Allegory on the Defeat of the Duke of Alva at Brielle

Art Institute of Chicago

Allegory on the Defeat of the Duke of Alva at Brielle

Artist unknown

Date
1580
Medium
Engraving in black on ivory laid paper
Culture
Flanders
Department
Prints and Drawings
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Political broadsheets invoked news and religious polemics. This satirical engraving represents the April 1, 1572, dispatching of the ferocious Duke of Alva and his troops from Brielle, a small Dutch village—a major turning point in the Netherlands’s conflict with Spain. The Dutch and German word for glasses ( Brille ) is phonetically close to the town’s name. The bespectacled geese represent its saviors, a group of Calvinist Dutch nobles who used guerrilla tactics. They burn a monstrance, chalice, and crucifix on the left, and rout the foxes—often associated with the evils of the Catholic Church during the Reformation—in the background.

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Object type
AAT300041273

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