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B10248 An exact survey of the United Provinces of the Netherlands. Of their cities, castles, fortresses, and other their dominions there: With some remarques of their government, antiquities and memorable actions. Together with an exact map of the Seven Provinces: which is also to be sold alone. / Collected by T.W. T. W. 1673 (1673) Wing W118A; ESTC R186113 36,792 171

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AN EXACT SURVEY OF THE UNITED PROVINCES OF THE NETHERLANDS OF Their Cities Castles Fortresses and other their Dominions there With some Remarques of their Government Antiquities and Memorable Actions Together with an Exact Map of the SEVEN PROVINCES Which is also to be Sold alone Collected by T. W. Vade Liber verbisque meis loca grata saluta LONDON Printed for Edward Berry and William Berry and are to be Sold at their Shops in Holborn-Court in Grays-Inne neer the Hall-door and at the Globe in the Strand betwixt York-House and the New-Exchange 1673. To the Right Honourable William Earl of Craven Viscount Craven of Vffington Baron Craven of Hamsted-Marshal one of the Lords of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and Lord-Lieutenant of the County of Middlesex and Borough of Southwark My Lord THe Belgick Provinces for the last Century have been such a Theatre of Mars that all the Princes of Europe have little reason to thank the Spaniard for enforcing the States of Holland to know and use their own power and strength and therefore it was gravely expressed by a sober Person that to have all the Low Countries governed by a few States or by one Prince wholly depending upon the King of Spain would be equally dangerous but it doth most comport with the interest of England in Wisdom and Policy to erect and establish such a Prince as should neither altogether depend upon France or be wholly devoted unto Spain or else to divide the Seventeen Provinces into divers several Cantons whereby some of them being induced to affect England and others to favour Princes of their Religion they could not render themselves so formidable How prudent an expedient this would be for the security of England and to establish peace in Christendom I submit it unto your Lordships grave judgement who is perfectly acquainted with all the Criticismes of State But that which is the just admiration of all wise men the lesser moiety of these Provinces hath far exceeded even the whole and seven Provinces are become greater and more potent then Seventeen In Riches and Power they have out-done some of the greatest Princes in Europe Their Cities are many and splendid and yet there are more Sects among them then Cities and as many Creeds as Heads but if they had imitated your Lordship when you did them the honour to live amongst them the regularity of your Devotions being with such reverence you had made all their Provinces Canonical yet they have learned to vernish their lucre with Devotion and to make godliness a Page to their private Interest and to be so wise in any of their meetings never to discourse of Religion their Opinions therein being as opposite as the sides of the Diameter but they all concentre in this one Ecliptick line to darken the Authority of Princes Your Lordship being so great an Artizan of State understands all their Arcana and Mysteries and so great a Captain as this AGE with much difficulty hath not produced a greater you know all their Policies and Stratagems of War by the first your Lordship hath much engaged your own Nation by the other you may live to oblige all Nations of the World I do beg your Lordships pardon for this interruption leaving the Grandeur of your Actions and the Glory of your Name to be blazon'd by the Heralds of Time and celebrated in the lasting Chronicles of after-Ages I am Your Lordships Humble Servant T. W. THE PREFACE TO THE READER LEst thou shouldest have cause Gentle Reader to Quaere this present Edition of the Exact Survey of the Vnited Provinces of the Netherlands considering the many Essays written of that Subject at the instance of the worthy Author of this excellent and useful Discourse I was desired to advertise thee that some honourable Friends of his put him upon this present work which in their noble conceptions would be very acceptable to the Publick By this Topographical Discourse thou art brought to more familiar acquaintance with the scite strength present state and condition of those Belgick Countries which for this last Century had so bravely quit themselves maugre the utmost Policies and Hostilities of their great and formidable Enemies and when you hear of this or that other Town or Castle of theirs either taken or besieged upon a slight perusal of it upon all occasions you may be able to judge of those matters The Author hereof hath seriously consulted with most of the Grave Writers both Cosmographers Historians and others of the greatest note which have hitherto written of those Countries and Provinces from whom besides his own observations he hath received no small light assistance having brought this Web out of the Loom he here presents it to the judicious Eye of the Candid Reader wherein without much trouble or cost he may behold the sad face in its full dimension of the late most High and Mighty States of the Vnited Provinces that seemed so lately to eclipse and shadow much of the Grandeur and Glory of the most Potent and absolute Princes now lamentably it self eclipsed and rent in pieces and Peace the fairest flower in Paradise and the pleasantest Fruit upon the Tree of Life is here in Exile so that you may say of them as the Poet of Rome Qui miserandae videt veteris vestigia Romae Ille potest merito dicere Roma fuit They who the Ruines of first Rome behold May say Rome is not now but was of old If in Anno 1584 the poor distressed People of the Low Countries was their Epithet in all their humble Addresses to the then Queen of England what they then spake as Politicians possibly the same they may now say as Realists But Pride will have its Fall sooner or later Perfidiousness and Ingratitude will never go long unpunished And truly three of the hardest things in the world are To Quadrate a Circle to finde out the Philosophers Stone and to make the Dutch grateful The first Office of Gratitude is to receive a good turn Civilly then to retain it in Memory and acknowledge it and lastly to endeavour a requital How far they are from these their Insolencies to the English Nation will easily tell you they daily do heap injuries on the English whom they have so highly wronged as if the latter injuries would give countenance of Justice to the former and to speak truly if we should be left to their mercies we should be stript as bare as Diogenes did Plato's Man 'T was England that first raised them and it was the King of Great Britain that under God would have preserved and protected them if they had kept their Ancient Boundaries and not been too ignorant of their true Interest At present they seem to the world a lost People full of intrinsick confusions and upon the point of Ruine and they that have been reckoned for Great and Dominical Letters in the Worlds Alphabet are now almost blotted out For their Country it was