
Gilles van Ledenberg was a Dutch politician who aligned himself with statesman Johan van Oldenbarnevelt. In 1618, following a dispute with Prince Maurits of Orange about the Dutch Reformed Church and the conflict with Spain, Ledenberg and Oldenbarnevelt were arrested and tried for treason. Fearful his conviction would bankrupt his family, Ledenberg committed suicide in prison. His trial proceeded, however, and he was posthumously executed, his body suspended from the gallows in a coffin (as seen here). A 17th-century print collector bound this image in a volume with other prints and pamphlets about the events in which Ledenberg and Oldenbarnevelt played a role.

Execution of Arminians in Leiden
Claes Jansz. Visscher Dutch, 1587–1652

A Castle, plate 22 after Pictures of Farms, Country Houses and Rustic Villages (Praediorum villarum et rusticarum casularum icones)
Claes Jansz. Visscher (Dutch, 1587-1652) after Unknown Flemish Artist, misidentified as Pieter Bruegel, the elder (Flemish, 1525/30-1569)

Village Road, plate four after Pictures of Farms, Country Houses and Rustic Villages (Praediorum villarum et rusticarum casularum icones)
Claes Jansz. Visscher (Dutch, 1587-1652) after Unknown Flemish Artist, misidentified as Pieter Bruegel, the elder (Flemish, 1525/30-1569)