Everything about Lamoral Of Egmont totally explained
Lamoral, Count of Egmont, Prince of Gavre (
November 18,
1522, La Hamaide near
Ellezelles –
June 5 1568,
Brussels) was a general and statesman in
Flanders just before the start of the
Eighty Years' War, whose execution helped spark the national uprising that eventually led to the independence of the
Low Countries.
The
Count of
Egmont headed
one of the wealthiest and most powerful families in the
Low Countries.
Paternally, a branch of the Egmonts ruled the sovereign
duchy of Guelders until 1538. His mother belonged to a
cadet branch of the
House of Luxembourg, and through her he inherited the title
prince de Gavre. During his youth, he received a military education in Spain. In
1542, he inherited the estates of his elder brother Charles in
Holland. His family's stature increased further in 1544 when he wed, in the presence of the Holy Roman Emperors
Charles V and
Ferdinand I at
Spires, the
Countess Palatine Sabine of Simmern, whose brother became the
Elector Palatine Frederick III.
In the service of the Spanish army, he defeated the French in the battles of
Saint-Quentin (
1557) and
Gravelines (
1558). Egmont was appointed
stadtholder of Flanders and
Artois in
1559, aged only 37.
As a leading
Flemish nobleman, Egmont was a member of King
Philip II of Spain's official
Council of State for Flanders and
Artois. Together with
William the Silent, Prince of Orange and the
Count of Horn,born 1524, he protested against the introduction of the
inquisition in Flanders by the cardinal
Antoine Perrenot Granvelle,
bishop of Arras. Egmont even threatened to resign, but after Granvelle left, there was a reconciliation with the king. In 1565, Egmont went to
Madrid to beseech
Philip II, the king of Spain, for a change of
policy in the Netherlands, but met with little more than courtesy.
Soon thereafter, the
Iconoclasm started, and resistance against the Spanish rule in the Netherlands increased. As a devout Catholic, Egmont deplored the iconoclasm, and remained faithful to the Spanish king.
After Philip II sent the
Duke of Alba to the Netherlands, William of Orange decided to flee
Brussels. Having always declined to do anything that smacked of
lèse majesté, Egmont refused to heed Orange's warning, thus he and Horn decided to stay in the city. Upon arrival, Alba almost immediately had the counts of Egmont and Horn arrested on charges of treason, and imprisoned them in a castle in
Ghent, prompting Egmont's wife and eleven children to seek refuge in a
convent. Pleas for
amnesty came to the Spanish king from throughout Europe, including from many reigning sovereigns, the
Order of the Golden Fleece, and the king's kinsman the Emperor
Maximilian I, all to no avail.
On 4 June Egmont and Horn were condemned to death, and lodged that night in the
maison du roi. On June 5, 1568, both men, aged only 46 and 44 respectively, were
beheaded on the
Grand-Place in
Brussels, Egmont's uncomplaining dignity on the occasion being widely noted. Their deaths led to public protests throughout the Netherlands, and contributed to the resistance against the Spaniards. The Count of Egmont lies buried in
Zottegem.
Egmont's offices and vast estates were forfeited upon his execution. By inheritance he'd been count of Egmont (or Egmond), prince de Gavre and van Steenhuysen, baron de Fiennes, Gaesbeke and La Hamaide,
seigneur de Purmerent, Hoogwoude, Aertswoude, Beyerland, Sottenghien, Dondes, Auxy and Baer. Some of these lands were eventually returned to his heirs. By appointment, he was Captain General of the Lowlands under Charles V, knight of the
Golden Fleece since 1546, and Imperial
Chamberlain. Despite the taint of treason and the family's impoverishment, his niece
Louise of Lorraine-Mercouer, was chosen to became the
Queen consort of
Henry III of France in 1575.
The Count of Egmont is the main character in a play by
Goethe,
Egmont. In 1810
Ludwig van Beethoven composed an overture and incidental music for a revival of the play.
Notes and references
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