Coornhert was the youngest son of Volckert Coornhert, an
Amsterdam cloth merchant. As a child, he spent some years in
Spain and
Portugal. Returning home, he was
disinherited by his father's
will in 1539, for his marriage with Cornelia (Neeltje) Simons, a portionless gentlewoman in his
Schilderboeck. After learning
Latin in 1552, Coornhert published Dutch translations from
Cicero,
Seneca and
Boethius. His 1562 translation of the first twelve books of Homer's
Odyssey is one of the first major works of Dutch Renaissance poetry. He was appointed secretary to the city of
Haarlem (1562) and secretary to the
burgomasters (1564). Throwing himself into the
struggle against Spanish rule, he drew up the manifesto of
William the Silent,
Prince of Orange (1566). Imprisoned at
the Hague in 1568, he escaped to
Cleves, where he maintained himself by his art. Recalled in 1572, he was for a short time
secretary of state in the
Dutch Republic; his aversion to military violence led him to return to Cleves, where William continued to employ his services and his pen. Possibly inspired by his time in jail, he wrote a book,
Boeventucht, on the causes of crime with ideas for more humane methods of punishment and correction. ==Theology==