I Take History With My Coffee
On October 25, 1555, Philip II rose before the assembled Estates of the Low Countries in the great hall of the Coudenberg Palace and began to speak. He then stopped. He explained that his French was not fluent enough. The Bishop of Arras delivered his speech for him. The Estates listened, applauded politely, and went home. This episode is a character portrait. It traces the formation that made Philip II who he was: Castilian piety, a governing style built on documents and suspicion rather than personal presence, and theological rigidity that was not cruelty but conviction. It also takes stock of what he had actually inherited — the most commercially sophisticated territory in Christendom, governed by a political culture of consent and negotiation that was almost the direct opposite of everything he knew. The structural tensions were already present in 1555, before he made a single decision: resentment of war taxation, the quartering of Spanish troops, and a heresy question that “largely contained” would never be good enough to satisfy him. We also briefly meet the three figures who will define the decade ahead: William of Orange, twenty-two, loyal and watchful; the Count of Egmont, a future military hero and a true believer in a workable relationship between Spain and the Netherlands; and Granvelle, the brilliant administrator who could translate Philip’s intentions into something the Low Countries could hear — which is precisely why the Low Countries resented him. Philip stayed in Brussels for four years. He tried. He distributed gifts, hosted ceremonies, and made the proper gestures. When he finally departed for Spain in 1559, the grandees at his farewell praised him as even more generous than his father. But the benevolence that does not feel heartfelt is the kind that eventually curdles. He knew something was wrong in that hall in 1555, but he could not diagnose it. What he left behind when he crossed back to Spain — unresolved, already under pressure — was everything else. Geoffrey Parker: The Grand Strategy of Philip II [https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?ds=20&kn=geoffrey%20parker%20philip%20ii&ref_=ds_ac_rk_0&sts=t] Geoffrey Parker: Imprudent King: A New Life of Philip II [https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=32394300442] Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/itakehistory] Find us on Substack. Both Free and Premium content is available: https://substack.com/@itakehistorywithmycoffee [https://substack.com/@itakehistorywithmycoffee] Podcast website: https://www.podpage.com/i-take-history-with-my-coffee/ [https://www.podpage.com/i-take-history-with-my-coffee/] Visit my blog at itakehistory.com [https://www.itakehistory.com/] and also follow me on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and Bluesky. Comments and feedback can be sent to itakehistory@gmail.com. You can also leave a review on Apple Podcast and Spotify. Refer to the episode number in the subject line. If you enjoy this podcast, you can help support my work to deliver great historical content. Consider buying me a coffee: I Take History With My Coffee is writing a history blog and doing a history podcast. (buymeacoffee.com) [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/itakehistory] Visit audibletrial.com/itakehistory [http://www.audibletrial.com/itakehistory] to sign up for your free trial of Audible, the leading destination for audiobooks. Intro Music: Hayden Symphony #39 Outro Music: Vivaldi Concerto for Mandolin and Strings in D
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