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Top: 1. Title Page of "The Miseries
and Misfortunes of War" (1633)
[See a larger version of this
image (1275 px)]
Bottom: 7. Plundering and Burning a Village (1633)
[See a larger version of
this image (1368 px)]
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In this series we want to explore the problem of war in 17th century
Europe by juxtaposing an image from the series of 18 etchings made
by Jacques Callot showing the ravages of war in his native Lorraine
during the Thirty Years War (1618-48), with passages from Hugo Grotius,The
Rights of War and Peace (1625) which is a foundation stone of
the modern understanding of the laws of war.
[See other works by Hugo
Grotius]
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Jacques Callot, Hugo Grotius, and the Miseries of War in the 17th Century
Overview of the Set
Titles of the 18 images [the images above are listed in order from left to
right and then top to bottom]. Links will take you to a description of the
image and the relevant quotation from Liberty Fund's edition of Hugo Grotius,
The Law of War and Peace (1625) below:
- Title Page
- The Recruitment of Troops
- The Battle
- Scene of Pillage
- Plundering a Large Farmhouse
- Destruction of a Convent
- Plundering and Burning a Village
- Attack on a Coach
- Discovery of the Criminal Soldiers
- The Strappado
- The Hanging
- The Firing Squad
- The Stake
- The Wheel
- The Hospital
- Dying Soldiers by the Roadside
- The Peasants avenge Themselves
- The Distribution of Rewards
Source
The Art Gallery of New South Wales <http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/>
Online Resources
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Hugo Grotius (1583-1645) by Michiel Jansz
van Mierevelt (1631)
[Source: Rijksmuseum Amsterdam]
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Jacques Callot, Hugo Grotius, and the Miseries of War in the 17th Century
7. Plundering and Burning a Village (1633)
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7. Plundering and Burning a Village (1633)
[See a larger
version of this image (1368 px)]
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Description: Armed soldiers pillage and burn a village including
a small chapel in the upper centre (there is a cross to its left). The inhabitants
and livestock are rounded up to be taken off as prisoners or booty. Livestock
can be seen being herded at the lower right. A man can be seen being killed
at the lower left under a tree.There is a grieviing wife who sits next to her
dead husband in the centre foreground.
III. 1. This will likewise happen, where the Possession is yet in Dispute, if
there be great Hopes of a speedy Victory, of which those Lands and Fruits will
be the Reward. Thus Alexander the Great, as Justin relates it, hindered his Soldiers
from wasting Asia, declaring to them, that they should spare their own, and not
destroy those Things, which they came to possess. Thus Quintius, when Philip
overrun Thessaly, wasting it with Fire and Sword, exhorted his Soldiers (as Plutarch
informs us) to march thro’ the Country, as if it were now entirely their own.
Croesus advising Cyrus not to give up Lydia to be plundered by his Soldiers,
tells him, You will not ruin my Cities, nor my Lands, they are no longer mine,
they are now become yours, they will destroy what is yours.
2. They who do otherwise, may apply to themselves the Words of Jocasta to
Polynices in Seneca’s Thebais.
Patriam petendo perdis: Ut fiat tua,
Vis esse nullam: Quin tuae causae nocet
Ipsum hoc, quod armis uris infestis solum
Segetesque adultas sternis, & totos fugam
Edis per agros: Nemo sic vastat sua.
Quae corripi igne, quae meti gladio jubes,
Aliena credis.
[You ruin your Country whilst you seek it; to make it yours
Its Being you destroy; it defeats your Claim
To level, thus in Arms, the ripen’d Harvest;
Is Fire and Sword, the Vengeance of an Enemy,
Applied to Spoil and Ravage what’s ones own?
No, our deadliest Foes we thus afflict.]
To the same Sense are the Words of Curtius, Whatsoever they did not waste,
they owned to be their Enemies. Agreeable hereunto is that which Cicero, in
his Letters to Atticus, says against the Design that Pompey had formed of taking
his Country by Famine. Upon this Account Alexander the Isian blames Philip
(in the 17th Book of Polybius) whose Words Livy has thus rendered: Philip dared
not engage in a fair Field-fight, nor come to a pitch’d Battle, but flying
away burned and plundered Cities; so that the Conquered rendered useless to
the Conquerors what should have been the Recompence of Victory. But the old
Kings of Macedon did not use to do so, they used to come to a fair Engagement,
to spare Cities as much as possible, that they might have the more wealthy
Dominion. For it is not a strange Conduct, to make War in such a Manner, that
at the same Time, we dispute the Possession of a Thing, we leave nothing for
ourselves but War.
Source: Hugo Grotius, The Rights of War and Peace,
edited and with an Introduction by Richard Tuck, from the Edition by Jean Barbeyrac
(Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 3. CHAPTER XII: Concerning
Moderation in regard to the spoiling the Country of our Enemies, and such other
Things.
Accessed from /title/1427/121240/2445825 on 2011-04-28.
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