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The English Exiles in Holland during the Reigns of Charles II and James II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

The United Provinces in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were the refuge of the oppressed of Western Europe. From the days of the Marian persecutions, considerable numbers of English exiles were to be found jostling one another in the busy street of Amsterdam and Rotterdam, wandering penniless along the quiet avenues of The Hague or seeking freedom in the more desolate expanses of Zealand. Reasons for the popularity of Holland as an asylum are not far to seek. In an age when religious heterodoxy was a political crime, the freedom of worship permitted in Holland was eagerly taken advantage of. The refugees went to live among a people who encouraged such immigration as a means of increasing the material prosperity of their country. English pamphleteers attributed the flourishing condition of Holland to this policy. ‘Liberty of Conscience’, wrote Sir Charles Wolseley, ‘would be a more serious blow to Holland than all the victories yet gained.’ Another writer drew attention to the part played by the refugees from the tyranny of Mary and Laud, in building up the prosperity of Amsterdam.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1948

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References

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page 111 note 2 A Letter from Holland touching Liberty of Conscience (1688).

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page 113 note 2 S.P. For., Spain, 72, pp. 21, 33; Historical Manuscripts Commission, Downshire MSS., i. 187.

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page 117 note 1 S.P. For., Holland, 202, pp. 72, 100, 102–3, 146; For. Entry Book 66, pp. 202, 203, 213–14 (the letter on p. 202 of 8 Aug. 1676 is misdated 28 Aug.) Wodrow, R., History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland (17211722), i. 434–5Google Scholar.

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page 117 note 4 Add. MSS. 17677 cc, p. 329.

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page 118 note 1 S.P. For., Holland, 168, p. 85; 169, pp. 51, 54, 57, 81, 129; Cal. S.P. Dom. 1663/4, PP. 512–13. He was not molested, however, as his confidence was gained by an intelligencer to whom he made a confession (ibid., 521, S.P. For., Holland, 170, p. 96).

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page 118 note 4 Mackintosh Coll. xxii (Add. MSS. 34508, pp. 51, 137–9); Add. MSS. 17677 hh, pp. 49, 63–4; Moreau Letter Book (Add. MSS. 38493, pp. 88–9, 103–4).

page 118 note 5 S.P. For., France, 150, p. 178; 151, p. 1; For. Entry Book 19, 10 Jan. 1686/7.

page 118 note 6 S.P. For., France, 151, pp. 46, 53; For. Entry Book 19, 7 April 1687.

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page 120 note 2 Ibid. 34508, pp. 50, 131.

page 120 note 3 Cal. S.P. Dom., 1663/4, p. 465.

page 120 note 4 S.P. For., German States, 86, p. 172.

page 120 note 5 Add. MSS. 34508, p. 127.

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page 122 note 9 Lansdowne MS. 1152 A, fo. 280.

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page 123 note 5 Coltness Coll., p.84. An English republican colony was said to exist in Rotterdam in 1682 (True Prot. Mercury, no. 22; Loyal Prot. and True Dom. Intell., no. 212).

page 123 note 6 Steven, , Hist. of the Scottish Church, Rotterdam, pp. 33–5Google Scholar.

page 123 note 7 Add. MSS. 34512, p. 22.

page 123 note 8 Ibid. 37981, fos. 1–4.

page 124 note 1 Add. MSS. 37981, fos. 57–8; S.P. For., Holland, 215, p. 234; S.P. Dom., Car. II, 433, no. 39.

page 124 note 2 Add. MSS. 37981, fo. 6.

page 124 note 3 Ibid., fo. 2; S.P. For., Entry Book 68, 31 Aug. 1680; S.P. For., Holland, 186, p. 77.

page 124 note 4 Twyn, John, the printer of Mene Tekel, was caught red handed by L' Estrange in 10 1663Google Scholar: see my article on the Yorkshire Plot, 1663, in the Yorks. Arch. Journal, xxxi. 354.

page 124 note 5 S.P. For., Holland, 174, pp. 50–1, 77.

page 124 note 6 S.P. Dom., Car. II, no. 50.

page 124 note 7 Cal. S.P. Dom., 1667/8, p. 282; S.P. For., Holland, 182, p. 18; Add. MSs. 35852, fos. 94–5; Sidney, Henry, Diary, i. 61Google Scholar.

page 124 note 8 Kitchin, G., Sir R. L'Estrange, p. 162Google Scholar; Cal. S.P. Dom., 1671/2, pp. 314–15; 1672, pp. 288–9; 1673, pp. 74, 106, 134, etc.

page 124 note 9 Ibid., 1672/3, p. 595; S.P. Dom., Car. II, p. 431, nos. 43, 53, 54; State Trials, ix. 383; Middlebush, p. 231.

page 124 note 10 Add. MSS. 35852, fo. 159.

page 124 note 11 Rothe, , a naturalized Englishman of Utrecht, , was knighted in 1660 (Commons Journals, viii. 33Google Scholar; Shaw, W. A., Knights of England, ii. 231Google Scholar).

page 125 note 1 S.P. For., Holland, 203, pp. 229, 232.

page 125 note 2 Sprat, T., Copies of the Informations, p. 181Google Scholar.

page 125 note 3 S.P. Dom., Car. II, 428, p. 47, no. 60.