England, the Dutch Republic, and Sweden had…
January 1672 CE
England, the Dutch Republic, and Sweden had in 1668 signed a Triple Alliance against France to prevent that country from occupying the Spanish Netherlands.
Charles II of England, feeling personally humiliated by the events of the Second Anglo–Dutch War, especially the Raid on the Medway, had only engaged himself in the Triple Alliance in order to create a rift between the Dutch and the French, two former allies.
While publicly trying to appease tensions between France and the Republic, making ambassador William Temple avow friendship to Grand Pensionary Johan de Witt, Charles has secretly schemed to seduce Louis XIV of France to a campaign against the Dutch.
He had in 1670 signed the secret Treaty of Dover with France, entailing that England would join Louis in a punitive campaign against the United Provinces.
He had been promised that after a French victory he would be rewarded by taking as Crown possessions strategic coastal key positions.
Walcheren, Cadzand and Sluys had been mentioned explicitly, but Charles also desires Brill, Texel, Terschelling and Delfzijl, to control the seaways towards the main Dutch ports, including Rotterdam and Amsterdam, the latter of which is the richest city in Europe.
Charles had hoped that an attack on the Republic could have begun in 1671, but it had had to be delayed for a year because the French needed first to establish secure diplomatic relations with two key German principalities: the Bishopric of Münster and the Archbishopric of Cologne.
Normally the Spanish Netherlands would act as a buffer between the Republic and France; to conquer the strongly fortified towns of Flanders and the south of the Republic would both be too slow and too costly for a swift and decisive campaign.
Therefore it had been decided to let the French army advance through the Bishopric of Liège, a dependency of Cologne, that intersects the Spanish Netherlands, and then attack the Republic unexpectedly from the east in its unprotected "soft side".
Ultimately Münster and Cologne even decide to join the invasion with their armies.
Charles has tried to use the delay to sow dissension between the Orangist faction in the Republic that wants to restore the House of Orange (represented at this time by Charles's nephew William III of Orange) to the office of stadtholder and the republican States faction headed by De Witt.
When, in November 1670, William had visited Charles to urge the House of Stewart to pay back a part of the large debt it owed to the House of Orange, Charles intended to make his nephew part of the conspiracy and promise to make him Sovereign Prince of Holland, a puppet state, in return for collaboration with the invading forces.
However, he started this attempt to recruit the young prince for his undertaking by advising William to become Roman Catholic, as he believed Catholicism was best fitted to absolutist rulers.
William's horrified reaction to this proposal had persuaded Charles that it was best not to reveal the Dover Treaty to him.
A further problem for Charles is the fact that he needs Parliament to vote for sufficient funds to bring out a strong fleet.
England, with its rather weak army, will not be involved in a land war.
Apart from an English brigade in the French army under the Duke of Monmouth, its only effort will be made by the Royal Navy to defeat its Dutch counterpart and, ideally, blockade the Dutch coast.
Charles is receiving considerable subsidies from Louis, about two hundred and twenty-five thousand a year, but he prefers to spend these on the luxuries of his own court.
Besides, the treaty being after all secret, these subsidies could not in any case be directed to the fleet.
However, whereas in 1664 the country had been, in the words of Samuel Pepys, "mad for war", most English in 1671 had begun to despair of ever being able to "beat the Dutch".
To provide for short-term money Charles therefore on January 2, 1672. repudiates the Crown debts in the Great Stop of the Exchequer, which gains him one million three hundred thousand pounds.