Enlightenment · Europe · Politics
1672
De Witt Brothers Murdered
August 20, 1672
A mob in The Hague lynched the Dutch grand pensionary Johan de Witt and his brother Cornelis, blaming them for the military catastrophe of the French invasion. Their bodies were hung upside down and partially eaten. William of Orange quietly inherited political power; the regent party never fully recovered, and Dutch republicanism took on a darker, more cautious character.