Empire: World History - 359. Spice Wars: The Birth of New York (Ep 2)
Episode Date: May 13, 2026What drove the Dutch to employ samurai mercenaries to commit horrifying genocides in the Banda Islands? Why were European powers willing to torture and kill just to control the global supply of a drie...d seed? How did a peace treaty trade a spice island for Manhattan, giving birth to New York? Get the entire Dutch Empire miniseries early and ad-free by joining the Empire Club at empirepoduk.com In the second episode of our series on the Dutch East India Company, William and Anita are joined by historian Giles Milton, author of Nathaniel's Nutmeg, to explore the deadly rivalry between the English and Dutch East India Companies. They discuss the brutal battle for Run Island, the horrific genocide committed by the Dutch in the East Indies, and how a trade for nutmeg gave us modern-day Manhattan. For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com. Email: empire@goalhanger.com Instagram: @empirepoduk Blue Sky: @empirepoduk X: @empirepoduk Assistant Producer: Imogen Marriott Social Producer: Charlie Johnson Producer: Anouska Lewis Executive Producer: Dom Johnson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello and welcome to Empire with me Anita Arnan.
And me, William Duremple.
And today's episode, the second in our amazing story of the VOC, the forgotten East India Company
that we always omit from stories when we talk about the English East India Company,
is, I think, one of the most extraordinary and little-known stories in the history of Empire,
at least little known in the English-speaking world.
It's about the deathly rivalry between the English and the Dutch and the two East India companies,
these two corporations that were empires, these incredibly rich precursors to the great and incredibly powerful corporations of our day.
And the story revolves around a spice so valuable that they were willing to torture and kill for it.
And the story culminates in a 17th century deal that changed the fortune of Manhattan forever.
When we say valuable, I mean, I just want to give you an idea of how valuable.
Okay.
And honestly, this doesn't speak well of the kind of reading that I've been doing.
But wait for weight, it's interesting, in the 1600s nutmeg was more valuable than cocaine is today.
Let that sit with you for a second.
I did the sums.
That's all I did.
Did you experiment?
No.
I was just why to get there very, very quickly, I did the sums.
To guide us through this rather extraordinary story, we've got exactly the right man.
for the job. You know, he's one of the finest narrative historians working in Britain today.
Giles Milton is the man and his book, Nathaniel's Nutmeg, is an absolute rip-roaring read,
which can I tell you he refers to as Nats Nuts when he's not working, which made me laugh so much.
Nats-Nuts, Nathaniel's Notmeg, a fine tomec, currently being developed for television.
It is indeed, yeah. Dear Russell Crow has got the rights and is...
doing something with it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I'm not quite sure where we're at with it,
but I'm told it's rolling along.
So coming to your screens in the next couple of years, hopefully.
What a tale.
First of all, I mean, William,
do you want to sort of remind us
about the monopolies that existed at the time
because we need a little bit of context?
So for those of you that missed the last episode
with the wonderful Harold van der Linder,
my travelling companion in Sumatra last week,
we paddled up the rivers of,
Martra together and ended up with Herald eating kneecap, which is something that I have to say I
avoided.
I opted for noodles instead.
Charles, I wasn't there for this recording and I'm quite glad because I think it crossed a
gamut of madness.
Have you never eaten kneecap?
No, I haven't.
Anyway, on you go.
Yeah.
So go on, Willie.
So the story we told, or rather the story, Harold amazingly educated us about was the story of
how the Dutch did the first stock market, invented the IPO, also invented how to fiddle it,
and did the first stock market short, invented financial regulations, all of which meant
that the Dutch East India Company had far more, I think the word is capitalisation, had far more
cash in its coffers than the English East India Company and grew at an incredible rate far
faster than its English competitor.
and we ended the episode with the English and the Dutch in competition in Batavia and Jakarta
with the two sides slightly facing off, which is where Giles' story will begin today.
Yeah, and it revolves around this tiny dried seed that you might have seen in your kitchens.
I mean, if you've ever made a bechamel sauce or mulled wine or pumpkin pie or in India,
very much you use masala chai.
I mean, a staple of everyday nutmeg is your go-to.
spice. Of course masala chai's got nutmeg in it.
If it's a good masala chai, if it's a good masala chai, it will have cloves, nutmeg and cinnamon.
You know, it was attributed, or it was credited with so many magical powers, Giles.
I mean, I was looking up cure for flatulence, cure for dysentery, a hallucinogen, blood
poisoning. I mean, was there anything they thought it didn't do?
It did it all. It cured the bloody flocks, as they said, the dysentery.
that they were all getting. But I think really, yeah, as you say, Aphrodisiac, I mean, when you're
trying to sell something for vast prices, you know, add all these properties onto it. And I suppose
nutmeg in the sort of 1600s was a cross between Viagra and cocaine, you know, which he mentioned
earlier. And this made it extraordinary valuable, but particularly that physicians claimed it could
cure the plague, the pestiferous pestilence, as it was called, which is, of course, you know,
cut a sway through the population of London at the time.
And so they claimed that if you had a bit of nutmeg,
stuffed it into these bizarre nasal caps that they wore.
They used to breathe through this sort of concoction of spices
of which nutmeg was the key ingredient.
When you go to Venice and you see those sort of beaks that they sell
for Venetian outfits,
that I think was also an anti-plague sort of nutmeg holder.
You're absolutely right.
beaks were filled with spices and it was claimed that if you breathe through those spices,
you wouldn't get the plague. Now, obviously, it was a complete nonsense, but everyone believed
it at the time. And that was the important bit because it meant that everyone wanted these
spices, which meant that the prices remained extraordinarily high. And they had celebrity
believers, as well, I mean, Peeps is one of those people who swore by the stuff. He said, you know,
this is the only thing that saved me while others have died around me. Yeah, I mean, there's a
wonderful account in my book, actually, Peeps going down to the docks on a late
one night and sort of doing this backhanded deal in the darkness where he shoves a few gold
coins into the hands of some sea dog and in exchange he's given a small sackload of nutmeg.
So yeah, this was a almost black market industry was going on in London at the time.
Such was the value of this spice.
I love the idea of Peeps being the sort of David Beckham influencer of the day.
So shall we talk about where you got these things?
because for something that was so sought after
that everybody wanted to get their hands on,
it was bloody difficult to get your hands on.
Where did it grow exactly?
And this is where the story really revolves around this,
because Nutmeg in the 1600s only grew on six islands in the world.
And these islands, known as the Bander Islands,
or the Banda archipelago, are impossibly remote.
They are literally in the middle of nowhere.
Just sort of paint a picture their 1,200 miles,
east of Java, if people can place that on a map. They're 600 miles west of Australia.
They're kind of nearer to Papua New Guinea than anywhere else, aren't they?
Yeah, that's the nearest place, Papua New Guinea. But even today, they're extremely hard
to get to. But in the 1600s, you know, when you're sailing in a wooden ship,
halfway across the world, they were not only difficult to get to, but extremely dangerous
to get to, because you're contending not only with the elements, with the storms, with monsoons,
with reefs, with sunken reefs,
but you're also contending with the Portuguese, the Spanish,
and of course the Dutch,
none of whom want you to find these islands
and kind of break the monopoly
that they're trying to carve out on this space.
I mean, difficult to find the islands,
but also they're a bugger to grow.
Do you want to know some...
What do you like a nutmeg tree fact?
They take about six to seven to nine years to fruit.
So, you know, it's not the kind of kidnap crop
that you could, if you are a colonial,
as we discuss with tea and other things,
that you could sort of sneak off and take a cutting
and start your own industry.
These trees, giles, have to be established.
They have to be mature.
They do, and they're very, very fussy trees.
So they require a particular type of volcanic soil.
They require a particular microclimate,
which is why they were confined to these islands.
And it was extremely difficult, actually,
to try and transplant these plants.
Just to paint a little picture of the tree,
because most people won't have seen one.
They're very, very beautiful.
They look rather like a lemon tree.
And in fact, the nutmeg fruit is this beautiful lemony golden fruit that hangs off the tree.
And it's inside that fruit.
You break open the flesh and inside you have this withered little nut, which is the nutmeg,
which is entirely surrounded by a very beautiful, bright red, lacy sort of thing,
which is mace, which is very similar in taste and flavour, in fact.
Mace and nutmeg come from the same fruit.
They come from exactly the same fruit.
The nut is covered in this stuff, yeah, in the mace.
And Indian cooking also uses mace a great deal.
I don't know any other cooking that does.
We have little pots of it.
Can you eat it or not?
Nutmeg obviously used in cooking.
Mace is used in cooking as well.
And of course, the flesh of the fruit in the Bander Islands
is made into sort of jams and marmalades and chutneys and things like that.
So every bit of the fruit can be used.
And it should be said that these six islands in the Bander Islands,
they are entirely, or they wear, entirely covered in forests and groves of nutmeg trees.
And the smell, the scent of these trees is quite extraordinary.
So when you're on a boat approaching these islands, hanging in the air is this almost kind of extraordinary perfume.
That pungent smell of nutmeg hangs in the air.
So they're magical places.
But as we will hear, they wear also extremely dangerous places.
Right. So, I mean, we should talk about, we've talked a little bit about the cocaine value, if we measure everything in cocaine value, which we don't on this podcast. I don't know making a sound a lot cooler than we are. You sound like you expect your life.
Much more peppy than I actually deserve to be. But we're talking about an enormous markup of roughly sort of 60,000 percent. Because, Charles, when you when you buy them from the islanders, I guess how much were people spending on it and how much were they selling it in the streets of London?
So yeah, it was about less than one English penny would get you 10 pounds of nutmeg.
So a kind of sack full of nutmeg.
That would sell for something like £2 and 10 shillings when you brought it back on the three-year voyage back to England.
The markup is absolutely staggering, whopping.
I mean, what Bondi Corporation wouldn't want a markup of 60,000 percent?
This is why, you know, to bring back even a small amount would set you up for life.
you're going to be extremely rich.
And we should perhaps explain, I mean, I'm sure people know this,
but for anyone that doesn't, why there is this massive markup,
is that traditionally the nutmeg would be shunted from the Bander Islands
to somewhere like Sriva Jaya, modern Sumatra.
From there, Indian sailors would take it to somewhere like Kerala,
whereupon Arab sailors would take it up the Red Sea to Cairo,
and then the Venetians would take it from Cairo to Venice.
Venice was the great centre of the spice trade.
in Italy, and then Northern Europeans, the English or the Dutch, would buy it from Venice.
And at each stage there would be a, you know, 200% markup.
So it went through five different hands originally before it got to Northern Europe,
where it was useful for stopping, as well as Viagra and so on, and all these, and plagues and all these other uses,
particularly useful for curing meats in winter at a time when you didn't have refrigeration.
First of all, I don't think it helped with plague at all.
It was just kind of like a belief that I would.
If you get plague, go see a doctor.
Can I just say it's a public health announcement?
I have to say, it didn't really preserve meat either.
In fact, it didn't do very much.
In fact, it was basically good for Muldwine and Bessramel sauce, you know.
But they didn't realize that at the time.
But Willie, you've made a very important point because the whole point of these voyages
is if you could sail to the Bander Islands and then make it back home alive again,
you've cut out five middlemen, all of whom double men, all of whom double.
or treble the price of the thing on the way.
So you stand to make a huge amount of money.
This is all about money, finance and business,
but most of all, it's about a monopoly
because if you control those six Bander Islands,
you control the global supply of nutmeg.
And that makes you a big cheese in this story.
Now, in the last episode,
we told the story of how the Dutch managed to short the Portuguese
who were already in,
in this area and take over the spice trade and make an enormous sum of money on the way.
But paint us a picture of the early 1600s with this Cold War developing between these two
nations that have been in the sense allies up to this point.
They're both Protestant nations.
They're both fencing off against the Catholics, whether it's the Spanish or the Portuguese,
but next to each other with rival companies.
with rival warehouses on either side of a river in Batavia, things begin to get nasty.
Yes, so both the English and the Dutch, they set up what are known as factories,
but are not really factories at all. They like fortified warehouses, which are their headquarters,
and they're in Bantam at the time, which is a port just down the coast from Jakarta.
And as you say, rivalries are intense there. They're both after the same thing.
And from the very word go, I think, the Dutch are far more powerful.
They have more ships.
They have far more capital behind them, many more men.
And they're much more aggressive in pursuit of the spices that are so yearned for in Europe.
And so from this base bantam in Java, they begin to set sail east, further east, to the Moluccas or what are known as the spice islands.
Or in the 1600s, they were simply those the spiceries.
And some of these islands were known for cinnamon and cloves.
That's Tanati and Tidori.
Others are known exclusively for Nutmeg, and that's the Bander Islands.
And the Dutch really have a big head start on the English.
They get to the Bander Islands, first of all.
And the first thing they do is build forts on the islands.
Forts, which I have to say still exist to this day,
these crumbling, vast fortifications.
There are still, you find brass cannon lying in the sand in these islands,
you know.
You make it sound a very alluring spot.
It's absolutely wonderful.
And the point, the kind of key point of the Bander Islands is that, as I said,
there are six islands and five of them are all quite close together.
And the Dutch realised if they built strategically placed forts,
they could control those five islands and therefore have a virtual monopoly on the nutmeg trade.
But one island, the six island in the Bander Islands, run island,
was about 10 miles from the main group.
And this was the island that the,
The Dutch did not control.
And this island was a real thorn for them
because it meant that without them controlling it,
if the English controlled it,
they would be able to break this monopoly on the nutmeg trade
that the Dutch was so desperate to carve out for themselves.
Yeah, I mean, describing it as a Cold War,
the Iceman, if you like, the Iceman from the Dutch side.
I know you talked about him in the last episode, Willie.
But Jan Peterson Keown.
Jan Kearn was the Governor-General of the entire.
of the Dutchy Sindies.
To use the parlance that we do sometimes use on this podcast,
was an asshole.
I mean, he's sort of like a Calvinist,
so deeply religious and couches everything he says
in sort of, you know, God has given unto us the Dutch this bounty.
It reminds me of certain people today who are making similar claims.
Couldn't possibly comment.
But, you know, so he made a big show of like, you know,
don't drink, don't women eyes, don't swear.
But, you know, this is the same man who had a 12-year-old girl flogged to death
in Batavia.
And he's a monster.
What more do we need to know about this man?
Just remind us, Giles, about, you know,
the personality of the guy who basically did for the Dutch.
Yeah, well, I mean, a portrait exists of him,
and he looks absolutely terrifying.
He's got these piercing eyes that are staring directly at you.
And unlike the English who wanted to try and deal with the native populations of these islands,
Yan Cohen decided it would be far easier just to massacre the lot,
just kill the lot of them and take control of the islands.
And essentially this is what he tried to do with the Bander Islands
and we'll come on to the massacre because this is a not of a pleasant story.
But compare it to the English.
I don't know if I'm getting ahead of myself here,
but when the English come to Run Island,
what they do, they sign a treaty with the islanders
and they bring Run Island under the...
under the control of the English.
And the treaty document still exists.
And I'll just read you.
It says,
And whereas King James, by the grace of God,
is king of England, Scotland, France and Ireland,
he is now, by the mercy of God, king of run.
And as one of the sea dogs, crypt,
I really shouldn't say this, Willie, while you're here.
But as one sea dog quipped, Run Island was going to prove far more profitable
than Scotland ever had done.
But probably true.
It is factually correct.
But you've got now sort of this island with the flag of St George fluttering by choice of the islanders.
The man, again, who is representative of the British interest, Nathaniel Cortobe.
Tell us about him.
So Nathaniel Cortob is who's to play an absolutely sort of central role to the whole story of what happened in the Bander Islands.
He was an employee of the East India Company.
Not much is known about him his early life,
although subsequent to writing the book,
I found that his house still exist in Cranbrook and Kent,
a beautiful half-timbered Elizabethan mansion.
Anyway, he set sail on one of the East India Company voyages,
which was an extraordinary adventure.
They took, you know, several years to get to the Spice Islands,
worth reminding listeners of the hazards they face,
storms, the doldrums in the Atlantic.
where the winds calmed and there was no, the ships couldn't move at all.
This is the original word that gives us doldrums.
Exactly, yes, where there was no wind and your ship just hung around in the heat
as you used up your precious foodstuffs on board and your water.
And probably got scurvy, which is another perennial problem sailing out over the oceans to run.
Scurvy was a perennial problem, a hideous disease caused, of course, by lack of citrus fruit,
lack of vitamin C. Your teeth fell out, your skin got purple blotches. You got incredibly weak and
then you died. The other thing was amoebic dysentery or, as I said, the bloody flux I mentioned
earlier. This was caused often by contaminated water. There's accounts of them drinking water on the
ships. They'd have to clench their teeth to sieve out all the flora and fauna that was sprouting
in the water barrels, you know, quite disgusting. And then, of course, there were storms.
there was attacks by the Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch.
And in the early voyages, only one in three ships made it home again.
And about 80% of the men on board would die.
So you're taking a massive risk when you travel on one of these voyages.
And it gives some idea of the value of the spices and the money they hope to make,
you know, when they got home again, that they were prepared to take the risk.
But, I mean, he's a man who sort of keeps his surviving cruise, you know, spirit.
up, by sort of giving them sort of regular doses of Arach and reading from the Bible regularly.
I mean, it's sort of quite an English thing to do, isn't it?
Cheers and cheers.
Keeping the men entertained and keeping boredom at bay was a very difficult thing to do.
And one of the, in fact, the captain of the ship on which Nathaniel Cortepe sailed, William Keeling.
He's one of my favourite characters in this entire story, actually, because he performed
Hamlet. He got all his men dressed up in costumes and everything and performed Hamlet on the
mangrove shores of West Africa as a way when they were caught in the doldrums. Yeah, and he thought,
well, this will keep them entertained. So this was, yeah, they had to keep the men entertained.
They have to keep bored them at bay. And so Nathaniel Court Top, when he arrives on Run
Island, he's faced with a problem here. Run Island, it should be pointed out, is a very, very
small island. It's a couple of miles wide, a mile or so long.
and they're going to be stuck on this island for a very long time.
So Arak, this fiery alcohol, is going to play a very important role in their lives
as they struggle to survive on this island.
And he arrives in Run in 1616 with two ships and 38 men,
and almost immediately the Dutch turn up on the horizon.
Yes. So the Dutch, as I said, they control the other five islands in the Bander Group,
leaving run as this isolated sort of outpost, if you like.
The Dutch have dozens of ships in the Bander Islands at time.
They have thousands of soldiers.
And so this is a classic sort of David versus Goliath struggle that's going to take place.
But Nathaniel Corteau on Run Island has one thing in his favour.
And that is that Run Island, most of Run Island,
is surrounded by extremely high precipitous cliffs that are almost impossible to scale.
And there's only one section of the island.
where it will be possible for the Dutch to land.
And, you know, Nathaniel knows enough about cannon and warfare
to know where to strategically place the cannon from his two ships
to defend the island.
The Dutch then instigate a complete blockade on run island.
They try on repeated occasions to try and take the island by force.
But Nathaniel's cannon see them off.
You know, a few shots over into the sea
and the ships have to retreat.
And so the siege of run will begin,
and it's going to last for a very long time indeed.
And it's really a question of who can hold out longer.
Will it be Nathaniel and his men on the island,
or will the Dutch be able to take this place by force?
I mean, when you say a very long time,
we're talking 1,540 days.
I mean, that's just unthinkable.
We're going to go to a break soon,
but with conditions getting worse and worse for Cortope
and his men,
there is a glimmer of hope at one point, isn't there, Giles, that the siege that the Dutch have so successfully laid around Run might be broken with some supplies.
What's on this sort of mercy mission that could have turned everything around for them?
Yes. I mean, Nathaniel and his men have been on the island for many, many months by now.
They are extremely hungry. There's no food on the island, apart from nutmeg.
And nutmeg jam wears a little bit thin after a while.
And so they need supplies from outside.
There's also very little fresh water on Run Island.
It's collected in the monsoon.
There's no natural water source on the island.
It's too small for that.
And so they're looking out at the horizon every day,
desperately hoping that a ship, a relief vessel, is going to come.
And then suddenly they see on the horizon sails.
And this is not just a ship, but it is an English ship.
It's a Solomon.
And it is full of supplies that have been sent from Bantam in Java.
And it's coming to relieve them.
And the men standing on the cliffs, they all give out a huge cheer.
They've not been forgotten.
They are going to be relieved.
They've got support coming.
They've got food coming.
And this for them is the best possible news.
Not just food.
600 jars of Arak, we're told.
That's going to help them along for the next few months.
You'd be kind of beside yourself.
But if you're getting excited for the poor men looking at those sales across the horizon,
Join us after the break to see whether this ends up in an enormous party on the Little Island of run.
It's not looking promising by the sound of it.
Or not.
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Welcome back. So just before the break, we were talking about, you know, this relief voyage
of the Solomon that might have made all the difference to the English.
sailors who had made it these 38 men with Corthope waiting for something with nothing to drink,
nothing to eat, and this would have been everything that they needed.
Giles, what happens? Does it make it to the shore?
Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. I'm afraid it's not going to end very well for the men on the Solomon.
As they come towards Iran and the men are watching expectantly, they turn to the east
and they see a Dutch fleet coming towards the Solomon.
And unfortunately, the Solomon is attacked by the Dutch. It's overwhelmed.
and literally under the cliffs of run,
it's captured by the Dutch and the men on board
and all the supplies and that Arak that they were so desperate for.
No Arak makes it ashore, not even a single jar.
Not even a single jar.
It's all carted off to the other five Bander Islands by the Dutch.
And actually rather worse than this
is the crew of the Solomon are taken prisoner by the Dutch
and the Dutch show absolutely no mercy.
And they're all imprisoned on what,
became known as Fort Revenge, which was one of the forts that I mentioned earlier that could still
be seen in the Bander Islands. And I don't know how sensitive the ears are of your listeners,
but I don't know if I can just read a very, very short thing of one of the prisoners who was
housed in the dungeons of this fort. And there was a grill over the top of the dungeon.
And this is what he said. Ben Bartholomew Churchman, he said, the Dutch, he said,
they pissed and shut on our heads.
And in this manner we lay until such time as we were broken out from top to toe like lepers,
having nothing to eat but dirty rice and stinking rainwater.
And so the Dutch treated their prisoners and the native population with absolute contempt and brutality.
And that was to be the story that unfolded for the next few years in the badwires.
Quickly, Jars, a question.
We've very much sort of demonised the Dutch and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, you know,
and we've got the kind of brave, brave little English in their dungeon.
But how did the English behave to the actual native inhabitants whose island they had taken for their king?
So when I was researching the book in the India Office Archives,
I came across the diary of a Factor, one of the merchant adventurers,
based in Bantam by a man called Edmund Scott.
And the fact the English factory had come under attack at one point.
The native inhabitants had tried to burn it down, in fact.
and Edmund Scott captured one of these guys
and in his diary
over the course of about five or six pages
he describes in gruesome detail
how he tortured this man to death
first of all he ripped out his fingernails
then he burned him then he crushed his bones
then he pulled out his bones
then they blew off bits of his body with dynamite
the poor man was still alive
they tied him to a stake
got the horrendous white ants
and put them into his wounds
So this, of course, was an age of great brutality.
Everyone was brutal.
And when I read that, the fact that he recorded it so matter-of-factly in his diary
truly shocked to me.
And when one realises that the Dutch were even more brutal than the English,
no one comes out well out of this period of history,
it was remarkably brutal.
I mean, one person, though, that you can admire,
at least for their tenacities, is Nathaniel Corteur,
who's having to hold the life.
line and have his men hold the line with, you know, watching men taken from the Solomon,
watching any hope of supply. And he does manage to do this. He's enough of a threat that there
is this plan, this ambush plan set up by the Dutch in October 1620 to bump him off. So tell us
how that works. They get intelligence at one point that Nathaniel Cortope is intending to leave
Run Island and go to one of the other Bander Islands where he hears there's a lot of unrest amongst
the native population. And he thinks this could herald the beginnings of a general uprising against
the Dutch. So it's a sort of vitally important moment for him. And so he takes the risk, really,
the very great risk in October 1620. He's been on the island for like four years to try and
cross the channel of water to the next island and find out what's taking place. This is to prove
an absolutely fatal mistake. He sets off at night with his boy William, as he was called,
His boy, William, is his son or his sort of cabin boy?
It's a sort of cabin boy come slave servant who's helping him, man-servant really, or boy servant.
Williams always have the rough end of things on empire.
It's a very tragic story.
So the two of them get into their rowing boat.
They're rowing out across the open water and the Dutch have laid an ambush.
It's about two o'clock or three o'clock in the morning where they're rowing.
see dimly glowing in the night. They see Nathaniel Cortope's lantern and they wait until they're
almost upon him and then they open fire. Cortope immediately fires back. There's a running gun battle
takes place on the water. But then Cortope's gun jams and in disgusty throws it into the water.
And he's caught defenseless. And of course, what do the Dutch do? He's a sitting duck. They gun him
down. And he was last seen falling into the water. Nathaniel Cortope is never
seen again. His corpse has never found
and we, well, he
died clearly, but we don't know what happened
to his body. I mean, you've got to do this for cinema.
Can you just tell this? Look, okay,
so there he is. He's there slumped,
taking another bullet, taking another bullet
and then he sinks beneath the water.
Is Russell going to be playing the role of
Nathaniel? Well, I was just like, it's kind of
do you know what? It's a terminator moment
isn't it? With a man's hand is the last
thing seen, never vanishes
forever. Arnie could play the
Dutch captain and we'll have Russell
as the, as Nat with his nuts.
So with Cortope gone, you know, the siege, I guess, you know, just collapses because, you know,
who's, you know, who's there to stop him? What happens?
Well, you know, every siege survives on the, or fails on the leadership of the person in charge.
And Nathaniel was a brilliant leader of men.
He kept his men going for, you know, as you say, 1,500 and whatever it was, days on the island.
40, 540, yes, exactly.
And once he was known.
longer there. The all resistance collapse, the men just decide to throw in the towel.
They can't face holding on any longer. The Arak's run out. There's no food. They realize that,
you know, they've got no alternative but to throw in the towel and that's what they do.
It's a desperately tragic situation. Nathaniel really, I think, inspired by patriotism.
I mean, in the letters that have survived, he talks about he's doing this for England,
you know. Extraordinary. Very few people these days, I think, would give,
lay down their lives for the flag of St George.
For Kirstama.
For Kirstama.
Exactly.
But that's precisely what he did.
Anyway, the men throw the towel.
And, you know, within a few days,
the Dutch have taken over Run Island.
And they have got what they always wanted,
which is the Sixth Bander Islands under their firm control.
They have secured, by doing this,
a monopoly over the global supply of Nutmeg.
So we saw that the Brits were pretty ghastly to the Bandonese, but you already flagged that the Dutch are worse.
What happens now that the Dutch have got complete control of run?
So we mentioned Jan Kern, the monstrous Governor General of the Dutch East India Company.
He decides that there's to be no dealings with the headmen of the Bander Islands.
There's to be no dealings with the local population.
They are simply to be exterminated.
And thus begins one of the most brutal episodes in the history of the Bander Islands.
where Jan Kern and his Dutch troops simply come ashore,
they arrest all of the key headmen of these islands.
And using Japanese mercenaries, very interestingly,
they have a band of Japanese executioners
who they used to do the dirtiest of their dirty work,
who simply round up the headmen and have them all decapitated.
How have they come into the picture?
Where have they got their samurai from?
Swords for hire.
Are they sell swords?
I mean, is that just floating over?
around, are they? No, no, it's worth recalling, of course, by this point, you know.
The Dutch have got to Japan. The Dutch and the English have got to Japan. And the Portuguese.
And the Portuguese, long before the Dutch and English, in fact, yeah. They've got to Japan. They've
formed trading bases there as well. The Dutch, rather more successfully than the English
had to be said. But of course, Japanese are also travelling over this area of the East Indies,
and the Dutch bring them under their, onto their payroll, if you
like, and use them as hired mercenaries and executioners.
And so they play a key role in this genocide that takes place in the Bander Islands.
They're the ones that execute all the headmen of the island.
The rest are either executed, they're sold into slavery, they're shipped off to Jakarta,
Bantam and Jakarta in Java.
Some end up in South Africa, don't they?
I've got a memory of, I've met somebody who said that their family were originally
from the Bander Islands and that they were part of the shipment that got sent off to the Cape.
Indeed, they're shipped off all over the place.
But what's kind of remarkable is the population of the Bander Islands in this period,
the sort of 1620s, early 1620s was about 15,000 native Bandonese.
By the time Yankern has finished his genocide, there are fewer than a thousand left on the Bander Islands.
It's an extraordinarily sweeping genocide that really wipes out the native population.
It's also become sort of a battle plan.
It becomes a plan that is repeated again and again.
And you can see, you know, always when you see people being wiped out, you see a dehumanisation of them.
So what he says about the bandanese is they're indolent people of whom little good can be expected.
And now he has a modus operandi.
You know, we can get rid of them.
We can import slave labour from Java, from China.
they can do the work.
And that is probably the thinking that leads to one of the worst massacres of Amboina in 1623.
So this is another island, Giles.
Tell us about Amboina.
Yeah.
For a cheery chap, Giles, you choose your genocide.
We've had you first on with Smirna when the whole population of Swerner got wiped out.
Now we're wiping out various other.
We've finished with the Banderas.
Take us to Amboiner.
But Amboina also, it's not a nutmeg island either, is it?
No. Amboyne, a little way to the north of the Bander Islands was another headquarters of the Dutch East India Company in this part of the world. There were a very small number of English traders on the island at the time. When I say small, I mean 10, precisely. And the Dutch want to get rid of them. They see them for some reason. They see them as a threat. And they capture one of the English allies. There were some Japanese who happened to be allied with the English on.
And Boeina.
Japanese are all over the place at this point.
The Japanese are all over the place.
And under torture, one of the Japanese men says, yes, indeed, the English are going to try and
take control of this Dutch fort, which frankly is utterly absurd.
The Dutch have got hundreds of troops in this fort on Amboina.
They've got tons and tons of weaponry.
The English are merchants there.
They've got about six guns.
They couldn't, in their wildest dreams, they couldn't hope to take control of this place.
nor would they want to. However, Jan Kern once the English wiped out and thus begun what became known as the massacre of Amboina.
And became very famous at the time. I mean, we've forgotten it today, but it was a kind of horror story in London and was long remembered this, wasn't it?
It was long remembered, partly because of the horrific treatment that was meted out during torture to the English.
And one of the notable torches that the Dutch used
was what essentially is waterboarding.
They would tie somebody to a chair,
they would tie a waxed canvas bag up over their head,
and they would proceed to fill this bag with water
until it reached your mouth and nostrils.
And the only way to stop yourself from drowning
was to drink the water.
And I'm talking gallons and gallons and gallons of water
until these men would become their bodies,
would become totally swollen.
completely grotesque.
That was originally a Portuguese torture, I believe.
It was used by the Inquisition, first of all, in Goa.
So, I mean, what we can surmise
that we have always been really shitty to each other.
I mean, throughout history, this is awful.
They also did fire torture.
Is that, you know, so describe what fire torture is
because we have waterboarding, but we don't have the equivalent in fire, do we?
Just when you get out of the water,
they light candles underneath your arms and legs and thighs
and what have you and burn the fat and the muscle in your body.
Quite revolting.
Now, I have to say that,
the point of this, this is not just gratuitous to talk about this violence, the point of it
is that this caused an absolute outrage when it reached England. And in fact, John Dryden,
who obviously famous poet, one of his more famous pieces was a play called The Massacre of Amboyna,
which really struck a chord with the English public at the time. And this gave rise to huge
anti-Dutch sentiment in England. Despite the Dryden play,
despite the outrage, the English government ends up,
Giles, doing precisely nothing about it.
Well, the question is what can they actually do?
Because the Dutch now have complete control of the Bander Islands,
short of sending an absolutely enormous armada out to the Spiceries,
to the Spice Islands, the English can't really get back their beloved run island.
And as Willie will be able to tell the next chapter of the story,
all attentions now begin to turn towards India.
India becomes the great goal of the East India Company.
By default only.
No one particularly wants India at this point.
We always talk about the East India Company today.
But it's originally the company of London merchants trading with the East Indies,
which means not India, but Indonesia in our modern terms.
India simply isn't in the kind of, you know, the game plan at all for the East Indie company until they get thrown out.
by the Dutch.
And this is, it turns out, in the long,
and we'll come back to this in future episodes,
this is the thing that actually makes
the East Indy Company's fortune,
because from this point,
spices begin to decline in value,
because they're not going through five hands anymore.
And the process by which, you know,
you can buy Nutmeg for five quid in Sainsbridge today,
or ASDA,
is already beginning to take place.
But the English in India,
1640, this sort of period, is when the Taj Mahan is coming up.
The moguls are at their peak, a million looms are at work in Bengal, and the English, as their
consolation prize, without anything better to do because they've been thrown out from what they
actually want, end up completely by chance, with the richest possible colony and trading
partner imaginable.
This situation where the Dutch dominate a trade from Banda and the islands around it,
Nutmeg is flowing into Amsterdam in huge quantities. It's making, you know, the Dutch East India
Company enormously wealthy. So you've got this situation where, you know, the Dutch just maintain
this hold on this very lucrative trade. Years past, Amsterdam gets richer and richer,
the East India Company, the Dutch East India Company, the richest corporation on Earth,
everybody's desperate to get their hands on the nutmeg. And then you have
sort of 1664 a swapseys of sorts.
Now this is really very, very tantalising.
Just tell us a little bit about, first of all, well, New Amsterdam,
because that's what we want to know about.
And that sort of muscle flex of having a new Amsterdam somewhere where a lot of people
might actually have been.
Throughout this whole period, there are endless Anglo-Dutch wars going on.
They're extremely complicated as wars, there's wars, there's peace treaties, as wars again.
But of course, as Edita you mentioned, the Dutch have formed a colony, New Amsterdam, which is essentially Manhattan, around there.
And this is their toehold in North America.
Now, at one point, at one of the many, many peace treaties, run is given, delivered back to the English under the terms of the treaty.
But the Dutch refused to give it up.
And the English really are really fed up by now with the Dutch.
And they decide to teach them a lesson.
Duke of York, the brother of Charles, the King Charles,
who incidentally we've met before in the very dodgy action
of setting up the Royal Africa Company,
which is the big slave trading operation,
which the royal family have a monopoly in.
His initials burned into people's chest, D-O-Y, Duke of York.
Yes.
So the Duke of York fed up that the Dutch haven't handed back run
under the terms of the treaty
and also still nursing the grievances,
or whipping up the grievances from the massacre of Amboyna,
he sends ships across the Atlantic
and seizes the Dutch-held territory of New Amsterdam.
He says, he says, tis high time to put the Dutch out of a capacity of doing mischief again.
And so he seizes this island.
And over the course of the coming months,
there will be peace negotiations between the English and the Dutch.
And he has to talk to, and this is the important personality we need to introduce.
Tell us, Giles, about peg-leg Pete.
Peter Stuyvesant, who is the governor of New Amsterdam at the time.
The Dutch cannot defend this swampy and rather worthless island on the Atlantic Sea.
Yeah, who would want it? Who would want it?
Who would want it? I mean, you know, they get skins and furs there,
but it's not very profitable at all.
But anyway, they come to negotiations at Breeder,
the town of Breeder in Holland,
and they discuss what they're going to do.
And the ensuing Treaty of Breeder decides the following thing.
That in return for the Dutch being allowed to keep the island of run in the Bander Islands,
the English will get to control and keep New Amsterdam,
which they decide in honour of Jeanne,
James Duke of York to name New York.
And that's how it happened, ladies and gentlemen.
I love stories like that.
And Charles II says to his brother,
tis a place of great importance.
He says, we've got the better of it.
And tis now called New York.
King Charles talking to the Duke of York about New York,
what could possibly go wrong?
Exactly.
Isn't it amazing though, you know, sort of like,
I had the theme tune going through my head of New Amsterdam.
I want to have no part of it.
New Amsterdam.
And then suddenly you've got it.
The new iteration, New York, nobody will be able to get enough of it.
Okay, so the Treaty of Breeder, the Dutch keep run, the English keep Manhattan.
They've done this marvellous swap season.
Everybody's happily ever after, Charles?
Is that what happens?
But actually, everyone's saying to the English, what have you done?
Why do we want this worthless piece of real estate, you know, on a swampy island on the Atlantic seaboard of North America?
But actually, of course, the British get the last laugh on this
because for a number of factors, but not least, as Willie hinted at,
the price of spices has decreased enormously.
So Nutmeg is not worth anything like it was before.
And the English, rather cleverly, have taken seedlings from the Bander Islands
and they've transplanted them to India and also to the West Indies.
Now, we mentioned right at the beginning that Nutmeg is a very, very difficult
crop a tree to grow, but they've taken seedlings encased in earth from the Bander Islands
and managed to propagate them. And this is why, in fact, most of the nutmeg you find today,
rumoured to be one of the key ingredients in Coca-Cola, it now comes largely, largely from the
West Indies, yeah. So, Giles, when you wrote this book, this was a book that really made your
career, wasn't it? It was a book which took off in a spectacular way and in America as well as
in Britain. He did. I mean, happily, it went mad globally. It was a fantastic success at the time.
One I wasn't expecting at all. I think even my publisher was completely taken by surprise that this
eccentric story about nutmeg should take off. We had the same agent at the time. I remember
her saying, oh, your books aren't doing that in those days. But since then, 25 years later,
and you've just had two years ago the 25th anniversary edition of Nats Nuts, which has got a brilliant
A brilliant new introduction.
A brilliant forward by somebody called William Del Ripple.
In that time, a lot has changed in the world.
But in particular, we've seen the rise of these giant corporations that have annual profit margins, the size of the GDP of entire continents.
Do you see warnings from this period and parallels with that period today?
Well, I think the reason why it remains relevant, because on the one hand, it's a rather quaint, if rather
violent story from the 1600s. But really underlying all this, this is a story of corporate power.
It's a story of monopolies. It's a story of a corporation like Google with an army behind it
enforcing its will. And it's also a story about who pays the price when these global corporations
get involved in a place. And we see that in the Bander Islands, which ended in the massacre of some
90% of the population, the original population of the Bander Islands. So I think that, yes,
while this is a story for 400 years ago, it remains deeply and increasingly relevant in the world
we live in today. It's such a pleasure always to have you on. I just feel like I want to
share something more about you with our listenership, because they may not know this about you,
Giles, but as well as writing beautiful history, you're quite at the dab hand at the metalwork.
And, you know, this 25th anniversary of Nats Nats, Nathaniel's Nutmeg,
you created this extraordinary piece of art.
You got it to hand.
I have to have.
Show it.
Show it.
This is where it becomes show and tell, yeah.
So my passion, apart from writing, is repousse metalwork, which is slightly eccentric.
So I've done Nathaniel's Nutmeg.
You know these books you get from the 15 and 1600s.
They're beautifully adorned with jewels and everything.
So here we have Nathaniel's Nutmeg.
Nathaniel Court.
tope in the middle here, all beaten out of metal,
nutmeg from the Bander Islands here, set into the cover,
beautiful ironite crystal.
And on the reverse, you have inspired by Elizabethan Astrolabe.
There we have it with a leatherbound spine.
So that was my little way of marking the 25th anniversary of this book.
So if you can't get enough of art connected to gnats, nuts,
because sadly Giles' repoussay metalwork condition is not for sale.
If your appetite is still there, you can go
to our bonus episode where we have the wonderful Andrew Graham Dixon, who's my favourite writer
on art full stop, absolutely genius, talking about the Dutch Golden Age, particularly talking about Vermeer.
He gave this lecture on Vermeer and his theory that ties together, all these paintings
that we know so well, like the girl with a pearl earring and so on, at Jaipo.
And although it has really only tangential links to empire, I was determined to get him on, because
He's just one of the great, great speakers.
So join the Empire Club.
You'll find the link in the description.
And if you can't get enough of art connected to Nats, nuts.
We have a wonderful bonus episode on the Dutch Golden Age and how it changed the history of art for club members.
So join up now.
You'll find the link in the description.
Yeah, sort of a gilded art for a golden age.
Listen, thank you so much for being with us again.
That's it from us.
So till the next time we meet, it's goodbye from me, Anita Arnand.
And goodbye from me, William Duremberg.
