Launched at
Rotterdam in 1644, and a design of shipwright
Jan Salomonszoon van den Tempel, she was the
flagship of Vice-Admiral
Witte Corneliszoon de With from May 1645 until 1647 when she was assigned to
Lieutenant-Admiral Maarten Tromp. The same year however, she again became De With's flagship for his expedition to
Dutch Brazil. De With delegated actual command of the vessel to Lieutenant
Jan Janszoon Quack, who remained in that role after the expedition returned to Holland in 1647. Only in 1652 would Tromp sail for the first time with his flag on
Brederode, during an attack against royalist
privateers operating from the
Scilly Islands. In the
First Anglo-Dutch War Brederode was present under Tromp's command at the
Battle of Dover on 29 May 1652. After Tromp's failure to bring the English to battle off the
Shetland Islands in July, Tromp was relieved and
Michiel de Ruyter took over command. When De Ruyter was subordinated to De With in September,
Brederodes crew refused to let the latter come on board to take command, so he had to content himself with
Prins Willem. Without Tromp,
Brederode fought at the
Battle of the Kentish Knock on 8 October 1652. , 12 June 1653
by Heerman Witmont, shows the Dutch flagship Brederode (''foreground left) in action. With Tromp back in command,
Brederode fought at the
Battle of Dungeness on 10 December 1652 where she came close to being captured, but was instrumental in that victory over the English. She fought again on 18 February 1653 at the
Battle of Portland and on 12 June 1653 at the
Battle of the Gabbard, where she fought an exhausting but inconclusive duel with
William Penn's flagship
James. On that day, the first day of the battle, Tromp's men boarded the English ship but were beaten back; boarded in turn by the English, Tromp was only able to dislodge the boarders by blowing up
Brederodes deck. On 13 June the English were joined by a squadron under Admiral
Robert Blake and the Dutch were scattered in defeat.
Brederode fought in the last major engagement of the war, the
Battle of Scheveningen on 26 July 1653, when Tromp was killed. The acting
flag captain (later Admiral)
Egbert Bartholomeusz Kortenaer kept Tromp's standard raised after his death to keep up morale. In the
Northern Wars the United Provinces sent an expeditionary force to support
Denmark in the war against
Charles X of Sweden. In the
Battle of the Sound on 8 November 1658 the Dutch fleet, commanded by Lieutenant-Admiral
Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam, defeated a Swedish fleet and relieved the
siege of Copenhagen. Van Wassenaer's flagship was ; De With commanded the van in
Brederode; attacking the enemy without proper knowledge of the shoals he grounded his ship (after damaging
Leoparden so much that this enemy vessel subsequently was lost by fire) and was surrounded; after many hours of fighting,
Brederode was boarded by
Wismar and De With mortally wounded. The partially burnt wreck was deemed unsalvagable. ==References==