chap. IV Dartmouth's Attempt on Torbay—November 7th to 22nd
- Chap. V Inaction in the Royal Fleet—November 22nd to December 1st
- Chap. VI The Surrender of the Royal Fleet—December 2nd to 14th
- Chap. VII From December 14th, 1688, to February 13th, 1688/9
- Appendix to Chapter I: The English Navy—Administration, Matériel and Personnel; a brief survey of the Dutch Naval Organisation; remarks upon the Navy of Louis XIV
- List of Authorities
- Note
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
It is well known that, at the close of the spring of 1687, the Dutch emissary, Everard Van Dyckvelt, having completed a brief, special mission from the court of William, Prince of Orange, Stadholder of the United Provinces, to the court of James II, the father of William's consort Mary, heiress-presumptive to the English throne, returned to his master at the Hague; and the high significance attaching to the return of the ambassador from a mission which, from a purely diplomatic point of view, had been quite unnecessarily undertaken, and which has rightly been called an embassy “not to the government but to the opposition”, has always been plain to students of Anglo-Dutch diplomacy of the months just preceding the Revolution of 1688. Indeed Mazure, the French historian of our Revolution, has declared with force and simplicity: “Le retour de Dyckvelt décida la fortune de Jacques II en fixant les résolutions du prince d'Orange”. Broadly, the statement is true. It was immediately after this embassy that the opposed policies of London and the Hague hardened into an irreconcileable opposition. The conclusion of the embassy is therefore that appropriate place at which, for the purpose of such a work as the present, to attempt to capture the aims and to gauge the character of the baffled diplomacy which, in so short a space, was to provide for Europe the spectacle of a prince intervening by force in the domestic concerns of his father-in-law, prosecuting a design quite indistinguishable from an overt act of war.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The English Navy in the Revolution of 1688 , pp. 1 - 32Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1928