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Encyclopedia > Emanuel van Meteren

Emanuel van Meteren (September 6, 1535 - April 11, 1612) was a Flemish historian and Consul for "the Traders of the Low Countries" in London. He was born in Antwerp, the son of Sir Jacobus van Meteren, financier and publisher of early English versions of the Bible, and Orrilia Ortellius, of the famous Ortellius family of mapmakers, and nephew of the famous cartographer Abraham Ortelius.


Van Meteren was a unique historian. He was not merely a chronicler of the events of his time, but also a powerful and wealthy man who influenced those events.


In 1581 he was the Consul representing Dutch merchants in London. In that year he harbored Christiaen, the fourth secretary of William the Silent, Prince of Orange while he was being pursued by enraged Spaniards. He related the surrounding events in his work Album.


To help thwart the plots of the Spanish Ambassador at the Court of Queen Elizabeth, William the Silent enlisted one Willem Janszoon van Hoorn, the captain of the Sea Beggar, to pretend to accept a bribe from the Spanish Ambassador and enter into a conspiracy to surprise the English garrison at Flushing. To avoid trickery Don Bernadin de Mendoza had insisted on having the captain's small son as a hostage. Since trickery was indeed intended, the captain was desperate as to what might befall his son. The Prince of Orange promised him on his word of honour that he would have the boy kidnapped from the Spanish Embassy in London and safely conveyed home. Christiaen (later called "The Elder") was commissioned to redeem at all costs the Stadtholder's given pledge. Van Meteren made some arrangements with the Secretary of State, Sir Francis Walsingham, who was in charge of security for the embassy. Nevertheless Christiaen and the boy narrowly escaped the pursuit of the enraged Spaniards who scoured the banks of the Thames for him and the boy. Van Meteren was successfully in concealing them and effecting their escape.


In 1599 van Meteren wrote a book titled Belgische ofte Nederlandsche Historie van onzen Tijden, detailing the events of the first part of the Eighty Years War between the Netherlands and Spain. Some of the accounts detail events that van Meteren actually witnessed. For instance he was with the Prince of Orange during the siege of Zaltbommel by the Spaniards.


After Henry Hudson returned from his second voyage he related to van Meteren that there had been a mutiny in 1609, originating in quarrels between Dutch and English sailors. Van Meteren had access to Hudson's journals, charts and logbooks, and recorded these events in Historie der Nederlanden.


He also chronicled the adventures and demise of the French merchant François Le Fort.


Van Meteren is also the author of Historia Belgica.


External link

  • The life and times of Henry Hudson (http://www.ianchadwick.com/hudson/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Van Meteren family (1957 words)
The family van Cuyk had owned Cuyk since the 11th century and it is believed that this family originated from a part of the Netherlands called the Betuwe (between the big rivers Nederrijn/Lek in the north and the Waal in the south) in the province of Gelderland.
Jacobus van Meteren married Orrilia Ortellius in Antwerp in 1540.
Marten could be the son of Jan Joosten van Meteren (born 1626 in Tielerwaard) and married to Mayken (Crom) Hendriksen, or Melchior van Meteren (born 1590 and married to Arience Anneken van Beest), or Hendrix van Cuijk van Meteren (born 1603 in Bommelerwaard) or Jan Gijsbertsen van Meteren (born 1618 in Zalbommel).
Jacobus van Meteren - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (356 words)
Apart from the reference to Whytchurch and the place of printing, this statement agrees with that of Simeon Ruytinck, and it is possible that Van Meteren showed his zeal in the matter by undertaking the cost of printing the work as well as that of remunerating the translator.
In fact in Emanuel van Meteren's affidavit of 1609 he is referring to both the Coverdale Old Testament of 1535, when his father employed Myles Coverdale as translator, and the Matthew Bible of 1537, printed in Paris and London.
Because J. van Meteren was the publisher for both of these works, he was readily able to provide Rogers with Coverdale's prior work covering those books of the Old Testament which Tyndale had not had time to translate.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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