Emanuel Sueyro
Emanuel Sueyro (1587–1629), Lord of Voorde, Knight of Christ, was an intelligence agent and historian in the 17th-century Habsburg Netherlands.
Emanuel Sueyro  | |
|---|---|
![]() Emanuel Sueyro in his 37th year, engraved by Pieter de Jode I after Peter Paul Rubens, 1624  | |
| Born | February 20, 1587 Antwerp, Duchy of Brabant, Spanish Netherlands  | 
| Died | 1629 (aged 41–42) Brussels, Duchy of Brabant, Spanish Netherlands  | 
| Occupation | spymaster | 
| Language | Spanish | 
| Period | Baroque | 
| Genre | history | 
| Notable works | Anales de Flandes (1624) | 
Life
    
Of Portuguese descent, Emanuel Sueyro was born and brought up in Antwerp.[1] He translated classical and more recent Latin histories into Spanish, and wrote a two-part history of the Low Countries, Anales de Flandes (1624).
He was head of a secret intelligence network in the Habsburg Netherlands, reporting to Philip III of Spain.[2] For this work he was awarded a knightship in the Order of Christ. He was lord of Voorde by purchase.
Writings
    
    Histories
    
- Descripcion breve del pais baxo (Antwerp, Gerard Wolsschaten, 1622)
 - Anales de Flandes (Antwerp, Peter and Jan Bellerus, 1624), dedicated to Philip IV of Spain
 
Translations
    
- Tacitus, Las obras de C. Cornelio Tacito (Antwerp, heirs of Peter Bellerus, 1613), dedicated to Isabel Clara Eugenia
 - Sallust, Obras de Caio Crispo Sallustio (Antwerp, G. Wolsschaten & H. Aerts for Jan Van Keerbergen, 1615), dedicated to Don Juan de Mendoza, Duke of the Infantado
 - Herman Hugo, Sitio de Breda rendida a las armas del rey don Phelipe IV (Antwerp, Plantin office, 1627), dedicated to Ambrogio Spinola
 
References
    
- V. Fris, "Sueyro (Emanuel)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 24 (Brussels, 1929), 253
 - J.J. Poelhekke, Het verraad van de pistoletten? (Verhandelingen der Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, Afd. Letterkunde, new series 88; Amsterdam, 1975) ISBN 0720482836
 
External links
    
- Translation of Tacitus (1613), at Google Books.
 - Translation of Sallust (1615), at Google Books.
 - Anales de Flandes part 1 (1624), at Google Books.
 - Anales de Flandes, part 2 (1624) at Google Books.
 - Sitio de Breda (1627) at Google Books.
 
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