Dirck van Delen: Iconoclasm in a Church (1630)
(Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
The
destruction of Islamic cultural heritage sites in Iraq in the last few weeks
reminded me of an event in Dutch history. In the period August-October 1566
there was an iconoclastic fury (Dutch = 'beeldenstorm) in certain areas in The
Netherlands and Flanders. In the 1550s Flanders en The Netherlands became
increasingly Protestant, despite penal sanctions. Together with harvests which
were failing and an negative economy, unrest was brewing in the Low Countries.
A focal point for this unrest became the Catholic faith and priests. People
viewed the Catholic priests as corrupt and totaly unfit for their duty. In the
minds of a lot of Protestants, the Catholic church was the cause of all their
problems. On 10 august 1566 things escalated. In Steenvoorde, a town in today
northern France, there was a sermon by Sebastiaan Matte about the commandment
'Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven images' (Exodus 20:4-6). After the
sermon the people attacked the nearby Saint Lawrence Monastery and destroyed
all the statues. This Iconoclastic attack spread rapidly Northwards with
Antwerp being attacked on August 20, Ghent on August 22 and Amsterdam on August
23. The attacks didn't reach every town in the Netherlands and in some places
the attacks were repulsed by the local Civic Guards. When the news reached
Philip II, King of Spain and lord of The Netherlands he send his army under the
command of Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, Grand Duke of Alba to restore order in
The Netherlands. This was the start of the Dutch War of Independence
(1568-1648). This painting is from 1630.