The East India Company was unhappy with the outcome, and in 1632 its directors published an exhaustive brochure, comprising all the relevant papers, with extensive comments and rebuttals of the Dutch position. The Dutch had already sought to influence public opinion with an anonymous pamphlet, probably authored by its secretary,
Willem Boreel in 1624. At the time, ambassador Carleton had procured its suppression as a "libel" by the States General. However, an English minister in
Flushing,
John Winge, inadvertently translated it and sent it to England, where it displeased the East India Company. The East India Company brochure contained the gruesome details of the tortures, as related in its original "Relation". The Dutch lost the war and were forced to accept a condition in the
1654 Treaty of Westminster, calling for the exemplary punishment of any surviving culprits. However, no culprits appear to have been still alive at the time. Moreover, after arbitration on the basis of the treaty, the heirs of the English victims were awarded a total of £3615 in compensation. The brochure and its allegations also played a role at the start of the
Second Anglo-Dutch War. One of the casus belli used for the annexation of the Dutch colony
New Netherland was the Amboyna Massacre. The
Treaty of Breda (1667) ending this war appeared to have finally settled the matter. However, during the
Third Anglo-Dutch War, the matter was again raised in a propagandistic context.
John Dryden wrote a play, entitled "
Amboyna or the Cruelties of the Dutch to the English Merchants", apparently at the behest of his patron who had been one of the chief negotiators of the
Secret treaty of Dover that caused England's entry into that war. The play embellishes the affair by attributing the animus of Governor Van Speult against Gabriel Towerson to an amorous rivalry between the (fictitious) son of the governor and Towerson over an indigenous princess. After the son rapes the princess, Towerson kills the son in a duel. The governor then takes his revenge in the form of the massacre.
Jonathan Swift refers to the massacre in Book 3, Chapter 11 of Jonathan Swift's novel ''
Gulliver's Travels (1726). Lemuel Gulliver pretends to be a "Hollander" and boards a Dutch ship named the Amboyna'' when he leaves
Japan. He conceals from the crew the fact that he has not performed the ceremony demanded by the Japanese of "
trampling upon the Crucifix" because, "if the secret should be discovered by my countrymen, the Dutch, they would cut my throat in the voyage." ==See also==