SAMUEL PEPYS, ADMIRAL DE RUYTER, AND NUMISMATICS Público Deposited

Contenido del artículo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 21, May 27, 2007, Article 11

    SAMUEL PEPYS, ADMIRAL DE RUYTER, AND NUMISMATICS

    Dr Kerry Rodgers writes: "Thanks for the item in last issue of The
    E-Sylum concerning the 17th century currency units mentioned in Pepys'
    Diary. Pepys is highly pertinent in 2007. This year the Dutch
    celebrate the 400th anniversary the birth of Pepys' nemesis,
    Lieutenant Admiral General Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter.

    "Pepys worked for the English Admiralty and for over 20 years
    de Ruyter would become one of the uppermost issues in Pepys' mind.
    After all it was de Ruyter who kept Pepys in a job. De Ruyter's
    repeated victories over the English fleet kept Pepys busy pushing
    through supplies, planning reorganization of dockyards, and
    urging drastic reforms of the entire English naval structure.

    "When Pepys finally made to Secretary of the Admiralty he had the
    temerity to recommend the promotion of long serving officers rather
    than the cynical selling of commissions. And these reforms were
    needed as de Ruyter, the son of a beer porter, repeatedly demonstrated.

    "de Ruyter did not play a major role in the First Anglo-Dutch War
    although he did best Vice Admiral George Ayscue at Plymouth. In the
    Second Anglo-Dutch War he inflicted serious damage on the English
    fleet at Carlisle Bay. His fleet did not escape unscathed, however,
    and he was unable to go on attack New York, the former New Amsterdam,
    as a prelude to liberating the New Netherlands.

    "On return to the Netherlands in 1665, the Dutch Regent, Johan de Witt,
    recognized de Ruyter's mettle and appointed him commander of the Dutch
    fleet with the rank of Lieutenant Admiral.

    "Admiral de Ruyter duly sailed forth to win probably his hardest-fought
    victory over the English fleet, the Four Days Battle of June 1666.
    Three months later he only narrowly escaped total rout at the St James's
    Day Battle but the following year saw him make amends big time. He
    seriously embarrassed the English by launching a direct attack on
    England's main naval base at Chatham at the mouth to the Thames.

    "Known as the Raid on the Medway it inflicted what is generally
    acknowledged to be the worst English naval defeat in history. Not
    only did de Ruyter burn a large number of the English capital ships
    but he towed away the fleet's flagship, HMS Royal Charles. Since 1066
    only de Ruyter is the only battle commander to succeed in bearding
    the English lion in its den.

    "But there's more!

    "When the first shots were fired in Third Anglo-Dutch War it was
    De Ruyter who pulled the Dutch chestnuts out of the fire. He won
    strategic victories over larger Anglo-French fleets at the Battles
    of Solebay (1672), the Double Schooneveld (1673) and Texel (1673).
    These actions directly averted the impending invasion of the
    Netherlands. The new rank of Lieutenant Admiral General was created
    especially for him by a grateful Dutch government in February 1673.

    "Mind you, de Ruyter didn't play favorites. He happily bloodied the
    noses of French, Swedish and Spanish admirals who came his way. He
    failed to take Martinique from the French in 1675, being forced back
    to Europe when disease spread throughout his ships. But in 1676 he
    took command of a combined Dutch-Spanish fleet to suppress the Messina
    Revolt. He fought the French at the Battle of Stromboli and again
    at the Battle of Agosta but it was at the latter he was fatally
    wounded with a cannonball scything off both legs.

    "He had engendered considerable respect among some of his enemies.
    When his body was brought back to the Netherlands, French king Louis
    XIV ordered canon to be fired in salute as the Dutch fleet passed
    along the French coast. A 2004 public poll for De Grootste Nederlander,
    The All Time Greatest Dutchman, saw de Ruyter take seventh place.

    "And for numismatics the Dutch have released two coins and half a
    dozen municipal trade tokens to mark the anniversary - similar
    issues to those for Rembrandt last year.

    "Oddly enough, given de Ruyter's role as the savior of the United
    Provinces, I can find him on only one Dutch banknote. Is this
    correct?"

    [So... can any of our find readers locate references to Admiral
    de Ruyter on Dutch banknotes? How about coins or medals?
    -Editor]

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2007-05-27
Volumen
  • 10

Relaciones

Autor NNP