680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World (Part 4)

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World (Part 4)

The Dutch national anthem's opening verse pledges loyalty to the King of Spain — the very monarch the Dutch were fighting to overthrow — and it has been sung that way for 450 years.

Jun 17, 2026 1:12:36 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

The Dutch national anthem, the Wilhelmus, is the world's oldest song to become a national anthem, with origins tracing back to 1568. Tom Holland and Dominic Sandbrook explore how its paradoxical opening verse — pledging loyalty to the King of Spain — perfectly mirrors the contradictions of William the Silent, the unlikely founding father of the Dutch Republic. A German-born, Catholic-turned-Calvinist aristocrat who served the Spanish crown, William led a revolt that birthed modern capitalism, religious tolerance, and a template for both the English Civil War and the American Revolution. The key takeaway: the Wilhelmus endures precisely because its ambiguity made it adaptable across centuries of Dutch political change.

#Dutch Revolt #Wilhelmus #William the Silent #Low Countries #Philip II of Spain #Sea Beggars #Calvinism #Dutch Golden Age #founding fathers #Act of Abjuration #national anthems #early modern Europe #religious tolerance #Amsterdam #Spinoza #Netherlands #Philip II #Spanish Empire #national anthem #Dutch Republic #founding father #modernity #Reformation

Tom Holland and Dominic Sandbrook explore the Wilhelmus — the Dutch national anthem — tracing its origins to the 1568 siege of Chartres, its paradoxical pledge of loyalty to the King of Spain, and its role as the musical emblem of the Dutch Revolt that gave birth to the modern world.

Chapter list
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  • Opening with a recording of the Wilhelmus, Dominic Sandbrook notes that while the Dutch anthem was only officially adopted in 1932, it has functioned as the great song of Dutch patriotism for 4.5 centuries — making it the oldest song in the world to become a national anthem. Tom Holland, drawing on the Dutch Royal House's own website, explains that the melody originated during the 1568 siege of Chartres and the first known lyrics date from 1572. These dates are not coincidental: they bracket a key turning point in the Dutch Revolt, the 80-year war between Dutch rebels and Spain that Holland describes as one of history's absolutely top revolts — a genuine David and Goliath story that begins with Protestant pirates taking on the greatest empire on earth.

  • The conversation expands rapidly in scale. Tom Holland traces a direct line of descent from the Dutch Revolt to the English Civil War, the American Revolution, and ultimately the French Revolution — a lineage the American Founding Fathers themselves acknowledged. The Dutch Republic that emerged from the revolt in 1588 — calling itself the United Provinces of the Netherlands — was, in Tom's words, one of the great incubators of modernity: the birthplace of modern capitalism, stock exchanges, deposit banking, and futures. It was also extraordinarily prosperous, with 60% of Holland's population living in cities and the Republic ranking as the richest state per capita on the planet in the 17th century. It was also the crucible of religious scepticism, Enlightenment thought, and Vermeer's bourgeois domestic art — a republic that was the antithesis of aristocratic Europe.

  • The first verse of the Wilhelmus, translated from the Dutch Royal House website, announces itself as a song narrated by William of Nassau — yet its closing lines pledge a lifelong loyalty to the King of Spain. Dominic and Tom are jointly baffled: William is the George Washington of Dutch independence, the man leading the revolt against Philip II. To have him pledge loyalty to the enemy king in the national anthem is, as Tom says, as though the Americans had an anthem featuring George Washington pledging allegiance to George III. This paradox — a rebel song that proclaims loyalty to the rebel's enemy — becomes the central thread of the entire episode, driving the inquiry back into the circumstances of the revolt and the biography of its unlikely hero.

  • Setting the scene for the revolt, Tom Holland paints the Low Countries as a spectacularly fragmented political landscape: 17 provinces, approximately 700 different legal codes, French and Dutch and Frisian and German speakers, and cities jealously guarding centuries-old charters. The 16th century was the heyday of the Reformation, and in the Low Countries it was a grassroots phenomenon — not imposed from above by a Tudor-style monarchy, but bubbling up from below, wild and factional. By mid-century, Calvinism had begun to impose order on this chaos, offering Protestants the disciplined, self-governing church structure they craved — what Tom, quoting historian Jonathan Israel, calls 'the antidote for which they thirsted.' Geographically, Holland and Zeeland's landscape of rivers, canals, marshes, and dikes made them far more defensible than the southern provinces, a fact that would prove decisive in the revolt to come.

  • With an affectionate eye for period detail, Tom describes how English visitors to the Low Countries were consistently astonished by what they found. Adults consumed 3 pints of beer per day — proper alcoholic beer, not weak table beer. Women were famous for their cleanliness; men for being extraordinarily tall, many over 6 feet. The population was packed at about 90 people per square mile, giving the region a density comparable in scale to England despite its much smaller surface area. These weren't arbitrary details: they speak to a deeply urbanised, commercially dynamic society that was already developing the distinctive cultural character — mercantile, bourgeois, clean, and capable — that would define the Dutch Golden Age.

  • The 17 provinces might have coalesced into a stable, unified state. In 1548, Charles V — who was simultaneously Holy Roman Emperor, King of Spain, King of Mexico, and King of Peru — created by Act a kind of constitutional unity for the Low Countries, separating them legally from the Holy Roman Empire and making them a distinct entity. Historian Geoffrey Parker, Tom notes, argues this might in normal circumstances have formed the basis for a permanent political unit — the way Switzerland emerged from diverse German-speaking cantons, or Spain unified from multiple Iberian kingdoms. But the circumstances were not normal, and the question of why this potential unity dissolved into revolt is the hinge on which the rest of the episode turns.

  • The biography of William the Silent is one of the episode's great set pieces. Born in 1533 as the eldest son of the impoverished Count of Nassau in Germany — a Lutheran household with almost no prospects — the young William was catapulted into unimaginable wealth in 1544 when a distant cousin, the Prince of Orange, died childless at a French siege. The inheritance was staggering: the sovereign Principality of Orange in France, a quarter of Brabant including Antwerp, 3 Italian principalities, 16 countships, 2 margravates, 50 baronies, and 300 smaller estates. The price was conversion to Catholicism, which William agreed to in roughly 3 seconds. Charles V then took him under his wing at the Brussels court, and by 1555 — when Charles dramatically leaned on the 22-year-old William's arm during his abdication ceremony — the Prince of Orange had become the most glamorous figure in the Habsburg train. By 1559, Philip II appointed him Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht: the Habsburg's most trusted man in the core Dutch provinces.

  • The transformation of the loyal Habsburg servant into a rebel leader has a precise origin: a hunting trip in the forests of Chantilly in 1559. William was temporarily at the French court as a diplomatic hostage during treaty negotiations, and Henry II had taken a liking to him. Out hunting, Henry let slip a state secret — apparently assuming William already knew — that he and Philip II had jointly agreed to a full-scale policy of extermination against Protestants across Christendom, starting with the Low Countries. William was appalled but gave nothing away, keeping a poker face for reasons Tom identifies as part self-preservation and part genuine uncertainty about whether Henry was exaggerating. This moment of strategic concealment — burying a dangerous secret behind a sociable, extroverted facade — is, Tom argues, the precise source of William's legendary epithet 'the Silent': a man remembered not for his brilliant social fluency but for what he chose not to say.

  • The mid-episode break packages three distinct commercial segments. The Times and Sunday Times are promoted as tools for making confident decisions in an uncertain world, with the hosts riffing on football tournament history. A live show announcement follows: the hosts will perform at the South Bank on 4 September, telling a never-before-covered story of a Victorian African emperor kidnapping British citizens and Queen Victoria's rescue mission — tickets including a copy of 'A History of the World in 51 Heroes and Villains' on sale from 10am on 16 June. Finally, The Rest Is History merch tab is promoted, offering limited-edition personalised football shirts for historical dream teams: Aztecs, Royal Navy, Austro-Hungary, and Ancient Rome.

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  • The rebellion reaches its crisis point in 1567 when Philip sends an army of 10,000 veteran soldiers to the Low Countries with orders to terrorise Protestants into submission. William's closest noble allies are executed. William himself had already withdrawn to the safety of his German lands, reading the wind correctly — his properties in the Low Countries are confiscated, his eldest son is seized and sent to Spain as a hostage, and he is formally declared an outlaw. The obvious move at this point was to negotiate a surrender. Instead, William mortgaged his remaining properties, raised loans, and funnelled everything into two streams of resistance: privateering pirates — the Sea Beggars — and a mercenary army he personally led into Brabant. The Spanish simply refused to fight him and waited for his money to run out, which it did.

  • The Sea Beggars were the rebels' naval arm: Protestant privateers nominally serving William of Orange, flying the orange tricolor with the Lion of Nassau. C.V. Wedgwood's 1950s description brings them vividly to life: weather-beaten ex-merchantmen with secondhand cannon nailed to splitting decks, manned by ruffians and patriots, the riffraff of 20 ports and 3 nations. The name 'beggar' had been an insult from the Spanish colonial administration, which the rebels defiantly appropriated — a classic act of political judo that Tom notes foreshadows much of the cultural logic of the Dutch Republic. By 1572, the revolt looked finished: William's mercenary campaigns had failed for lack of money, the Spanish had retaken rebel towns, and Elizabeth I — leaned on by Spain and unconvinced the revolt would survive — had closed English ports to the Sea Beggars. They were homeless, sailing the North Sea with nowhere to go. And then came April Fool's Day 1572.

  • The turning point of the Dutch Revolt arrives almost by accident. On 1 April 1572, the Sea Beggars sailed towards Brill — a strategically vital port on an island in the estuary controlling the waterways of Holland and Zeeland — and found it empty. The entire garrison had gone fishing, convinced the war was effectively over. The pirates sailed in, seized the port, sacked the Catholic churches, and proclaimed Calvinist rule. With this single base secured, the whole situation transformed. Calvinist risings ignited across Holland and Zeeland; towns expelled Spanish garrisons and declared for William. By July, representatives from both provinces were ready to confirm William as Stadtholder — re-instating the office Philip had originally given him, but now in the service of the revolt. The rebels' rhetorical solution to the paradox of serving the Spanish king while fighting the Spanish was elegant: Philip didn't know what his servants were doing and would be appalled if he did. It was the oldest political fiction in the book.

  • The Dutch Revolt was, paradoxically, a revolution embarrassed by its own radicalism. William the Silent, even after four years of open conflict with Philip II, still framed himself as a loyal servant of the Spanish crown whose revolt was merely correcting the abuses of wicked royal ministers. Tom, quoting historian Simon Schama, notes that the Dutch espoused independence with 'the lowest possible profile' — no grand Declaration of Independence, no dramatic ideological leap. This reticence, Tom argues, makes the Wilhelmus the perfect anthem: a rebel song that in its very first verse proclaims loyalty to the king the rebels are fighting. The hosts trace a spectrum of increasing revolutionary boldness from the Dutch Revolt through the English Civil War (where people moved from monarchist to regicide almost by accident) through the American Revolution (which embraced rebellion as an ideology) to the French Revolution (which chopped the king's head off).

  • The strangeness of the Wilhelmus runs deeper than its paradoxical lyrics: its melody was born at a Catholic victory — the 1568 siege of Chartres, where a Catholic garrison repelled a Protestant attack. The Calvinist rebels then claimed it as their own, in a move Tom reads as part of a wider logic of appropriation: just as the Calvinist rebels converted Catholic churches into Protestant ones, they converted a Catholic melody into a Protestant anthem. But Tom suggests the appropriation was also diplomatically sophisticated. The revolt was never exclusively Calvinist: many rebels were Catholic, and William himself only converted to Calvinism in 1573, after the Wilhelmus was written. A Protestant song with a Catholic melody was a compromise — something for everyone. And this connects to William's own stated ambition for the emerging Dutch state: freedom of religion for both Reformed and Roman Catholic in public or in private. Though Calvinism ultimately became the public religion of the Dutch Republic, a blind-eye tolerance of Catholics, Quakers, Jews, and Muslims persisted — making Amsterdam the great centre of Jewish life and the eventual home of Spinoza, precursor of the radical Enlightenment.

  • The final act of William the Silent's life is both tragic and purposeful. Philip II, alarmed by a Spanish governor's 1577 warning that William 'hates nothing more in this world than Your Majesty, and if he could drink your blood, he would do it,' placed a bounty on William's head in 1580. William responded with an Apology accusing Philip of tyranny and of poisoning his wife and son. Then, in July 1581, the rebels issued the Act of Abjuration — formally repudiating Philip II and all his heirs in perpetuity, removing his image from coins, seals, and buildings across the Low Countries. Tom draws a direct parallel to the American Declaration of Independence: loyal subjects, pushed to their limit, branding their king a tyrant and formalising their rejection. Three years later, on 10 July 1584, Balthasar Gérard shot William in Delft. William died before seeing the proclamation of the Dutch Republic in 1588 — the Moses who never reached the Promised Land.

  • One of the episode's sharpest insights is the shadow the Dutch Republic cast over the American Founding Fathers. Tom, noting that he and Dominic are preparing a series on the Founding Fathers, explains that Thomas Jefferson was haunted by the fear that the American presidency might mutate into a hereditary monarchy — precisely because he knew what had happened in the Dutch Republic. Every Stadtholder without exception was drawn from William's dynasty, and the most famous of them, William III, ended up ruling England, Scotland, and Ireland. By the mid-18th century the Dutch had simply given up the pretence: the Stadtholder became a king. This was the nightmare scenario for Jefferson: the republic's highest office ossifying into an inherited crown.

  • The Wilhelmus's path to official status was tortuous. Under French Revolutionary occupation, the Netherlands became the Batavian Republic and then a Napoleonic kingdom; the Wilhelmus was officially banned. Even after Napoleon's defeat, the anthem was tainted by its association with the House of Orange. A competition was held, producing a winning entry that opened with lines about Dutch blood 'free of foreign blemishes' — acceptable in the 1810s, deeply problematic by the 1930s. When Queen Wilhelmina was inaugurated in 1898, the competition winner's masculine-gendered lyrics created absurd metrical problems. By 1932 — one year before the Nazis came to power — Queen Wilhelmina decreed the Wilhelmus officially the Dutch national anthem, partly to distance the Netherlands from Nazi-style racial ideology. When the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, the Wilhelmus came into its own: its defiant sixth verse about resisting tyranny became a rallying cry for the Dutch resistance, and even anti-monarchists took it to heart.

  • Dominic and Tom bring the episode to a close by stepping back to appreciate the Wilhelmus as a perfect historical artefact. It is simultaneously a rebel song loyal to the enemy king, an anthem of a republic named after a German prince, a Protestant anthem with a Catholic melody, and a song about events in France that became the emblem of Dutch nationhood. All these layers of paradox, Tom argues, make it the ideal anthem for a country whose own history is equally layered and paradoxical. Dominic invites listeners to the Rest Is History newsletter — which will feature more on national anthems — and teases next week's episodes on the anthems of Brazil and South Africa, available immediately to Rest Is History Club members.

  • Tom and Dominic address listeners directly with a Father's Day offer: a 25% discount on The Rest Is History Club subscription, redeemable as a gift at therestishistory.com. The Club's benefits are enumerated — ad-free listening, early access to full series, bonus episodes, live show tickets, and a members-only newsletter — with Tom joking that nothing says Happy Father's Day quite like six solid hours ad-free about the First World War. The hosts sign off before the episode closes with the full Dutch national anthem, the Wilhelmus.

Stadtholder
The governor or chief magistrate of a Dutch province, appointed by the sovereign; William of Orange held this title for Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht under Philip II.
Sea Beggars (Watergeuzen)
Protestant privateers — pirates operating nominally on behalf of the Dutch rebels — who were instrumental in the Dutch Revolt, seizing the port of Brill in 1572.
Act of Abjuration
The 1581 declaration by the Dutch rebels formally renouncing allegiance to Philip II of Spain and all his heirs, often called the Dutch Declaration of Independence.
Privateer
A privately owned armed ship licensed by a government to attack enemy shipping; used in the episode to describe the Sea Beggars operating for the Dutch rebels.
Calvinist
A follower of the Protestant theology of John Calvin, emphasising predestination and a disciplined, self-governing church structure; the dominant faith of the Dutch rebels.
Wilhelmus
The Dutch national anthem, officially adopted in 1932 but dating to 1568–1572; its 15 verses form an acrostic spelling 'Willem van Nassau'.
Acrostic
A composition in which the first letter of each line or section spells out a word or name; the 15 verses of the Wilhelmus spell 'Willem van Nassau'.
Habsburg
The royal dynasty that ruled Spain, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Low Countries in the 16th century; Philip II was a Habsburg.
United Provinces of the Netherlands
The federal republic established in 1588 by the rebellious northern Dutch provinces after breaking from Spanish rule; forerunner of the modern Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Nominative determinism
The humorous observation that people tend to gravitate toward careers or roles that reflect their names; used here to note that 'Tom Holland' hosts a show about Dutch history (Holland).
Inveterate
Having a habit or activity so firmly established it is unlikely to change; used in the episode to describe Elizabeth I's constitutional caution toward Spain.
Apulia
A region in the heel of southern Italy; mentioned as one of the many European territories William of Nassau inherited when he became Prince of Orange.
Margravate
The territory governed by a margrave, a rank of German nobility; William of Nassau inherited two margravates as part of his vast estate.
Batavian Republic
The French-backed Dutch republic established in 1795 after French Revolutionary armies conquered the Netherlands, during which the Wilhelmus was officially banned.
Enlightenment
The 17th–18th century intellectual movement emphasising reason, science, and individual rights over tradition and religion; partly incubated in the Dutch Republic by figures like Spinoza.
Spinoza
Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677), Amsterdam-born Jewish philosopher excommunicated by his synagogue, whose rationalist philosophy made him a key precursor of the radical Enlightenment.
Hegemony
Leadership or dominance over others; relevant to the episode's discussion of Spanish imperial dominance over the Low Countries in the 16th century.
Escorial
Philip II's vast royal monastery and palace complex built in the mountains near Madrid, from which he governed his global empire — including the Low Countries — largely in absentia.

Chapter 3 · 04:05

Introduction: Het Wilhelmus and the World's Oldest National Anthem

Opening with a recording of the Wilhelmus, Dominic Sandbrook notes that while the Dutch anthem was only officially adopted in 1932, it has functioned as the great song of Dutch patriotism for 4.5 centuries — making it the oldest song in the world to become a national anthem. Tom Holland, drawing on the Dutch Royal House's own website, explains that the melody originated during the 1568 siege of Chartres and the first known lyrics date from 1572. These dates are not coincidental: they bracket a key turning point in the Dutch Revolt, the 80-year war between Dutch rebels and Spain that Holland describes as one of history's absolutely top revolts — a genuine David and Goliath story that begins with Protestant pirates taking on the greatest empire on earth.

Claims made here

The melody of the Wilhelmus originated during the siege of the French city of Chartres in 1568.

Tom Holland Official website of the Royal House of the Netherlands

The first known reference to the lyrics of the Wilhelmus dates from 1572.

Tom Holland Official website of the Royal House of the Netherlands

Chapter 4 · 07:00

The Dutch Revolt and the Birth of Modernity

The conversation expands rapidly in scale. Tom Holland traces a direct line of descent from the Dutch Revolt to the English Civil War, the American Revolution, and ultimately the French Revolution — a lineage the American Founding Fathers themselves acknowledged. The Dutch Republic that emerged from the revolt in 1588 — calling itself the United Provinces of the Netherlands — was, in Tom's words, one of the great incubators of modernity: the birthplace of modern capitalism, stock exchanges, deposit banking, and futures. It was also extraordinarily prosperous, with 60% of Holland's population living in cities and the Republic ranking as the richest state per capita on the planet in the 17th century. It was also the crucible of religious scepticism, Enlightenment thought, and Vermeer's bourgeois domestic art — a republic that was the antithesis of aristocratic Europe.

Claims made here

The Dutch Republic came into existence in 1588 under the name the United Provinces of the Netherlands.

Tom Holland no source cited

The Dutch Republic was per capita by far the richest state on the planet in the 17th century.

Tom Holland no source cited

60% of the population of Holland lived in cities during the Dutch Golden Age.

Tom Holland no source cited

Chapter 5 · 10:20

The Paradox at the Heart of the Wilhelmus

The first verse of the Wilhelmus, translated from the Dutch Royal House website, announces itself as a song narrated by William of Nassau — yet its closing lines pledge a lifelong loyalty to the King of Spain. Dominic and Tom are jointly baffled: William is the George Washington of Dutch independence, the man leading the revolt against Philip II. To have him pledge loyalty to the enemy king in the national anthem is, as Tom says, as though the Americans had an anthem featuring George Washington pledging allegiance to George III. This paradox — a rebel song that proclaims loyalty to the rebel's enemy — becomes the central thread of the entire episode, driving the inquiry back into the circumstances of the revolt and the biography of its unlikely hero.

Chapter 6 · 12:40

The Low Countries in the Mid-16th Century

Setting the scene for the revolt, Tom Holland paints the Low Countries as a spectacularly fragmented political landscape: 17 provinces, approximately 700 different legal codes, French and Dutch and Frisian and German speakers, and cities jealously guarding centuries-old charters. The 16th century was the heyday of the Reformation, and in the Low Countries it was a grassroots phenomenon — not imposed from above by a Tudor-style monarchy, but bubbling up from below, wild and factional. By mid-century, Calvinism had begun to impose order on this chaos, offering Protestants the disciplined, self-governing church structure they craved — what Tom, quoting historian Jonathan Israel, calls 'the antidote for which they thirsted.' Geographically, Holland and Zeeland's landscape of rivers, canals, marshes, and dikes made them far more defensible than the southern provinces, a fact that would prove decisive in the revolt to come.

Claims made here

Across the 17 Low Countries provinces there were approximately 700 different legal codes.

Tom Holland no source cited

Jonathan Israel wrote the definitive book on the history of the Dutch Republic and argued that Calvinism provided Protestants with coherence through its disciplined, self-governing church structure.

Tom Holland Jonathan Israel, definitive history of the Dutch Republic

Chapter 7 · 18:00

The Character of the Low Countries People

With an affectionate eye for period detail, Tom describes how English visitors to the Low Countries were consistently astonished by what they found. Adults consumed 3 pints of beer per day — proper alcoholic beer, not weak table beer. Women were famous for their cleanliness; men for being extraordinarily tall, many over 6 feet. The population was packed at about 90 people per square mile, giving the region a density comparable in scale to England despite its much smaller surface area. These weren't arbitrary details: they speak to a deeply urbanised, commercially dynamic society that was already developing the distinctive cultural character — mercantile, bourgeois, clean, and capable — that would define the Dutch Golden Age.

Claims made here

The population of the Low Countries in the 16th century was not much smaller than that of England, despite England having a much larger surface area.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1548, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V imposed constitutional unity on the 17 Low Countries provinces, separating them legally from the Holy Roman Empire.

Tom Holland no source cited

Chapter 8 · 20:00

Charles V and the Constitutional Unity of the 17 Provinces

The 17 provinces might have coalesced into a stable, unified state. In 1548, Charles V — who was simultaneously Holy Roman Emperor, King of Spain, King of Mexico, and King of Peru — created by Act a kind of constitutional unity for the Low Countries, separating them legally from the Holy Roman Empire and making them a distinct entity. Historian Geoffrey Parker, Tom notes, argues this might in normal circumstances have formed the basis for a permanent political unit — the way Switzerland emerged from diverse German-speaking cantons, or Spain unified from multiple Iberian kingdoms. But the circumstances were not normal, and the question of why this potential unity dissolved into revolt is the hinge on which the rest of the episode turns.

Claims made here

Historian Geoffrey Parker argued that the 1548 constitutional unity of the Low Countries might have formed the basis for a permanent political unit, comparable to how Switzerland and Spain emerged as unified states.

Tom Holland Geoffrey Parker (historian of the Dutch Revolt)

History
William the Silent: The Most Improbable Founding Father in History

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World… · Jun 17, 2026 History

William of Nassau was German-born, raised Lutheran, became a Catholic to inherit vast wealth, served loyally as a Spanish royal governor — and then became the founding father of an anti-Spanish, Calvinist, bourgeois republic. He only converted to Calvinism in 1573, after the anthem that bears his name was already written.

Chapter 9 · 21:50

William of Nassau: The Improbable Founding Father

The biography of William the Silent is one of the episode's great set pieces. Born in 1533 as the eldest son of the impoverished Count of Nassau in Germany — a Lutheran household with almost no prospects — the young William was catapulted into unimaginable wealth in 1544 when a distant cousin, the Prince of Orange, died childless at a French siege. The inheritance was staggering: the sovereign Principality of Orange in France, a quarter of Brabant including Antwerp, 3 Italian principalities, 16 countships, 2 margravates, 50 baronies, and 300 smaller estates. The price was conversion to Catholicism, which William agreed to in roughly 3 seconds. Charles V then took him under his wing at the Brussels court, and by 1555 — when Charles dramatically leaned on the 22-year-old William's arm during his abdication ceremony — the Prince of Orange had become the most glamorous figure in the Habsburg train. By 1559, Philip II appointed him Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht: the Habsburg's most trusted man in the core Dutch provinces.

Claims made here

William of Nassau was born in 1533 as the eldest son of the Count of Nassau in Germany.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1544, William of Nassau inherited the Principality of Orange and vast European estates from a distant cousin who died childless.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1559, Philip II appointed William of Orange as Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht.

Tom Holland no source cited

Chapter 10 · 28:00

The Hunting Trip Revelation: Why William the Silent Became Silent

The transformation of the loyal Habsburg servant into a rebel leader has a precise origin: a hunting trip in the forests of Chantilly in 1559. William was temporarily at the French court as a diplomatic hostage during treaty negotiations, and Henry II had taken a liking to him. Out hunting, Henry let slip a state secret — apparently assuming William already knew — that he and Philip II had jointly agreed to a full-scale policy of extermination against Protestants across Christendom, starting with the Low Countries. William was appalled but gave nothing away, keeping a poker face for reasons Tom identifies as part self-preservation and part genuine uncertainty about whether Henry was exaggerating. This moment of strategic concealment — burying a dangerous secret behind a sociable, extroverted facade — is, Tom argues, the precise source of William's legendary epithet 'the Silent': a man remembered not for his brilliant social fluency but for what he chose not to say.

Chapter 13 · 39:40

Philip's Army of 10,000: The Crunch Point of the Revolt

The rebellion reaches its crisis point in 1567 when Philip sends an army of 10,000 veteran soldiers to the Low Countries with orders to terrorise Protestants into submission. William's closest noble allies are executed. William himself had already withdrawn to the safety of his German lands, reading the wind correctly — his properties in the Low Countries are confiscated, his eldest son is seized and sent to Spain as a hostage, and he is formally declared an outlaw. The obvious move at this point was to negotiate a surrender. Instead, William mortgaged his remaining properties, raised loans, and funnelled everything into two streams of resistance: privateering pirates — the Sea Beggars — and a mercenary army he personally led into Brabant. The Spanish simply refused to fight him and waited for his money to run out, which it did.

Claims made here

Philip II sent an army of 10,000 battle-hardened soldiers to the Low Countries in 1567 to terrorise Protestants into submission.

Tom Holland no source cited

History
William the Silent Declared an Outlaw: Mortgaging Everything for the Cause

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World… · Jun 17, 2026 History

After failing to defeat the Spanish militarily, William the Silent had his Low Countries properties confiscated, his eldest son seized as a hostage and taken to Spain, and was declared an outlaw. Rather than submit, he mortgaged all his remaining estates and funnelled the proceeds into financing the resistance.

Chapter 14 · 42:40

The Sea Beggars: Calvinist Pirates and the Language of Appropriation

The Sea Beggars were the rebels' naval arm: Protestant privateers nominally serving William of Orange, flying the orange tricolor with the Lion of Nassau. C.V. Wedgwood's 1950s description brings them vividly to life: weather-beaten ex-merchantmen with secondhand cannon nailed to splitting decks, manned by ruffians and patriots, the riffraff of 20 ports and 3 nations. The name 'beggar' had been an insult from the Spanish colonial administration, which the rebels defiantly appropriated — a classic act of political judo that Tom notes foreshadows much of the cultural logic of the Dutch Republic. By 1572, the revolt looked finished: William's mercenary campaigns had failed for lack of money, the Spanish had retaken rebel towns, and Elizabeth I — leaned on by Spain and unconvinced the revolt would survive — had closed English ports to the Sea Beggars. They were homeless, sailing the North Sea with nowhere to go. And then came April Fool's Day 1572.

Chapter 15 · 48:10

The Miracle of Brill: 1 April 1572

The turning point of the Dutch Revolt arrives almost by accident. On 1 April 1572, the Sea Beggars sailed towards Brill — a strategically vital port on an island in the estuary controlling the waterways of Holland and Zeeland — and found it empty. The entire garrison had gone fishing, convinced the war was effectively over. The pirates sailed in, seized the port, sacked the Catholic churches, and proclaimed Calvinist rule. With this single base secured, the whole situation transformed. Calvinist risings ignited across Holland and Zeeland; towns expelled Spanish garrisons and declared for William. By July, representatives from both provinces were ready to confirm William as Stadtholder — re-instating the office Philip had originally given him, but now in the service of the revolt. The rebels' rhetorical solution to the paradox of serving the Spanish king while fighting the Spanish was elegant: Philip didn't know what his servants were doing and would be appalled if he did. It was the oldest political fiction in the book.

Claims made here

The Sea Beggars seized the port of Brill on 1 April 1572, finding the garrison had left to go fishing.

Tom Holland no source cited

Chapter 16 · 51:20

William the Silent's Paradox and the Nature of the Revolt

The Dutch Revolt was, paradoxically, a revolution embarrassed by its own radicalism. William the Silent, even after four years of open conflict with Philip II, still framed himself as a loyal servant of the Spanish crown whose revolt was merely correcting the abuses of wicked royal ministers. Tom, quoting historian Simon Schama, notes that the Dutch espoused independence with 'the lowest possible profile' — no grand Declaration of Independence, no dramatic ideological leap. This reticence, Tom argues, makes the Wilhelmus the perfect anthem: a rebel song that in its very first verse proclaims loyalty to the king the rebels are fighting. The hosts trace a spectrum of increasing revolutionary boldness from the Dutch Revolt through the English Civil War (where people moved from monarchist to regicide almost by accident) through the American Revolution (which embraced rebellion as an ideology) to the French Revolution (which chopped the king's head off).

History
The Wilhelmus: A Catholic Melody Turned Protestant Anthem

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World… · Jun 17, 2026 History

The melody of the Wilhelmus originated at the 1568 siege of Chartres — a Catholic garrison's victory over a Protestant attack. The Calvinist rebels then appropriated it as their own anthem, just as they appropriated Catholic churches for Calvinist worship. A Protestant song with a Catholic melody: the perfect emblem of Dutch compromise.

Chapter 17 · 53:50

The Melody of the Wilhelmus: A Catholic Tune Stolen by Calvinists

The strangeness of the Wilhelmus runs deeper than its paradoxical lyrics: its melody was born at a Catholic victory — the 1568 siege of Chartres, where a Catholic garrison repelled a Protestant attack. The Calvinist rebels then claimed it as their own, in a move Tom reads as part of a wider logic of appropriation: just as the Calvinist rebels converted Catholic churches into Protestant ones, they converted a Catholic melody into a Protestant anthem. But Tom suggests the appropriation was also diplomatically sophisticated. The revolt was never exclusively Calvinist: many rebels were Catholic, and William himself only converted to Calvinism in 1573, after the Wilhelmus was written. A Protestant song with a Catholic melody was a compromise — something for everyone. And this connects to William's own stated ambition for the emerging Dutch state: freedom of religion for both Reformed and Roman Catholic in public or in private. Though Calvinism ultimately became the public religion of the Dutch Republic, a blind-eye tolerance of Catholics, Quakers, Jews, and Muslims persisted — making Amsterdam the great centre of Jewish life and the eventual home of Spinoza, precursor of the radical Enlightenment.

Claims made here

William only converted to Calvinism in 1573, after the Wilhelmus was already written.

Tom Holland no source cited

History
Amsterdam: The Jewish Capital of Europe and Birthplace of the Radical Enlightenment

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World… · Jun 17, 2026 History

The Dutch Republic's culture of unofficial religious tolerance — turning a blind eye to Catholics, Quakers, Jews, and Muslims — made Amsterdam one of the great centres of Jewish life in the 17th century. It became home to Spinoza, who would go on to question the very value of religion itself and launch the radical Enlightenment.

Chapter 18 · 58:00

William's Assassination and the Act of Abjuration

The final act of William the Silent's life is both tragic and purposeful. Philip II, alarmed by a Spanish governor's 1577 warning that William 'hates nothing more in this world than Your Majesty, and if he could drink your blood, he would do it,' placed a bounty on William's head in 1580. William responded with an Apology accusing Philip of tyranny and of poisoning his wife and son. Then, in July 1581, the rebels issued the Act of Abjuration — formally repudiating Philip II and all his heirs in perpetuity, removing his image from coins, seals, and buildings across the Low Countries. Tom draws a direct parallel to the American Declaration of Independence: loyal subjects, pushed to their limit, branding their king a tyrant and formalising their rejection. Three years later, on 10 July 1584, Balthasar Gérard shot William in Delft. William died before seeing the proclamation of the Dutch Republic in 1588 — the Moses who never reached the Promised Land.

Claims made here

William the Silent was assassinated in Delft by Balthasar Gérard on 10 July 1584.

Tom Holland no source cited

Philip II placed a bounty on William of Orange's head in 1580.

Tom Holland no source cited

Chapter 19 · 1:04:30

The Dutch Republic, William III, and the Creep Toward Monarchy

One of the episode's sharpest insights is the shadow the Dutch Republic cast over the American Founding Fathers. Tom, noting that he and Dominic are preparing a series on the Founding Fathers, explains that Thomas Jefferson was haunted by the fear that the American presidency might mutate into a hereditary monarchy — precisely because he knew what had happened in the Dutch Republic. Every Stadtholder without exception was drawn from William's dynasty, and the most famous of them, William III, ended up ruling England, Scotland, and Ireland. By the mid-18th century the Dutch had simply given up the pretence: the Stadtholder became a king. This was the nightmare scenario for Jefferson: the republic's highest office ossifying into an inherited crown.

Chapter 20 · 1:06:50

The Wilhelmus Banned, Revived, and Officially Adopted

The Wilhelmus's path to official status was tortuous. Under French Revolutionary occupation, the Netherlands became the Batavian Republic and then a Napoleonic kingdom; the Wilhelmus was officially banned. Even after Napoleon's defeat, the anthem was tainted by its association with the House of Orange. A competition was held, producing a winning entry that opened with lines about Dutch blood 'free of foreign blemishes' — acceptable in the 1810s, deeply problematic by the 1930s. When Queen Wilhelmina was inaugurated in 1898, the competition winner's masculine-gendered lyrics created absurd metrical problems. By 1932 — one year before the Nazis came to power — Queen Wilhelmina decreed the Wilhelmus officially the Dutch national anthem, partly to distance the Netherlands from Nazi-style racial ideology. When the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, the Wilhelmus came into its own: its defiant sixth verse about resisting tyranny became a rallying cry for the Dutch resistance, and even anti-monarchists took it to heart.

Claims made here

The Wilhelmus was officially adopted as the Dutch national anthem in 1932.

Tom Holland no source cited

History
The Wilhelmus Banned Under Napoleon — Then Reborn Under the Nazis

680. The Netherlands: The Revolt that Made The Modern World… · Jun 17, 2026 History

The Wilhelmus was officially banned during the French Revolutionary-era Batavian Republic and Napoleon's rule. It only became the official Dutch national anthem in 1932 — and found its true power when the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, with its defiant verse about resisting tyranny becoming a rallying cry for the Dutch resistance.

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4 / 20 cited (20%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The melody of the Wilhelmus originated during the siege of the French city of Chartres in 1568.

Tom Holland Official website of the Royal House of the Netherlands

The first known reference to the lyrics of the Wilhelmus dates from 1572.

Tom Holland Official website of the Royal House of the Netherlands

The Dutch Republic was per capita by far the richest state on the planet in the 17th century.

Tom Holland no source cited

60% of the population of Holland lived in cities during the Dutch Golden Age.

Tom Holland no source cited

Across the 17 Low Countries provinces there were approximately 700 different legal codes.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1548, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V imposed constitutional unity on the 17 Low Countries provinces, separating them legally from the Holy Roman Empire.

Tom Holland no source cited

Historian Geoffrey Parker argued that the 1548 constitutional unity of the Low Countries might have formed the basis for a permanent political unit, comparable to how Switzerland and Spain emerged as unified states.

Tom Holland Geoffrey Parker (historian of the Dutch Revolt)

William of Nassau was born in 1533 as the eldest son of the Count of Nassau in Germany.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1544, William of Nassau inherited the Principality of Orange and vast European estates from a distant cousin who died childless.

Tom Holland no source cited

In 1559, Philip II appointed William of Orange as Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, and Utrecht.

Tom Holland no source cited

Jonathan Israel wrote the definitive book on the history of the Dutch Republic and argued that Calvinism provided Protestants with coherence through its disciplined, self-governing church structure.

Tom Holland Jonathan Israel, definitive history of the Dutch Republic

William only converted to Calvinism in 1573, after the Wilhelmus was already written.

Tom Holland no source cited

Philip II sent an army of 10,000 battle-hardened soldiers to the Low Countries in 1567 to terrorise Protestants into submission.

Tom Holland no source cited

Philip II placed a bounty on William of Orange's head in 1580.

Tom Holland no source cited

William the Silent was assassinated in Delft by Balthasar Gérard on 10 July 1584.

Tom Holland no source cited

The Wilhelmus was officially adopted as the Dutch national anthem in 1932.

Tom Holland no source cited

The first letters of the 15 verses of the Wilhelmus form an acrostic spelling 'Willem van Nassau'.

Dominic Sandbrook no source cited

The Dutch Republic came into existence in 1588 under the name the United Provinces of the Netherlands.

Tom Holland no source cited

The population of the Low Countries in the 16th century was not much smaller than that of England, despite England having a much larger surface area.

Tom Holland no source cited

The Sea Beggars seized the port of Brill on 1 April 1572, finding the garrison had left to go fishing.

Tom Holland no source cited