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Nathaniel's Nutmeg: How One Man's Courage Changed the Course of History

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The tiny island of Run is an insignificant speck in the middle of the Indonesian archipelago--remote, tranquil, and now largely ignored. At the beginning of the seventeenth century, however, Run's harvest of nutmeg turned it into the most lucrative of the Spice Islands, precipitating a fierce and bloody battle between the all-powerful Dutch East India Company and a small band of ragtag British adventurers led by the intrepid Nathaniel Courthope. The outcome of the fighting was one of the most spectacular deals in history: Britain ceded Run to Holland, but in return was given another small island, Manhattan. A brilliant adventure story of unthinkable hardship and savagery, the navigation of uncharted waters, and the exploitation of new worlds, Nathaniel's Nutmeg is a remarkable chapter in the history of the colonial powers.

388 pages, Paperback

First published March 4, 1999

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About the author

Giles Milton

36 books535 followers
British writer and journalist Giles Milton was born in Buckinghamshire in 1966. He has contributed articles for most of the British national newspapers as well as many foreign publications, and specializes in the history of travel and exploration. In the course of his researches, he has traveled extensively in Europe, the Middle East, Japan and the Far East, and the Americas.

Knowledgeable, insatiably curious and entertaining, Milton locates history's most fascinating—and most overlooked—stories and brings them to life in his books.

He lives in London, where he is a member of the Hakluyt Society, which is dedicated to reprinting the works of explorers and adventurers in scholarly editions, some of which he uses in his research. He wrote most of Samurai William in the London Library, where he loves the "huge reading room, large Victorian desks and creaking armchairs". At home and while traveling, he is ever on the lookout for new untold stories. Apparently he began researching the life of Sir John Mandeville for his book The Riddle and the Knight after Mandeville’s book Travels "literally fell off the shelf of a Paris bookstore" in which he was browsing.

Copyright BookBrowse.com 2007

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 465 reviews
Profile Image for Kinga.
504 reviews2,557 followers
December 4, 2011
There was a time when people killed and died for nutmeg. Imagine that! Stinking nutmeg! Not even oregano or at least cinnamon. I must say on my list of things I would be willing to die for nutmeg is somewhere at the bottom, right before marmite.

Nonetheless, The Dutch and the English and the Portuguese would fight relentlessly over the access to nutmeg. Apart from successfully killing the smell and taste of rotten meat, nutmeg was also known for curing just about anything from the plague to impotence. In the beginning of the 17th century nutmeg was in. Maybe one day people will laugh at the lenghts we go now to get access and control over the oil resources.

Interestingly enough, nutmegs grew only on a few small remote islands that form part of today's Indonesia. For about two hundred years no one had the brilliant idea of taking some seeds and planting them somewhere else, it seems. Instead, the English and the Dutch fought like maniacs over Banda islands that had very little except for nutmeg. Of course, Giles Milton sympathises with the poor natives who got paid very little for their nutmeg which fetched astronomical prices in Europe. But I'd like to believe that the natives were thinking they were conning the Europeans selling them all that useless nutmeg and getting things like knives and clothes in return. They probably thought: "What in the hell are you doing with all that nutmeg, you crazy white man?".

Long story short, thanks to nutmeg New York is called New York and not New Amsterdam and we are not all speaking Dutch. If you want to know what that has to do with the price of the fish, read the book. You will also learn that the English are good and the Dutch are bad (it is not quite clear why, but apparently the English were more gentlemanly when doing the pirate stuff). Another thing, Nathaniel doesn't appear until towards the end of the book and doesn't do all that much before dying but he makes for a nice title.

This is a book for people who want to know how people found places before the Google Maps and how weird it was when information would travel from one place to another for two years, rather than 0.2 sec. Good God, people used to be patient back then.
Profile Image for Silvana.
1,214 reviews1,212 followers
August 28, 2019
This book reminds me of Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded by Simon Winchester. An interesting book about something (major) happened in Indonesia but the author decided that the readers will be happy with many side stories that detract from the main topic.

I had the wrong expectation when I bought this book since I was expecting an account of the colonization of Banda Islands and the struggle of the natives. Instead, this book dedicates far more pages for events NOT in Banda but somewhere else like the Mughal Empire in India, Banten, the North Pole, and tons and tons of shipwrecks, dead sailors and other calamities in the vast ocean.

Even Nathaniel himself - the man in the title - was only discussed after around 60% of the book, still with many going off on a tangent afterward. His one-time (!) role as a besieged commander while very heroic and all, was not very instrumental in deciding the fate of the islands. With such a long history during the years of the colonization, everything was decided in the negotiation rooms in London and The Hague and who knows where else. It's not his nutmeg - figuratively and literally - and the author/editor/whoever just did not write a very convincing thesis on why he chose that title.

I think the Banda portion was just okay. As expected, the colonials were cruel (the Dutch even more so, argued Mr. Milton). Combining the forces of paper agreement, guns, ships, and forts, both the English and the Dutch tricked and forced the hands of the natives to sell them monopoly rights for the nutmeg. There were quite lengthy accounts of various fighting between the English and the Dutch over controls of these islands (and some other places including a very long tale about a riot in Java. Some of which involved siege warfare and some crazy torturings (the Dutch were pretty ruthless even to fellow Europeans). Of course, we are also informed about the killings and slavery of the Bandanese, courtesy of both the VOC and the infamous governor general of the East Indie JP Coen, whose big statue can still be found in a big museum in Jakarta instead of being blasted to smithereens for committing genocide.

I wished there were more about the Breda Treaty, where the Dutch traded with the English the island of Manhattan (yes, that one in New York) with Rhun Island. However, it was just a few pages at the end, more like an afterthought.

The author also uses many weird spellings for cities and places. Banten is Bantam, Aceh is Achin, Mollucas is Molucos, Ambon is Amboyna, and he also misspelled Indonesian first vice president name, Hatta became Hatti. Was it so hard to do some research, Mr. Milton? And the boat journey from Neira to Rhun is not treacherous (I've been there using a rickety inter-island transport) since in the ocean, everything depends on the season and tides. I remember a crystal clear water, looks like glass, even.

I want to give this book one star due to those shortcomings but since there are not many books dedicated for this part of Indonesia's history I decided to cut the author some slack. Also, because there were some amusing factoids like this one about Banten: "It was infamous in the East for its loose women and lax morals and an air of profligacy". LOL. Sorry, you'll know why it's funny if you live in Indonesia.

Anyway, this is view of Rhun from a nearby islet: https://www.instagram.com/p/8Z5YbEiSGX/
Gorgeous, right? The smell of nutmeg is still there, you know. One can see the nutmeg trees even though there are not as many as they used to be. In front of their houses, the inhabitants spread the fruit's mace to be sun-dried. It was now a sleepy island, forgotten. The people are poor and being so far away from the provincial capital (let alone the country's) does not help with their condition. Tourism is rising but mostly for divers and less for history buffs (except for the laudable Sahabat Museum community who does regular trips there). I sincerely wish more Indonesians want to come there. We need to be constantly reminded that there are some things that should never fade from our memory as a nation, including the blood price we paid and are still paying for being rich with natural resources.
Profile Image for Belinda.
131 reviews
February 8, 2011
It was an interesting read. As other reviews have mentioned, this is a book one should not judge by their title. (Perhaps a better fit would have been The Dastardly Deeds of the Dutch versus the Entrepid English (pardon the typo, I'm a fan of alliteration)). Anyway, it was interesting. I'd like to think of other adjectives for it, but it was such an overwhelming collection of information. Surprisingly not very optimistic either, with a history of the failures of the English to develop a stronghold in the Spice Islands, and of the Dutch to learn to love...

I liked the pirate-y stories, and some of the tales of individuals were fascinating. However, Milton tries to explain too much in defending his 'thesis' of the importance of Nathaniel Courthorpe and his nutmeg. There were many chapters in the Arctic Circle or West Indies that while loosely related, were distracting from his argument and the rest of the narrative-- they could have be mentioned in a footnote and been just as informative...and saved me from some reading for class.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,347 reviews26 followers
November 15, 2014
I have spent a good part of my reading life finishing everything I start. I can count on one hand the number of books I've started and haven't finished. To my credit, I have been a librarian for a long time and rarely do I start something that I don't think I'll like. I read too many book reviews, spend too much time on Goodreads, and pay attention to things like book awards to just randomly pick up a book off the shelf and start it. So my 99% completion rate isn't exactly that surprising.
What is surprising is that this week I am not finishing not one, but two books! A whole new chapter (excuse the pun)!
So Nathaniel's Nutmeg has all the ingredients of something I would like. It is nonfiction that includes colonial expansion, indigenous peoples, ocean voyages, travels to far away lands, political scrambling, commercial trade, and food. But when I sing the praises of narrative nonfiction, I must remember that there are also terrible narrative nonfiction books out there too. This is one of them.
Within the stories of the Spice Islands and the founding of the Dutch East India Company, and the East India Company are some really interesting stories and they are dutifully recorded here in the driest way possible. Juicy stories are told with all the exuberance of a terrible middle school text book. There isn't really a story here, just the relating of some events in a report sort of way. Blerg.
I am about 1/2 way through this and don't think it is worth it to finish.
Profile Image for Libby.
290 reviews46 followers
March 20, 2015
I love to read history. The most wonderful, improbable, intriguing stories are lurking in our history books, if we have the patience and wit to find them. Obviously, I think Giles Milton has found one of those fascinating, obscure true life adventures. Nathaniel Courthope really was an amazing heroic figure that time has consigned to forgotten dusty pages. He and the other swashbuckling characters of the East India trade are all but unknown today, but they swashed their way to creating the greatest Metropolis of our time.

Spice was at the heart of it all. Pepper, cinnamon, mace and nutmeg were worth fortunes in Europe. Control of the spice trade would give any country access to treasure and power. To paraphrase Bedford Forrest, he who got there fustest got the mostest. The Spanish, the Portuguese, the Dutch and the English were duking it out in the Spice Islands. These tiny specks on the map were vital for only one reason:the most exquisite spices grew there and only there. The resulting wars, raids, atrocities and massacres ended with exhausted diplomats conceding a tiny island called Run to the Dutch and a tiny island called Manhattan to the English. Oh my! Who won and who lost?

This book is very well written. The author has a beautiful style which sweeps along rather like an ice skater;it's so pretty that you forget it's difficult.Naturally I like that a lot. So why, if it's history and it's well written, did I give it only 4 stars? Well, I felt it was a flaw to title the book Nathaniel's Nutmeg and tell so much about others and so little about Nathaniel. I am aware that it is often difficult to document the lives even of very famous persons. I know that aside from his heroic stand on Run, Nathaniel was little known. But I just feel that if he's good enough to make the title, he should not be dealt with in such a perfunctory fashion. I was dissatisfied, almost disgruntled.

I do, however, maintain that this book has a lot to say to us. I am sure it must appeal to history buffs. Foodies should be intrigued by the history of their favorite spices. Adventure lovers should drool over the pirates, crocodiles, cannibals and shipwrecks. So, yes, fellow readers, this one is worth your time.
Profile Image for D.A. Holdsworth.
Author 2 books54 followers
November 1, 2022
Nathaniel's Nutmeg tells the story of the Anglo-Dutch battle for the spice islands in Indonesia - a conflict that raged on and off for centuries. The particular focus is on the Banda archipelago, which was famous for being the world's only source of nutmeg and mace (at least until the Victorians learnt how to cultivate it elsewhere).

The culmination of the story is the tale of the eponymous Englishman, Nathaniel Courthope. He was an officer of the East India company, who seized the island of Run from the Dutch. A two-mile strip of land in the Banda sea, the island was rich with nutmeg and offered the English a chance to break the global Dutch monopoly. With the support of the natives and a tiny military contingent, he held the island for a staggering 1,500 days, fending off a vastly greater Dutch force throughout that period. Ultimately (...spoiler alert...) Nathaniel met his end and the English traded the island back to the Dutch. But - and here's the spicy bit - they did so in exchange for a small North American colony by the name of 'New Amsterdam'. Which was to turn into Manhattan. So not such a bad trade in the end.

So far so good.

Now here's the glitch.

I honestly think the author intended to write a stirring tale of plucky colonial adventurers etc etc. But actually, it's all rather depressing. Yes, the tale of Nathaniel himself is extraordinary, but there's not that much detail to share - he just occupies the last few pages of the book. Before you get to him, you read about generation after generation of Europeans travelling to places they had no right to be, where they either succumbed to unmentionable diseases or coshed each other over the head or both. All in pursuit of spices that would soon be propagated elsewhere and traded for tuppence. The net effect is strangely nihilistic. Thus the book acts, inadvertently, as a cautionary tale about colonialism - which is perhaps no bad thing.

But a riveting read it is not.

[UPDATE 01-Nov-22: I recently finished reading the author's more recent offering, Russian Roulette, about British espionage in 1917, revolutionary Moscow. A much better effort. 5 stars. You can find my review here.]
Profile Image for GoldGato.
1,218 reviews39 followers
October 15, 2011
This was a book that snuck up and surprised me. Reaching into my collection abstractedly, perchance I hit upon this volume. I had no clue about the race for the Spice Islands or just how important spices were to Europe in the 17th century. This book details the history of spices, their importance, their cost, the explorers who dared to find them, and the wars that subsequently developed because of them.

"Have you a great care to receive such nutmegs as be good, for the smallest nutmegs be worth nothing at home."


Book Season = Spring (when the open seas call)
Profile Image for 'Aussie Rick'.
425 reviews235 followers
May 28, 2014

This is an enjoyable book to read, easy to get into and hard to put down. I found the story of the Spice Trade to be quite interesting and that I suppose was a result of the hard work put in by the author. The story was fun, vibrant and quite blood-thirsty and all over a little 'nut'. This is good fun history and the story is well told. Well done to the author!
Profile Image for Emily.
172 reviews246 followers
Read
October 26, 2009
I'm marginally ill today - mild fever, slight achiness, low energy - and because of that, I'm disappointed that I've already finished Giles Milton's Nathaniel's Nutmeg: or, the True and Incredible Adventures of the Spice Trader Who Changed the Course of History. Because this, my friends, is my version of the perfect home-sick-from-work book. A true story (more or less), it nonetheless reads like an old-fashioned swashbuckler, complete with bravery, treachery, derring-do, clandestine dealings, betrayals, base incompetence, and much adventure on the high seas. A highly-colored chronicle of the European race for control of the spice islands (the small south-east Asian archipelago that produced the entire world supply of nutmeg and cloves during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries), Nathaniel's Nutmeg introduces the reader to a rollicking cast of brigands, merchants and adventurers, all of whom are out for a piece of the spice pie. Milton paints a portrait of a Europe obsessed with nutmeg and other spices - not merely as luxurious additions to a meal, but as (they thought) a cure for everything from the common cold to the Bubonic plague. Some London apothecaries even claimed that enough saffron, taken with sweet wine, could raise the dead. (I'm not sure how you were supposed to "take" the wine/saffron combo once you were no longer living, but presumably few people were wealthy enough to find out.) Spice prices in London and other European centers was sky-high, and fortunes could be made by those with enough knowledge and capital to fit out an expedition, and enough bravery or foolhardiness to risk their lives sailing around the world in order to buy nutmeg and other spices at their source.

I was fascinated by the "early modern" character of the world portrayed; the Age of Exploration brought a glut of new information about the world outside Europe, but people - even highly-educated people - had no way of separating the true stories from what, in retrospect, we know to be absurd. The wealth of nations was allocated to missions that now seem outlandish: seventeenth-century geographers, for example, were convinced that the North-East Passage (a supposed navigable sea route from Europe over the North Pole and into the Pacific) must exist, because surely God made the world symmetrical up-and-down:


In an age when men still looked for perfect symmetry on their maps, the northern cape of Norway showed an exact topographical correspondence to the southern cape of Africa. Geographers agreed that this was indeed good news; the chilly northern land mass must surely be a second Cape of Good Hope.


In retrospect, it's amazing that an unproved assumption about geological symmetry would have trumped, even for the most intelligent people of the time, the proven fact that if you get water cold enough it will freeze, thereby trapping your ships in the frozen Arctic wastes. In another amazing development, more "evidence" for the existence of a North-East Passage came with the return of a failed Arctic expedition:


[T:]he crew returned to England with a strange horn, some six feet long and decorated with a spiral twirl. Ignorant of the existence of the narwhal - that strange member of the whale family that has a single tusk protruding from its head - the rough English mariners confidently declared that this odd piece of flotsam had once belonged to a unicorn, a highly significant find, for 'knowing that unicorns are bred in the lands of Cathay, China and other Oriental Regions, [the sailors:] fell into consideration that the same head was brought thither by the course of the sea, and that there must of necessity be a passage out of the said Oriental Ocean into our Septentrionall seas.'


So future expeditions, hugely expensive and incredibly risky, were launched on the basis of global symmetry and the knowledge that unicorns are bred in China, along with some ancient texts by Pliny the Elder, claiming that there were open waters at the North Pole. Which is a pretty astounding testament to the power of magical thinking, and makes you wonder which modern assumptions will seem similarly absurd to future generations.

Milton's narrative gets even more exciting once the expeditions actually set off. In addition to stand-offs among the Portuguese, English and Dutch, and the inherent dangers of the voyage (most expeditions lost at least a third of their men to scurvy, dystentry and tropical diseases), there were legion clashes among the grandiose and idiosyncratic personalities involved in these explorations. Henry Hudson, for example, was commissioned to find the North-East Passage: he was given explicit instructions and signed an agreement saying that he would sail up the coast of Norway and then attempt to turn east. Unbeknownst to his backers, however, he never intended to follow this route at all, but immediately headed west to explore the possibility of a North-WEST Passage. There was such a thin membrane of allegiance in many of these stories: Sir Frances Drake, who defeated the Spanish Armada for England and then led an early, successful expedition to the Spice Islands, turned down the next job offer he got from the British East India Company: he had decided to pursue a career of straight-up piracy instead. Even in later years, each voyage sent by the East India Company was out for its own profit, and a second British ship would often commandeer the goods won by a first British ship, rather than working together for the overall profit of the Company. Milton did a good job depicting the chaotic, winner-take-all quality of the times, and made it all seem as fun to read as a nineteenth-century adventure story.

Which is actually a little bit disturbing.

Because, if you think about it, the reason an old-fashioned swashbuckler is fun to read is that the narrative makes certain pirates into the "good guys," and other pirates into the "bad guys." Obviously, in real life NO pirates are good guys, but Milton, despite writing non-fiction, does exactly this same thing. Consistently, throughout his narrative, he paints the British as the good guys and the Dutch as their treacherous adversaries, even when the two sides are acting more or less equally reprehensibly. Every instance of an unprovoked attack or secret conspiracy on the part of the Dutch is treated with an attitude of condemnation, yet not of surprise. Miton seems to be asking the reader "Well, what else would you expect? Gruesome, isn't it?" Whereas stories of the exact same kind of plotting and scheming on the part of the British are met either with excuses on Milton's part, or with outright approval. Milton calls Nathaniel Courthope's practice of running spies under cover of darkness "ingenious," but classifies the actions of a Dutch spy who betrays Courthope as underhanded treachery. In one instance, the British captain William Keeling (a funny duck by all accounts - he organized early productions of Shakespeare plays among his sailors while crossing the Atlantic) has been trying to overcome his Dutch rivals on the islands of Ai and Neira, and has been sending spies among the natives. Many might assume that Keeling was therefore in on the native uprising that ended up slaughtering 48 Dutchmen, but Milton goes to great lengths to suggest that he wasn't:


After the passing of almost four centuries it is hard to piece together exactly what happened next. The Dutch records suggest that William Keeling helped instigate the ensuing massacre, but this accusation contradicts his own diaries. Although he had certainly struck a number of secret deals with the natives, there is nothing to suggest he was actively inciting them to violence. Indeed, he was busy buying nutmeg at Ai Island, a day's sailing journey from Neira, when rumors of a plot began to circulate.


It could just be me, but if I were conspiring with the natives to overthrow my Dutch adversaries, that's the kind of information I might elect to exclude from my journals. You know, so as to avoid HANDING THEM EVIDENCE in the event of my capture. Of course I don't know anything about the circumstances here; it could be that Keeling really didn't know anything about the uprising. Yet Milton seems willing to impugn Dutch captains and bureaucrats on flimsier, more circumstantial evidence than we can read between the lines here against Keeling. And when he is forced to relate distasteful behavior on the part of the British (such as the men in Henry Hudson's expedition who made a sport of shooting American Indians with muskets from the deck of their ship) he seems extremely grieved by it, whereas similar behavior by the Dutch can pass without comment.

So, Nathaniel's Nutmeg was not the most balanced, bias-free history I've ever read. There was a definite jingoistic/nationalistic bent that bothered me more as the book went on, and inspired some eye-rolling toward the end. I would still recommend it, though, to those in the mood for the true(ish) version of the old-fashioned sea yarn.
Profile Image for Picoroco.
39 reviews22 followers
March 23, 2009
What a ridiculous title; very little to do with Nathaniel (Courthope), and the use of the singular nutmeg just grates (if you excuse the pun).

That said, this is an interesting introduction to Western Europe's involvement in the global race to corner the spice market. Particular focus is given to the increasingly bitter and deadly rivalries of the 17th Century English and Dutch spice merchants as they vie for control of the remote archipelagos of Indonesia along with their precious crops of cloves and nutmegs. The Dutch are the eventual winners, but Milton argues that in the long run this was a Pyrrhic victory for the Dutch as they had to sacrifice the bounties of New Amsterdam/York as a consequence.

There is a lot to savour in this book once you look beyond the author's jingoistic spin but as an Irishman it was rather difficult to stomach Milton's portrayal of the English merchants as heroic and honourable opposites of the lawless, villainous Dutch, when he must be fully aware that fellow countrymen of these same 'honourable' merchants were simultaneously laying waste to an island closer to their own shores - but then that island had no valuable spice to offer.
Profile Image for Liberté.
264 reviews
March 8, 2020
The NYT calls this a "rousing historical romp" which is a strange description of a history of human brutality and loss. Oddly enough, Nathaniel in Nathaniel's Nutmeg barely features in this history. This book is more truly a history of colonialism in the Banda Islands, the destructive effects of Dutch and English attempts to take control of various islands (trade here was synonymous with substituting colonial governance for independent rule), the enslavement and murder of the indigenous population, and the many and repeated failures of the English to secure a toehold in the East Indies in the 17th century. It's informative, but know what you're getting: a history of the spice race over the course of two centuries, and very few accounts from non-Europeans included in the primary sources. Nathaniel Courthope landed on Run, held it for four years, and was betrayed and killed when he left it to negotiate. It's more like Milton was looking for a hero to hang the story on than anything else. The most surprising fact out of this book was that the English were able to leverage a tenuous-at-best claim to a tiny island in exchange for New Netherland (New York).

This book is actually most interesting in its history of naval exploration, including Henry Hudson's exploration of North America in his attempts to find a Northwest Passage. The history of the East India Companies (Dutch and English) trying to find a Northeast Passage is also interesting, but these histories are also one of failure and horrible death.

Unfortunately, there are almost no on-the-ground women mentioned in this history: besides Queen Elizabeth I, there is only one recurring woman in these histories, Widow Mariam Hawkins (then Mrs. Towerson), whose second husband is murdered in the Massacre of Amboyne but the author fails to tell us what happened to her, if anything. Funnily enough, I was able to find out with a quick search: Amrita Sen has written on the role of wives of the men in the East India Company and there's an open-access summary of some events here.
Profile Image for Philip Lane.
534 reviews21 followers
December 10, 2014
I found this very disappointing for two reasons. I had previously read Samurai William which despite its flaws I had much enjoyed and the title and tag on the cover because this book does not live up to its cover. Nathaniel's is a very minor character in the book and Milton's hypothesis that his actions changed the course of history is not properly explored or supported by the book. It is obvious that a lot of research has been done and I did pick up a large number of curious facts and was introduced to a range of amazing characters. However the book lacks focus, it is like a kaleidoscope or a set of pick-up-sticks that have been tossed in the air. I felt that there were at least 5 or 6 good novels in the material or a Hollywood franchise. In essence the book is about the voyages of discovery and trade which set out to profit from the huge demand for spices in Western Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries. Milton attempts to tell this story through the letters of the sailors and merchants involved in this trade. We get a vivid picture of the hardships and dangers but the wider picture which Milton tries to paint is lost in speculation. Whilst he tries to promote Nathaniel Courthope to national hero status he skates over other more important events and protagonists. I got very irritated.
Profile Image for Bart Thanhauser.
225 reviews17 followers
January 25, 2012
Summary:

Nathaniel’s Nutmeg is about the battle for trade supremacy in the East Indies between the Dutch and English in the late 16th, early 17th century. The book focuses on the Banda Islands—a series of tiny islands in current day Maluku, which itself is an adaptation of the Portuguese word Moluccas meaning “spiceries”. This is essentially what the islands were for European merchants: spice plantations. With waves of the plague hitting Europe and the belief that nutmeg and mace were cure-alls, a pinch of nutmeg was worth a staggering amount. The Banda Islands were some of the only islands in the world where these spices grew and so these tiny, tough to access islands became a battleground for two of the world’s naval powers.

Although, I’ve heard plenty about the Dutch legacy in Indonesia—they oppressed Indonesia for over three centuries—I never knew how contested their initial presence was. Dutch dominance over other European powers was never guaranteed. The British East India Company was originally established to promote trade and compete with Dutch in the East Indies (rather than the Indian subcontinent. With that goal, the English established a trading in “Bantam” (current day Banten, on the Western tip of Java) long before the Dutch established Batavia, and poured plenty of ships and money towards the dream of controlling the spice trade.

Milton's story, however, focuses on the tiny island of Run: one of a handful of islands where nutmeg and mace grew. As nearly every spice island fell to Dutch control, an English merchant, Nathaniel Courthope, and a few dozen other merchants were able to sneak in and declare British sovereignty over Run Island—not too challenging a task as native islanders were so upset with the harshness of Dutch rule that they actually invited British sovereignty in exchange for protection. The British held Run Island for close to a decade and survived food shortages, blockades, and the constant threat of Dutch invasion. This had incredible significance. It prevented a Dutch monopoly of the spice market. In fawning language, Milton gushes about Courthope as a true English patriot forgotten in English history.

The Dutch would eventually capture Run Island and all but kick the English out of Indonesia. But because the British had a right to this island, they eventually were able to “trade” it for the Dutch colony of “New Amsterdam”. Modern day Manhattan. This is the big fun fact that Milton seemingly builds to throughout the book.

Opinion:

The subject matter of this book is great; it's why I read it. There is a dearth of English language history on Indonesia (at least what is available outside the academic presses). Reading about a lesser known chapter of history—especially a story as seemingly buried as this one was interesting. Kudos to Milton for digging it up. I also learned some really interesting things that I want to hold on to (which I've written below).

But beyond these fun facts this was ultimately a mediocre book. It was history-lite, with plenty of photos and a wide breadth, meant to appeal to a large market. Yet it was slow and not particularly interesting for large chunks. I was ready to eat up this subject matter, but it wasn't very engaging.

Milton isn't a particulary strong writer. He fails to give much personality to his characters or build any significant story lines in the book. The story of Nathaniel Courthope as the hero-patriot of the British seems exaggerated. Throughout most of the book Milton does an admirable job using plenty of primary documents, but when it comes to Courthope, Milton shrugs off academic rigors and paints a picture of a selfless savior. (This despite primary documents that indicate that this guy was a rough merchant known to filch from the company). In short, Milton seems too ready to paint this lame, hero narrative to try strengthen what is already weak writing.

Although I learned some interesting things from this book, and I’m ultimately happy I read it, I would’ve been much happier if this book was in the hands of a better popular history writer (Erik Larson?)—one who could fledge out the history with greater depth, build a stronger thesis (Milton's thesis that a mid-level merchant altered history isn't that strong), and make the characters more human. Not interesting or entertaining enough for a popular history book and strong enough of a thesis for a serious history book.


Interesting things to hold on to:

- Bantam (modern day Banten) was once a hot smelly, disease-filled port, “infamous in the East for its loose women and lax morals and an air of profligacy hung over the town like the plague of typhoid that frequently descended on its inhabitants” (98). Living in East Java now, this is something I can’t imagine at all, which makes details like this fascinating.

- The English and Dutch wasted tons of lives and money searching for a fabled North-East passage above Russia in hopes of shortening the distance to the Spice Islands.

- Henry Hudson was originally looking for this Northeast passage when he decided to throw the chain of his funders and head west to America. When he sailed up the Hudson he thought he had found the Northwest passage—again leading to the Spice Islands.

- Just how brutal the Dutch were. In the Banda Islands, the Dutch Govern General, Jan Coen, practiced a policy of repopulation, “rounding up whole communities of Bandanese and shipping them to Batavia to be sold as slaves” (318). This is essentially genocide.

Profile Image for Bagus.
430 reviews88 followers
May 19, 2022
I guess May is “the month of reading slump” since this book feels really long to me, although the subject is supposed to intrigue me. This book is featured among the Top 10 Non-Fiction Books on Indonesia by Indonesia Expat magazine. I wouldn’t find it surprising, given an expat looking for information about a country would naturally gravitate towards books written by fellow foreigners about the said country. Perhaps few also know the relationship between a spice called nutmeg with Manhattan which is currently the most densely populated borough of New York City. Manhattan did not appear on the map until an Englishman by the name of Henry Hudson who worked for the Dutch East India Company came across the island. The author even offers a brief anecdote on the origin of the word “Manhattan” which is derived from the drunkenness that took place there when the native Indians took the alcohol that Hudson offered them, from the native Indian word manahactanienk which means “the island of general intoxication”.

Nathaniel Courthope, our important Englishman, travelled to the spice island of Run near the present-day Maluku in the eastern part of Indonesia around 1616, the same year Shakespeare died. He performed an important duty to his country by travelling to the island and thus, breaking the Dutch monopoly of nutmeg trading. Much of the book recounts the contests between the English and the Dutch to gain access to the natives for trading nutmegs. As an Indonesian, I find the exotic portrayal of the natives as something akin to lost history, particularly since much has not been written at that age about the islands in the eastern part of Indonesia (as opposed to Java and Sumatra with many historical accounts both from locals and trading merchants from Asia and Arabia). Giles Milton leaves many of his primary sources verbatim, quoted in 17th century English like what Shakespeare used. I can say this book is like a collection of letters or journals compiled into the form of a book with a few explanations here and there. Perhaps the author believes that “history speaks for itself” but overall it was not a pleasant reading experience for me.

The Treaty of Westminster which was signed in 1674 and ended the Third Anglo-Dutch War, provided the return of the colony of New Netherland to England (which would be called New York in time) and was commissioned to solve trade conflicts concerning the East Indies. In short, the British gave up their claim to the spice trading on the island of Run in exchange for the right to keep their colony in Manhattan. The rest is history. The way the two lines are drawn together to connect facts by the author is interesting for scholarly reading but I surely wouldn���t recommend this to someone who has just arrived in Indonesia and is looking for information about the country. The book is laden with colloquial terms which might resonate instantly with most Indonesians or scholars specialising in the colonial history of this particular period (again, proof that Giles Milton has done good research with his archives) but it doesn’t make it an easy read.

Perhaps those who are into colonial history would enjoy this book, although it’s heavily one-sided in the way only European accounts are included in this story. It’s not surprising to read passages which depict natives from across Asia and the Americas as savage tribes. There is even one dedicated chapter by the name of “The Cannibals’ Country” which retells the bad experience of the Englishmen encountering headhunters during their expedition. It shows a lot of how we have changed in the past 400 years in our civilisation and the author could make it sounds “recent”.
683 reviews15 followers
September 27, 2021
Interesting read about something I had little real knowledge of--the exploration and battles for control of the East Indies Spice Islands (present day Indonesia) in the 16-17th centuries. The focus is on the English merchants and sailors of the East India Company but by necessity a lot also on their rival the Dutch East India Company. Portugal and Spain hover around the periphery of the tale as well and a wide assortment of native peoples. There are lot of maps which are really useful but some sort of appendix on the various convoys and a Who's Who would also have been beneficial. In fact, the title is slightly misleading as Nathaniel Courthope after whom the book is named, is featured in only a short but important part of it, the tenacious defense of Run Island. Run was center of nutmeg production and the last English held island in the core spice region of the Banda Islands. The book describes the nearly incredible difficulty of just getting to the Spice Islands, much less surviving there amidst tropical diseases, hostile natives and the incessant fighting among the Europeans. The one-way trip of something like 15,000 miles in the tiny, leaky boats of that era was, well not safe. But anything for a Pound or a Guilder! Actually lots and lots of them. The demand for nutmeg and other spices made the entire effort apparently worthwhile. The rivalry between Dutch and English was fierce and the tortures in store for captives like something out of the Dark Ages, actually worse. And of course the natives were victims of frequent depredations but it was not all one-sided and were often perpetrators of their own barbarities. Yet probably not 1 in 100 people (or more) could state the most fantastic outcome of this story involving an eventual trade of islands in 1667 (Treaty of Breda) between the Dutch and English. It ranks up there with Babe Ruth's sale by the Red Sox to the New York (Amsterdam-hint) Yankees!
Profile Image for Sarah.
155 reviews9 followers
August 25, 2018
This is an interesting recount of the history of English trade in the East and their battles with the Netherlands for supremacy over a small group of islands, the Bandas Islands, much coveted for their rich harvest of cloves, mace and nutmeg. Much credit must go to Milton who has managed to piece together this history despite the limited extant historical sources. This battle known as the 'spice race' which began in the late 16th century and lasted throughout the 17th century, as well as being interesting in itself, also sheds light on the story of how Britain came to be involved in India and how New York cam to be so named. Oddly enough, despite the piracy and bloodshed and heartache, it took until the 1810's before anyone thought to uproot a plant and transfer it elsewhere. Strange! There was obviously a lot of honour in dying for your nutmeg.
Don't be misled by the title, although Nathaniel Courthope has a very significant role to play in this history, he is only in the story for a very short period.

One thing: this book was originally published in 1999, and very matter-of-factly talks about the World Trade Centre. This brought me up short. With a jolt I realised how much more innocent and blissfully ignorant we were only 20 years ago.
389 reviews188 followers
June 12, 2023
Wasn't what I thought it would be, but I enjoyed it very much. The book is not as much about Nathaniel Courthope as it is about the Anglo-Dutch spice wars in modern-day Indonesia. It's a sprawling set of situations, characters, and stories, and makes for gripping reading. What it does not do is come together as a memorable whole, though I don't think the author was quite aiming for that either. Learnt a lot, but kept thinking this could have been better structured.

Edit - Was thinking about this book again, and realised anew what bothered me so much as I read it: Milton and his book care very little about what the Bandanese themselves thought, felt, and did about these alien Europeans who brought so much death, destruction, and pain to them. It carries a perspective of adventure and bravery that is thoroughly imperial and racist, and does not even acknowledge the question of why these powers thought they could take over these far-off lands in the first place. Milton is probably aware of this, this is a learned, accomplished writer. The only explanation is that he didn't think it was important. Which is the point.
Profile Image for Theresa.
1,252 reviews26 followers
June 24, 2023
If you are curious at all about the Spice Trade, or about the roots of the British and Dutch East India Companies, or how the competing interests to control the Spice Trade from the Spice Islands in Indonesia were fought, or even how it all affected the founding of Manhattan (and it did) and the ultimate control of it by Britain, this is the book for you. The depth of primary research and the clear telling of a complicated story that stretches essentially from Queen Elizabeth the I to the mid-1800s are astonishing.

I really rate this 4.5 stars - the ding that pushes it below 5 stars is the failure to provide a timeline in the back of the book which would have helped immensely in keeping track of the events recited, especially as there were some sections that jumped back in time, thus creating a bit of confusion, I thought.

Compelling, fascinating and filled with excerpts from primary sources, meaning letters and journals of the merchants and sailors and ships captains who experienced it all, I will never again use nutmeg, cloves, and peppercorns without thinking of the battles fought and blood shed in the 17th Century over these commodities. And there was a lot of blood. There are points that the brutality described, especially that of the Dutch during the final battles against the British for total control of the Spice Islands, make the bloodshed George RR Martin's 'Song of Ice and Fire' cycle look like an afternoon at a picnic in a park.

Who is the Nathaniel of the title? You first meet him in the prologue, then do not see his name again until about page 200. Even then, it's another 40 pages before his story is told - over 2/3rds of the book. While initially you look askance at this, once you do reach his story and its aftermath, you realize it was the only way to tell it. Nathaniel Courthope was a merchant, a factor of the British East India Company, sent with ships full of sailors, merchants, and warriors to the minute island of Run in the Spice Islands, to claim it for England and thus control a rich source of nutmeg as the island was covered with prime nutmeg trees. Against incredible odds, the last of the merchants sent to establish a toehold in the island group, he rallied his men and the natives daily and held Run against the Dutch, under the most brutal conditions, for four long years. Though ultimately he was murdered at the hands of the Dutch, and England lost control of tiny Run and its valuable nutmeg to the Dutch, his heroic actions, all done out of duty and patriotism, became the rallying cry for the struggling British East India Company, and ultimately led to no less an acquisition by the British Crown of Manhattan.

It's quite a story, but not for any one who is feint of heart, squeamish or missish. But then, most of history is not for such as those.

ATY 2019 #10 - historical figure
Profile Image for Beth Cato.
Author 120 books627 followers
April 10, 2012
The title of this is somewhat misleading; it's not simply Nathaniel Courthope's story, but that of various men over a century who fought and died over islands that don't even garner a mention on most contemporary maps.[return][return]The tiny island of Run is in the Indonesian archipelago. Five hundred years ago, that small cluster of volcanic islands was the only place in the world where one could find clover and nutmeg. And everyone wanted it - the Spanish, the Portuguese, the Dutch and the English, though the last two were the greatest foes. In this fascinating story, Milton describes the incredible effort it took to make it to Run and its neighboring islands. Thousands of lives were lost just in the journey. Shipwrecks, dysentery, piracy. Starving sailors would land on islands and gorge on scared cows, only to be slaughtered by mobs of horrified villagers who believed the cows held the spirits of deceased ancestors. When the Dutch finally gained control and brutally subjugated the native population of the islands, the English still persisted in their claim for spices. War ensued. Brutality was undeniable on both sides, but Nathaniel Courthope's valiant stand on the island of Run made the English claim seem justified. The end result of this conflict: a simple trade of the wealthy island of Run for a scarcely-settled island in America named Manhattan.[return][return]This book was enlightening. I have nutmeg in my kitchen cupboard and took it for granted. It costs what, $3? I've read about the Spice Wars, but knew nothing about the specifics or the sacrifices involved. It made me feel sad at times. People really should know about these things. As much as I enjoyed Nathaniel's Nutmeg, it was a very slow read and took almost a week for me to get through. I am glad I read it, though. Many thanks to the person who reviewed it on 50bookchallenge in 2008 and brought it to my attention.
Profile Image for Stefan.
474 reviews58 followers
June 2, 2008
Nathaniel’s Nutmeg was a highly readable, interesting, enlightening, and exciting read. It was extremely fascinating to read about the spice race in which a large number of ships and men were lost to war and illness all over a few small isolated and backwater islands in the South Pacific. The interesting stories of forgotten explorers, soldiers, and sailors in their quest to find spices and glory amidst the uncharted vastness of the region was quite amazing. I’d never read a book on this era before, and had never heard about the key individuals in this story. Nor did I know much about the context and history of the spice race. The book’s description of forgotten and obscure events during the colonization of the world was astonishing, I’d never read about any of this in my previous readings of History. This book was an eye opener to me, it explored a time period I had never even known about before, and allowed me to get a general and easy to read over view of the key events and context of the time. I thought the early colonization was boring, but Nathaniel’s Nutmeg shows that is was both interesting and critically important. Very importantly, this book gave me a interest to read more books about this time period and explore it in greater depth. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
27 reviews38 followers
December 30, 2008
I do not normally read non-fiction, but my dad shoved this book into my hands after a recent visit and said "Read it" in hushed tones, as if this book contains all the hidden truths I could possibly need.

Written like fiction, it follows the start of the spice trade between Europe and the east Indian islands (Indonesia), the ultimate birth of the East India trading company and the many many battled fought over control over this area between the English, Dutch, Spanish and Portuguese.
It took me a while to get into the story, but, once I got past the archaic and sometimes clumsy language, it was a fun read that prompted me to want to know even more about the islands.

I would suggest this book to anyone interested not only in marine history, but also in Pirate lore.
Profile Image for Dave Mosher.
19 reviews96 followers
October 22, 2009
Not a history buff by any stretch? I'm not, but this book was fantastic.

It offers a fascinating glimpse into the spice race of late 1500s and early 1600s, and how relatively few sailors seeking riches and glory set the course of history around the world.

Full of detail and primary sources -- letters of tortured sailors, greedy merchants, out-of-touch bureaucrats, etc. -- yet shockingly approachable and impossible to put down at times.

As an added note, it's a must-read for any New Yorker who wants to know what Manhattan's native name "Manahatta" means, and how it was deemed so :)
Profile Image for Dave Carden.
56 reviews2 followers
August 5, 2023
How is this book not more popular?! The story reads like Indiana Jones, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Marco Polo all in one.
For nearly a century, the greatest powers in Europe battled over a tiny patch of ocean on the other side of the world. Thousands of men died on the quest for spices that today we buy for pennies.
Giles Milton weaves a thrilling tale and is especially gifted at finding the best direct quotes from period letters and documents.
A must-read for any history buff!
2 reviews
April 15, 2009
Extraordinary account of the spice trade and life aboard trading ships.
519 reviews3 followers
January 31, 2008
The tale of the opening up of the Spice Islands of Indonesia. Very interesting and well written.
Profile Image for John.
962 reviews121 followers
April 1, 2022
I appreciate the central story here, that Manhattan and the island of Run are tied together in this interesting historical moment. That connection is something that I would work into a history lesson, especially if I was trying to show how the colonies that become the US are connected to global history and world trade.
But so little of the book was actually about that. It really only came about at the end. This Nathaniel guy was barely in the book. Mostly "Nathaniel's Nutmeg" is about how bumbling the English were at trying to get the spice trade going in southeast Asia, and how the Dutch outmaneuvered them at every turn. It kind of all blends together - Milton recounts the tale of ship after ship that tried to grab this island or that island, but then the Dutch beat them, or destroyed their fort, or threatened the islanders with death for trading with the English, and then everyone got scurvy and died. Repeat. Eventually this Nathaniel guy does his heroic stand on this one little nutmeg island, but he gets shot too (or dies of the bloody flux? I don't remember).
So yeah, my mind kind of wandered after a while. I also thought the author was a bit cavalier with his sources. He tells everything from an English point of view, because those were the sources he was using, but we can't always rely on these accounts to be an honest accounting of events. And Milton will just throw these claims in there that seem iffy. Like on page 60, he writes that when sailors were keel-hauled, "in the majority of cases, the victim's head was ripped off." Really? I know this isn't the most important point in the book, but is that actually true, or does it just kind of "feel" true? Where is he getting this from? I kept thinking that in this book. And he does it with accounts of Africans and Asians all over the place too - he takes something that an English sailor said about them and just accepts it as an accurate account. There were just some eyebrow raising moments here, is what I am saying.
Profile Image for Britta.
279 reviews
March 12, 2024
Who tf even is Nathaniel?
I could hardly tell you, he’s really more of a footnote in this book than anything.
What I expected from this book was decent detail about at least:
1) the history of the spice trade
2) a degree of socioeconomic info around it
3) I don’t know, maybe literally anything about the islands the spices are harvested from besides that the spices are from them
What I got was just a never ending log of countless ships and who was on board and what the load weighed and who was captain and where they came from and who died of what and what course they took and how much spice they came home with
And OH MY GOD I DO NOT CARE
After the fifth or sixth chapter of the exact same thing, I’d about had it. There was even a detour all the way over to North America and the potential to discuss how the Dutch traded Manhattan for Run, the nutmeg island, but nah. The main focus was on who shot the most natives or who got sick of the “blody flux”.
So anyway, unless you’re REALLY into like, golden age European piracy and maritime cargo details, you could skip this and be no worse for it.
1 review1 follower
August 19, 2019
This is an utterly fascinating book - and I loved all the original sources. But I was disappointed that Nathaniel didn’t surface until page 271 and was gone again by page 306! Also although infinitely better than the Dutch , I not sure that Nathaniel isn’t over described as a thoroughly good guy - full of derring do.
I had to skip all the torture scenes but important to know they happened....
The scene in the epilogue with the flickering re runs of American tv is totally heart -breaking . I thought it had a very important message for our times.... scent of nutmeg there might have been , but the picture of ruin , hacked spice trees and burnt land remains in the mind. Such is the price of greed and exploitation.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Andy P.
59 reviews1 follower
October 25, 2023
I should have loved it from the blurb and reviews on the cover. But it was a struggle. Lots of interesting, sometimes incredible, true tales of adventure and discovery, but put together in a dry fashion and which, to me, lacked continuity. It seemed to jump from one expedition to another with no narrative thread to entice the reader on. It's 370 pages long; I gave up at 285. I didn't feel I'd wasted my time, I'd learnt a lot, but it wasn't tempting me to learn more. The eponymous Nathaniel has only just been mentioned, despite the title of the book. I wonder what he did? But I've got other books waiting.
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