Johan de Witt
Johan de Witt (24 September 1625 – 20 August 1672) was a Dutch statesman and mathematician who was a major political figure during the
First Stadtholderless Period, when flourishing global trade in a period of rapid European colonial expansion made the Dutch a leading trading and seafaring power in Europe, commonly referred to as the
Dutch Golden Age. De Witt was elected
Grand Pensionary of Holland, and together with his uncle
Cornelis de Graeff, he controlled the Dutch political system from around 1650 until the (Disaster Year) of 1672. This progressive cooperation between the two statesmen, and the consequent support of Amsterdam under the rule of De Graeff, was an important political axis that organized the political system within the republic.
As a leading
republican of the
Dutch States Party, De Witt opposed the
House of Orange-Nassau and the
Orangists and preferred a shift of power from the
central government to the ''
regenten''. However, the Dutch Republic suffered numerous early defeats in the
Rampjaar, due to an alliance of
England,
France and several
German states which planned on invading the Dutch Republic. In the hysteria that followed, he and his brother
Cornelis de Witt were blamed and lynched in The Hague, with their corpses at least partially eaten by the rioters. These
cannibals were never prosecuted, and some historians claim
William of Orange may have incited them.
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