The Dutch Republic :: its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 /
The Dutch Golden Age - the age of Grotius, Spinoza, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and a host of other renowned artists and writers, was also remarkable for its immense impact in the spheres of commerce, finance, shipping, and technology. It was in fact one of the most spectacularly creative episodes in the hi...
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford :
Clarendon Press,
1995.
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Schriftenreihe: | Oxford history of early modern Europe.
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-862 DE-863 |
Zusammenfassung: | The Dutch Golden Age - the age of Grotius, Spinoza, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and a host of other renowned artists and writers, was also remarkable for its immense impact in the spheres of commerce, finance, shipping, and technology. It was in fact one of the most spectacularly creative episodes in the history of the world. In this book, Jonathan Israel gives the definitive account of the emergence of the United Provinces as a great power, and explains its subsequent decline in the eighteenth century. He places the thought, politics, religion, and social developments of the Golden Age in their broad context, and examines the changing relationship between the northern Netherlands and the south, which was to develop into modern Belgium. One of the principal aims of the book is to provide a new type of integrated history which draws the different dimensions of the discipline firmly together in strictly non-technical language. The result is a comprehensive and lucid account as useful to the reader primarily interested in artistic and cultural history as to the student who needs a survey of the Republic's institutions, class structure, and economic development. At the same time it will provide an invaluable aid to scholars interested in new research and new interpretations. |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xxx, 1231 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) :) |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9780191585753 0191585750 0585181225 9780585181226 |
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245 | 1 | 4 | |a The Dutch Republic : |b its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / |c Jonathan Israel. |
260 | |a Oxford : |b Clarendon Press, |c 1995. | ||
300 | |a 1 online resource (xxx, 1231 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) :) | ||
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490 | 1 | |a The Oxford history of early modern Europe | |
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Print version record. | |
546 | |a English. | ||
505 | 0 | 0 | |g 1. |t Introduction -- 2. |t On the Threshold of the Modern Era. |t The Rise of Holland. |t Under the Burgundians. |t The Early Habsburg Netherlands. |t The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3. |t Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4. |t Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5. |t The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565. |t The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation. |t The Impact of Luther. |t Fragmentation. |t Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution. |t The Rise of Calvinism -- 6. |t Society before the Revolt. |t The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture. |t Urbanization. |t The Urban Economy. |t Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric. |t Poverty and Civic Welfare. |t The Regents -- 7. |t The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566. |t The Seeds of Revolt. |t Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8. |t Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9. |t The Revolt Begins -- 10. |t The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State. |t The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575. |t From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579). |t The Two Netherlands. |t The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585. |t The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11. |t Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12. |t The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609. |t Territorial Expansion. |t The Fixed Garrison System. |t The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance. |t The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13. |t The Institutions of the Republic. |t The Provinces. |t Taxation and the Tax System. |t The Generality. |t The Generality Lands. |t The Stadholderate -- 14. |t The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy. |t Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South. |t The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'. |t The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15. |t Society after the Revolt. |t Urbanization. |t Rural Society. |t The Nobility. |t The Regents. |t The Merchant Elite. |t The Elite of the Skilled. |t Wages. |t Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16. |t Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization. |t The Confessional Arena. |t The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church. |t The Rejection of Toleration. |t The Catholic Revival. |t Confessionalization and the State. |t Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17. |t The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce. |t The Pressure to Negotiate. |t The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce. |t 'South' confronts 'North' -- 18. |t Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19. |t The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20. |t The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621. |t Domestic Politics. |t The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619. |t Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War. |t The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21. |t The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628. |t Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625. |t The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate. |t Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22. |t The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647. |t Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632. |t The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633. |t Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640. |t The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23. |t Art and Architecture, 1590-1648. |t The Proliferation of Art. |t Architecture and the Building Boom. |t Specialization in Painting. |t The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24. |t Intellectual Life, 1572-1650. |t The Forming of a New Culture. |t Universities and Civic High Schools. |t Dutch Late Humanism. |t The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View. |t Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25. |t The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26. |t Society. |t The Economy. |t Population. |t Work and Migration. |t The Huguenot Influx. |t Wages and Living Standards. |t Rural Society -- 27. |t Confessionalization, 1647-1702. |t The Rise of Toleration. |t William III and the Churches. |t Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism. |t The Waning of the Lesser Churches. |t Church Politics in the Generality Lands. |t The Unity of the Public Church. |t Internal Confessionalization. |t The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28. |t Freedom and Order. |t A Disciplined Society. |t Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture. |t The Further Reformation and Society -- 29. |t The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s. |t The Making of the 'True Freedom'. |t The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654). |t De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30. |t The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672. |t 'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659. |t Party and Faction in the Early 1660s. |t Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s. |t The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667. |t The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV. |t The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31. |t 1672: Year of Disaster -- 32. |t The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702. |t From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678. |t From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685. |t The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691. |t The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33. |t Art and Architecture, 1645-1702. |t Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts. |t Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672. |t Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34. |t Intellectual Life, 1650-1700. |t Intellectual Crisis. |t The Universities. |t Science. |t The Anti-Socinian Campaign. |t Radical Cartesians and Spinozists. |t The Death of the Devil. |t The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35. |t The Colonial Empire. |t The Territories. |t Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies. |t Power, Politics, and Patronage. |t Religion and Discipline -- 36. |t The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747. |t The New Regime. |t The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713. |t The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713. |t Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37. |t Society. |t Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute. |t Urban Decay. |t Wealth and Poverty -- 38. |t The Churches. |t Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews. |t The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39. |t The Enlightenment. |t The Dutch Impact. |t The 'Radical' Enlightenment. |t The Decline of the Universities. |t The Decline of the Visual Arts. |t The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands. |t The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire. |t The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40. |t The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41. |t The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'. |t Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766. |t New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands. |t The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42. |t The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43. |t The Fall of the Republic. |t The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795. |t The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'. |t The End of the United Provinces -- 44. |t Denouement. |t The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. |t Abolished by Napoleon. |
520 | |a The Dutch Golden Age - the age of Grotius, Spinoza, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and a host of other renowned artists and writers, was also remarkable for its immense impact in the spheres of commerce, finance, shipping, and technology. It was in fact one of the most spectacularly creative episodes in the history of the world. In this book, Jonathan Israel gives the definitive account of the emergence of the United Provinces as a great power, and explains its subsequent decline in the eighteenth century. He places the thought, politics, religion, and social developments of the Golden Age in their broad context, and examines the changing relationship between the northern Netherlands and the south, which was to develop into modern Belgium. One of the principal aims of the book is to provide a new type of integrated history which draws the different dimensions of the discipline firmly together in strictly non-technical language. The result is a comprehensive and lucid account as useful to the reader primarily interested in artistic and cultural history as to the student who needs a survey of the Republic's institutions, class structure, and economic development. At the same time it will provide an invaluable aid to scholars interested in new research and new interpretations. | ||
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contents | Introduction -- 2. On the Threshold of the Modern Era. The Rise of Holland. Under the Burgundians. The Early Habsburg Netherlands. The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3. Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4. Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5. The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565. The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation. The Impact of Luther. Fragmentation. Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution. The Rise of Calvinism -- 6. Society before the Revolt. The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture. Urbanization. The Urban Economy. Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric. Poverty and Civic Welfare. The Regents -- 7. The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566. The Seeds of Revolt. Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8. Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9. The Revolt Begins -- 10. The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State. The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575. From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579). The Two Netherlands. The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585. The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11. Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12. The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609. Territorial Expansion. The Fixed Garrison System. The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance. The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13. The Institutions of the Republic. The Provinces. Taxation and the Tax System. The Generality. The Generality Lands. The Stadholderate -- 14. The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy. Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South. The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'. The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15. Society after the Revolt. Rural Society. The Nobility. The Regents. The Merchant Elite. The Elite of the Skilled. Wages. Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16. Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization. The Confessional Arena. The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church. The Rejection of Toleration. The Catholic Revival. Confessionalization and the State. Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17. The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce. The Pressure to Negotiate. The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce. 'South' confronts 'North' -- 18. Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19. The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20. The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621. Domestic Politics. The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619. Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War. The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21. The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628. Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625. The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate. Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22. The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647. Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632. The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633. Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640. The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23. Art and Architecture, 1590-1648. The Proliferation of Art. Architecture and the Building Boom. Specialization in Painting. The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24. Intellectual Life, 1572-1650. The Forming of a New Culture. Universities and Civic High Schools. Dutch Late Humanism. The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View. Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25. The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26. Society. The Economy. Population. Work and Migration. The Huguenot Influx. Wages and Living Standards. Rural Society -- 27. Confessionalization, 1647-1702. The Rise of Toleration. William III and the Churches. Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism. The Waning of the Lesser Churches. Church Politics in the Generality Lands. The Unity of the Public Church. Internal Confessionalization. The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28. Freedom and Order. A Disciplined Society. Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture. The Further Reformation and Society -- 29. The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s. The Making of the 'True Freedom'. The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654). De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30. The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672. 'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659. Party and Faction in the Early 1660s. Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s. The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667. The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV. The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31. 1672: Year of Disaster -- 32. The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702. From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678. From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685. The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691. The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33. Art and Architecture, 1645-1702. Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts. Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672. Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34. Intellectual Life, 1650-1700. Intellectual Crisis. The Universities. Science. The Anti-Socinian Campaign. Radical Cartesians and Spinozists. The Death of the Devil. The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35. The Colonial Empire. The Territories. Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies. Power, Politics, and Patronage. Religion and Discipline -- 36. The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747. The New Regime. The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713. The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713. Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37. Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute. Urban Decay. Wealth and Poverty -- 38. The Churches. Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews. The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39. The Enlightenment. The Dutch Impact. The 'Radical' Enlightenment. The Decline of the Universities. The Decline of the Visual Arts. The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands. The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire. The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40. The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41. The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'. Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766. New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands. The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42. The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43. The Fall of the Republic. The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795. The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'. The End of the United Provinces -- 44. Denouement. The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Abolished by Napoleon. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)44962429 |
dewey-full | 949.2/.02 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 949 - Other parts of Europe |
dewey-raw | 949.2/.02 |
dewey-search | 949.2/.02 |
dewey-sort | 3949.2 12 |
dewey-tens | 940 - History of Europe |
discipline | Geschichte |
era | 1477-1806 fast |
era_facet | 1477-1806 |
format | Electronic eBook |
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"><subfield code="a">949.2/.02</subfield><subfield code="2">21</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="084" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">15.70</subfield><subfield code="2">bcl</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="084" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">15.63</subfield><subfield code="2">bcl</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="084" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">NK 1056</subfield><subfield code="2">rvk</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="084" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">NK 2405</subfield><subfield code="2">rvk</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="084" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">NN 1364</subfield><subfield code="2">rvk</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="049" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">MAIN</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Israel, Jonathan Irvine.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="4"><subfield code="a">The Dutch Republic :</subfield><subfield code="b">its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 /</subfield><subfield code="c">Jonathan Israel.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="260" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Oxford :</subfield><subfield code="b">Clarendon Press,</subfield><subfield code="c">1995.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (xxx, 1231 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) :)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Oxford history of early modern Europe</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="546" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">English.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2="0"><subfield code="g">1.</subfield><subfield code="t">Introduction -- 2.</subfield><subfield code="t">On the Threshold of the Modern Era.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Rise of Holland.</subfield><subfield code="t">Under the Burgundians.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Early Habsburg Netherlands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3.</subfield><subfield code="t">Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4.</subfield><subfield code="t">Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Impact of Luther.</subfield><subfield code="t">Fragmentation.</subfield><subfield code="t">Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Rise of Calvinism -- 6.</subfield><subfield code="t">Society before the Revolt.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture.</subfield><subfield code="t">Urbanization.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Urban Economy.</subfield><subfield code="t">Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric.</subfield><subfield code="t">Poverty and Civic Welfare.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Regents -- 7.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Seeds of Revolt.</subfield><subfield code="t">Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8.</subfield><subfield code="t">Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Revolt Begins -- 10.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575.</subfield><subfield code="t">From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579).</subfield><subfield code="t">The Two Netherlands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585.</subfield><subfield code="t">The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11.</subfield><subfield code="t">Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609.</subfield><subfield code="t">Territorial Expansion.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Fixed Garrison System.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Institutions of the Republic.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Provinces.</subfield><subfield code="t">Taxation and the Tax System.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Generality.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Generality Lands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Stadholderate -- 14.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy.</subfield><subfield code="t">Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15.</subfield><subfield code="t">Society after the Revolt.</subfield><subfield code="t">Urbanization.</subfield><subfield code="t">Rural Society.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Nobility.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Regents.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Merchant Elite.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Elite of the Skilled.</subfield><subfield code="t">Wages.</subfield><subfield code="t">Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16.</subfield><subfield code="t">Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Confessional Arena.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Rejection of Toleration.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Catholic Revival.</subfield><subfield code="t">Confessionalization and the State.</subfield><subfield code="t">Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Pressure to Negotiate.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce.</subfield><subfield code="t">'South' confronts 'North' -- 18.</subfield><subfield code="t">Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621.</subfield><subfield code="t">Domestic Politics.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619.</subfield><subfield code="t">Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628.</subfield><subfield code="t">Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate.</subfield><subfield code="t">Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647.</subfield><subfield code="t">Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633.</subfield><subfield code="t">Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23.</subfield><subfield code="t">Art and Architecture, 1590-1648.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Proliferation of Art.</subfield><subfield code="t">Architecture and the Building Boom.</subfield><subfield code="t">Specialization in Painting.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24.</subfield><subfield code="t">Intellectual Life, 1572-1650.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Forming of a New Culture.</subfield><subfield code="t">Universities and Civic High Schools.</subfield><subfield code="t">Dutch Late Humanism.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View.</subfield><subfield code="t">Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26.</subfield><subfield code="t">Society.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Economy.</subfield><subfield code="t">Population.</subfield><subfield code="t">Work and Migration.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Huguenot Influx.</subfield><subfield code="t">Wages and Living Standards.</subfield><subfield code="t">Rural Society -- 27.</subfield><subfield code="t">Confessionalization, 1647-1702.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Rise of Toleration.</subfield><subfield code="t">William III and the Churches.</subfield><subfield code="t">Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Waning of the Lesser Churches.</subfield><subfield code="t">Church Politics in the Generality Lands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Unity of the Public Church.</subfield><subfield code="t">Internal Confessionalization.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28.</subfield><subfield code="t">Freedom and Order.</subfield><subfield code="t">A Disciplined Society.</subfield><subfield code="t">Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Further Reformation and Society -- 29.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Making of the 'True Freedom'.</subfield><subfield code="t">The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654).</subfield><subfield code="t">De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672.</subfield><subfield code="t">'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659.</subfield><subfield code="t">Party and Faction in the Early 1660s.</subfield><subfield code="t">Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31.</subfield><subfield code="t">1672: Year of Disaster -- 32.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702.</subfield><subfield code="t">From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678.</subfield><subfield code="t">From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33.</subfield><subfield code="t">Art and Architecture, 1645-1702.</subfield><subfield code="t">Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts.</subfield><subfield code="t">Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672.</subfield><subfield code="t">Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34.</subfield><subfield code="t">Intellectual Life, 1650-1700.</subfield><subfield code="t">Intellectual Crisis.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Universities.</subfield><subfield code="t">Science.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Anti-Socinian Campaign.</subfield><subfield code="t">Radical Cartesians and Spinozists.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Death of the Devil.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Colonial Empire.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Territories.</subfield><subfield code="t">Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies.</subfield><subfield code="t">Power, Politics, and Patronage.</subfield><subfield code="t">Religion and Discipline -- 36.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747.</subfield><subfield code="t">The New Regime.</subfield><subfield code="t">The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713.</subfield><subfield code="t">Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37.</subfield><subfield code="t">Society.</subfield><subfield code="t">Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute.</subfield><subfield code="t">Urban Decay.</subfield><subfield code="t">Wealth and Poverty -- 38.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Churches.</subfield><subfield code="t">Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Enlightenment.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Dutch Impact.</subfield><subfield code="t">The 'Radical' Enlightenment.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Decline of the Universities.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Decline of the Visual Arts.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'.</subfield><subfield code="t">Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766.</subfield><subfield code="t">New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Fall of the Republic.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'.</subfield><subfield code="t">The End of the United Provinces -- 44.</subfield><subfield code="t">Denouement.</subfield><subfield code="t">The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806.</subfield><subfield code="t">Abolished by Napoleon.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Dutch Golden Age - the age of Grotius, Spinoza, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and a host of other renowned artists and writers, was also remarkable for its immense impact in the spheres of commerce, finance, shipping, and technology. It was in fact one of the most spectacularly creative episodes in the history of the world. In this book, Jonathan Israel gives the definitive account of the emergence of the United Provinces as a great power, and explains its subsequent decline in the eighteenth century. He places the thought, politics, religion, and social developments of the Golden Age in their broad context, and examines the changing relationship between the northern Netherlands and the south, which was to develop into modern Belgium. One of the principal aims of the book is to provide a new type of integrated history which draws the different dimensions of the discipline firmly together in strictly non-technical language. The result is a comprehensive and lucid account as useful to the reader primarily interested in artistic and cultural history as to the student who needs a survey of the Republic's institutions, class structure, and economic development. At the same time it will provide an invaluable aid to scholars interested in new research and new interpretations.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="651" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Netherlands</subfield><subfield code="x">History</subfield><subfield code="y">House of Habsburg, 1477-1556.</subfield><subfield code="0">http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090999</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="651" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Netherlands</subfield><subfield code="x">History</subfield><subfield code="y">Eighty Years' War, 1568-1648.</subfield><subfield code="0">http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091001</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="651" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Netherlands</subfield><subfield code="x">History</subfield><subfield code="y">1648-1795.</subfield><subfield code="0">http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091006</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="651" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield 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genre | History fast |
genre_facet | History |
geographic | Netherlands History House of Habsburg, 1477-1556. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090999 Netherlands History Eighty Years' War, 1568-1648. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091001 Netherlands History 1648-1795. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091006 Netherlands History Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091009 Netherlands History. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090996 Pays-Bas Histoire. Pays-Bas Histoire 1477-1556 (Maison de Habsbourg) Pays-Bas Histoire 1568-1648 (Guerre de Quatre-Vingts Ans) Pays-Bas Histoire 1648-1795. Pays-Bas Histoire 1795-1806 (République batave) Netherlands fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJk4D96j3YTHJQfHCV3vpP Niederlande gnd Pays-Bas 1795-1806 (République batave) ram Pays-Bas Histoire. ram Pays-Bas Civilisation. ram Pays-Bas 17e siècle. ram Pays-Bas 18e siècle. ram HOLANDA HISTORIA CASA DE HABSBURG, 1477-1556. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA GUERRAS DE LA INDEPENDENCIA, 1556-1648. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA 1648-1795. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA REPUBLICA BATAVIA, 1795-1806. renib |
geographic_facet | Netherlands History House of Habsburg, 1477-1556. Netherlands History Eighty Years' War, 1568-1648. Netherlands History 1648-1795. Netherlands History Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Netherlands History. Pays-Bas Histoire. Pays-Bas Histoire 1477-1556 (Maison de Habsbourg) Pays-Bas Histoire 1568-1648 (Guerre de Quatre-Vingts Ans) Pays-Bas Histoire 1648-1795. Pays-Bas Histoire 1795-1806 (République batave) Netherlands Niederlande Pays-Bas 1795-1806 (République batave) Pays-Bas Civilisation. Pays-Bas 17e siècle. Pays-Bas 18e siècle. HOLANDA HISTORIA CASA DE HABSBURG, 1477-1556. HOLANDA HISTORIA GUERRAS DE LA INDEPENDENCIA, 1556-1648. HOLANDA HISTORIA 1648-1795. HOLANDA HISTORIA REPUBLICA BATAVIA, 1795-1806. |
id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocm44962429 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2025-03-18T14:13:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780191585753 0191585750 0585181225 9780585181226 |
language | English |
oclc_num | 44962429 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | MAIN DE-862 DE-BY-FWS DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-862 DE-BY-FWS DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource (xxx, 1231 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) :) |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA ZDB-4-EBA |
publishDate | 1995 |
publishDateSearch | 1995 |
publishDateSort | 1995 |
publisher | Clarendon Press, |
record_format | marc |
series | Oxford history of early modern Europe. |
series2 | The Oxford history of early modern Europe |
spelling | Israel, Jonathan Irvine. The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / Jonathan Israel. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1995. 1 online resource (xxx, 1231 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) :) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier The Oxford history of early modern Europe Includes bibliographical references and index. Print version record. English. 1. Introduction -- 2. On the Threshold of the Modern Era. The Rise of Holland. Under the Burgundians. The Early Habsburg Netherlands. The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3. Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4. Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5. The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565. The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation. The Impact of Luther. Fragmentation. Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution. The Rise of Calvinism -- 6. Society before the Revolt. The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture. Urbanization. The Urban Economy. Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric. Poverty and Civic Welfare. The Regents -- 7. The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566. The Seeds of Revolt. Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8. Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9. The Revolt Begins -- 10. The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State. The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575. From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579). The Two Netherlands. The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585. The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11. Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12. The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609. Territorial Expansion. The Fixed Garrison System. The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance. The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13. The Institutions of the Republic. The Provinces. Taxation and the Tax System. The Generality. The Generality Lands. The Stadholderate -- 14. The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy. Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South. The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'. The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15. Society after the Revolt. Urbanization. Rural Society. The Nobility. The Regents. The Merchant Elite. The Elite of the Skilled. Wages. Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16. Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization. The Confessional Arena. The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church. The Rejection of Toleration. The Catholic Revival. Confessionalization and the State. Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17. The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce. The Pressure to Negotiate. The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce. 'South' confronts 'North' -- 18. Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19. The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20. The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621. Domestic Politics. The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619. Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War. The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21. The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628. Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625. The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate. Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22. The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647. Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632. The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633. Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640. The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23. Art and Architecture, 1590-1648. The Proliferation of Art. Architecture and the Building Boom. Specialization in Painting. The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24. Intellectual Life, 1572-1650. The Forming of a New Culture. Universities and Civic High Schools. Dutch Late Humanism. The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View. Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25. The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26. Society. The Economy. Population. Work and Migration. The Huguenot Influx. Wages and Living Standards. Rural Society -- 27. Confessionalization, 1647-1702. The Rise of Toleration. William III and the Churches. Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism. The Waning of the Lesser Churches. Church Politics in the Generality Lands. The Unity of the Public Church. Internal Confessionalization. The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28. Freedom and Order. A Disciplined Society. Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture. The Further Reformation and Society -- 29. The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s. The Making of the 'True Freedom'. The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654). De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30. The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672. 'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659. Party and Faction in the Early 1660s. Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s. The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667. The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV. The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31. 1672: Year of Disaster -- 32. The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702. From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678. From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685. The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691. The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33. Art and Architecture, 1645-1702. Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts. Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672. Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34. Intellectual Life, 1650-1700. Intellectual Crisis. The Universities. Science. The Anti-Socinian Campaign. Radical Cartesians and Spinozists. The Death of the Devil. The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35. The Colonial Empire. The Territories. Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies. Power, Politics, and Patronage. Religion and Discipline -- 36. The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747. The New Regime. The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713. The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713. Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37. Society. Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute. Urban Decay. Wealth and Poverty -- 38. The Churches. Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews. The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39. The Enlightenment. The Dutch Impact. The 'Radical' Enlightenment. The Decline of the Universities. The Decline of the Visual Arts. The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands. The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire. The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40. The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41. The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'. Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766. New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands. The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42. The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43. The Fall of the Republic. The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795. The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'. The End of the United Provinces -- 44. Denouement. The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Abolished by Napoleon. The Dutch Golden Age - the age of Grotius, Spinoza, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and a host of other renowned artists and writers, was also remarkable for its immense impact in the spheres of commerce, finance, shipping, and technology. It was in fact one of the most spectacularly creative episodes in the history of the world. In this book, Jonathan Israel gives the definitive account of the emergence of the United Provinces as a great power, and explains its subsequent decline in the eighteenth century. He places the thought, politics, religion, and social developments of the Golden Age in their broad context, and examines the changing relationship between the northern Netherlands and the south, which was to develop into modern Belgium. One of the principal aims of the book is to provide a new type of integrated history which draws the different dimensions of the discipline firmly together in strictly non-technical language. The result is a comprehensive and lucid account as useful to the reader primarily interested in artistic and cultural history as to the student who needs a survey of the Republic's institutions, class structure, and economic development. At the same time it will provide an invaluable aid to scholars interested in new research and new interpretations. Netherlands History House of Habsburg, 1477-1556. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090999 Netherlands History Eighty Years' War, 1568-1648. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091001 Netherlands History 1648-1795. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091006 Netherlands History Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091009 Netherlands History. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090996 Pays-Bas Histoire. Pays-Bas Histoire 1477-1556 (Maison de Habsbourg) Pays-Bas Histoire 1568-1648 (Guerre de Quatre-Vingts Ans) Pays-Bas Histoire 1648-1795. Pays-Bas Histoire 1795-1806 (République batave) HISTORY General. bisacsh Netherlands fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJk4D96j3YTHJQfHCV3vpP Niederlande gnd Machtpolitik gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4168427-8 Politik gnd Politisches System gnd Unabhängigkeitskrieg gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4186823-7 Wirtschaft gnd Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden. gtt Regions & Countries - Europe. hilcc History & Archaeology. hilcc Netherlands, Belgium & Luxembourg. hilcc Pays-Bas 1795-1806 (République batave) ram Pays-Bas Histoire. ram Pays-Bas Civilisation. ram Pays-Bas 17e siècle. ram Pays-Bas 18e siècle. ram HOLANDA HISTORIA CASA DE HABSBURG, 1477-1556. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA GUERRAS DE LA INDEPENDENCIA, 1556-1648. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA 1648-1795. renib HOLANDA HISTORIA REPUBLICA BATAVIA, 1795-1806. renib Eighty Years' War (Netherlands : 1568-1648) fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39Qhp4vB9BhMdPpDKqdpQJCbm 1477-1806 fast History fast has work: The Dutch Republic (Work) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCFWQ4RMfqQGBcvWbtVV7QC https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: Israel, Jonathan Irvine. Dutch Republic. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1995 0198730721 (DLC) 97223086 (OCoLC)32700360 Oxford history of early modern Europe. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no95033835 |
spellingShingle | Israel, Jonathan Irvine The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / Oxford history of early modern Europe. Introduction -- 2. On the Threshold of the Modern Era. The Rise of Holland. Under the Burgundians. The Early Habsburg Netherlands. The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3. Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4. Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5. The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565. The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation. The Impact of Luther. Fragmentation. Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution. The Rise of Calvinism -- 6. Society before the Revolt. The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture. Urbanization. The Urban Economy. Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric. Poverty and Civic Welfare. The Regents -- 7. The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566. The Seeds of Revolt. Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8. Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9. The Revolt Begins -- 10. The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State. The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575. From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579). The Two Netherlands. The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585. The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11. Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12. The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609. Territorial Expansion. The Fixed Garrison System. The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance. The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13. The Institutions of the Republic. The Provinces. Taxation and the Tax System. The Generality. The Generality Lands. The Stadholderate -- 14. The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy. Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South. The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'. The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15. Society after the Revolt. Rural Society. The Nobility. The Regents. The Merchant Elite. The Elite of the Skilled. Wages. Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16. Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization. The Confessional Arena. The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church. The Rejection of Toleration. The Catholic Revival. Confessionalization and the State. Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17. The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce. The Pressure to Negotiate. The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce. 'South' confronts 'North' -- 18. Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19. The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20. The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621. Domestic Politics. The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619. Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War. The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21. The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628. Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625. The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate. Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22. The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647. Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632. The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633. Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640. The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23. Art and Architecture, 1590-1648. The Proliferation of Art. Architecture and the Building Boom. Specialization in Painting. The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24. Intellectual Life, 1572-1650. The Forming of a New Culture. Universities and Civic High Schools. Dutch Late Humanism. The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View. Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25. The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26. Society. The Economy. Population. Work and Migration. The Huguenot Influx. Wages and Living Standards. Rural Society -- 27. Confessionalization, 1647-1702. The Rise of Toleration. William III and the Churches. Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism. The Waning of the Lesser Churches. Church Politics in the Generality Lands. The Unity of the Public Church. Internal Confessionalization. The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28. Freedom and Order. A Disciplined Society. Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture. The Further Reformation and Society -- 29. The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s. The Making of the 'True Freedom'. The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654). De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30. The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672. 'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659. Party and Faction in the Early 1660s. Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s. The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667. The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV. The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31. 1672: Year of Disaster -- 32. The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702. From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678. From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685. The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691. The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33. Art and Architecture, 1645-1702. Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts. Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672. Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34. Intellectual Life, 1650-1700. Intellectual Crisis. The Universities. Science. The Anti-Socinian Campaign. Radical Cartesians and Spinozists. The Death of the Devil. The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35. The Colonial Empire. The Territories. Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies. Power, Politics, and Patronage. Religion and Discipline -- 36. The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747. The New Regime. The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713. The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713. Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37. Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute. Urban Decay. Wealth and Poverty -- 38. The Churches. Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews. The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39. The Enlightenment. The Dutch Impact. The 'Radical' Enlightenment. The Decline of the Universities. The Decline of the Visual Arts. The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands. The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire. The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40. The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41. The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'. Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766. New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands. The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42. The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43. The Fall of the Republic. The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795. The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'. The End of the United Provinces -- 44. Denouement. The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Abolished by Napoleon. HISTORY General. bisacsh Machtpolitik gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4168427-8 Politik gnd Politisches System gnd Unabhängigkeitskrieg gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4186823-7 Wirtschaft gnd Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden. gtt Regions & Countries - Europe. hilcc History & Archaeology. hilcc Netherlands, Belgium & Luxembourg. hilcc |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090999 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091001 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091006 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85091009 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090996 http://d-nb.info/gnd/4168427-8 http://d-nb.info/gnd/4186823-7 |
title | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / |
title_alt | Introduction -- 2. On the Threshold of the Modern Era. The Rise of Holland. Under the Burgundians. The Early Habsburg Netherlands. The Institutions of the Habsburg Netherlands -- 3. Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520 -- 4. Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559 -- 5. The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565. The Netherlands Church on the Eve of the Reformation. The Impact of Luther. Fragmentation. Spiritualism and the Impact of Persecution. The Rise of Calvinism -- 6. Society before the Revolt. The Land, Rural Society, and Agriculture. Urbanization. The Urban Economy. Institutions of Civic Life: Guilds, Militias, Chambers of Rhetoric. Poverty and Civic Welfare. The Regents -- 7. The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566. The Seeds of Revolt. Crisis, 1559-1566 -- 8. Repression under Alva, 1567-1572 -- 9. The Revolt Begins -- 10. The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State. The Revolt Survives, 1573-1575. From the Pacification of Ghent (1576) to the Union of Utrecht (1579). The Two Netherlands. The Habsburg Reconquest of the South, 1579-1585. The North Netherlands under Leicester, 1585-1587 -- 11. Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590 -- 12. The Republic Becomes a Great Power, 1590-1609. Territorial Expansion. The Fixed Garrison System. The Dutch Military Reforms and their European Significance. The Dutch in Europe: Skills, Technology, and Engineering -- 13. The Institutions of the Republic. The Provinces. Taxation and the Tax System. The Generality. The Generality Lands. The Stadholderate -- 14. The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy. Revolt, Commerce, and Migration from the South. The Changing Balance between 'Bulk-Carrying' and the 'Rich Trades'. The Beginnings of the Dutch Colonial Empire -- 15. Society after the Revolt. Rural Society. The Nobility. The Regents. The Merchant Elite. The Elite of the Skilled. Wages. Civic Poor Relief and Charitable Institutions -- 16. Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization. The Confessional Arena. The Organization of the Dutch Reformed Church. The Rejection of Toleration. The Catholic Revival. Confessionalization and the State. Anabaptism and the Confessionalization Process -- 17. The Separation of Identities: The Twelve Years Truce. The Pressure to Negotiate. The Political and Economic Consequences of the Truce. 'South' confronts 'North' -- 18. Crisis within the Dutch Body Politic, 1607-1616 -- 19. The Fall of the Oldenbarnevelt Regime, 1616-1618 -- 20. The Calvinist Revolution of the Counter-Remonstrants, 1618-1621. Domestic Politics. The Synod of Dordrecht (Dordt), 1618-1619. Maurits, the Counter-Remonstrants, and the Commencement of the Thirty Years War. The Beginnings of the Further Reformation -- 21. The Republic under Siege, 1621-1628. Maurits's last Years, 1621-1625. The Commencement of Frederik Hendrik's Stadholderate. Politics, Ideology, and the Great Dutch Toleration Debate of the late 1620s -- 22. The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647. Frederik Hendrik Victorious and the Regents Divided, 1629-1632. The Negotiations between North and South of 1632-1633. Frederik Hendrik and the Regent Party-Factions, 1633-1640. The Contest for the Leadership of the Republic, 1640-1647 -- 23. Art and Architecture, 1590-1648. The Proliferation of Art. Architecture and the Building Boom. Specialization in Painting. The Second Phase in Golden Age Art, 1621-c.1645 -- 24. Intellectual Life, 1572-1650. The Forming of a New Culture. Universities and Civic High Schools. Dutch Late Humanism. The Rise of the Mechanistic World-View. Boreelism and the 'Third Force' -- 25. The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650 -- 26. Society. The Economy. Population. Work and Migration. The Huguenot Influx. Wages and Living Standards. Rural Society -- 27. Confessionalization, 1647-1702. The Rise of Toleration. William III and the Churches. Jansenism and Anti-Jansenism. The Waning of the Lesser Churches. Church Politics in the Generality Lands. The Unity of the Public Church. Internal Confessionalization. The Later Stages of the Toleration Debate -- 28. Freedom and Order. A Disciplined Society. Schools, Literacy, and the Reshaping of Popular Culture. The Further Reformation and Society -- 29. The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s. The Making of the 'True Freedom'. The First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654) and the Exclusion Crisis (1654). De Witt's System during the Later 1650s -- 30. The Republic at its Zenith, II: 1659-1672. 'South' and 'North' after the Peace of the Pyrenees, 1659. Party and Faction in the Early 1660s. Ideological Conflict in the Early 1660s. The Second Anglo-Dutch War, 1664-1667. The Republic in Conflict with Louis XIV. The Twilight of the 'True Freedom' -- 31. 1672: Year of Disaster -- 32. The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702. From the 'Year of Disaster' to the Peace of Nijmegen, 1672-1678. From Nijmegen to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1678-1685. The Republic and the Glorious Revolution, 1685-1691. The Last Years of William III's Stadholderate -- 33. Art and Architecture, 1645-1702. Urban Expansion, Town Planning, and the Arts. Phase Three: The Zenith in Painting, c.1645-1672. Art after the Crash of 1672 -- 34. Intellectual Life, 1650-1700. Intellectual Crisis. The Universities. Science. The Anti-Socinian Campaign. Radical Cartesians and Spinozists. The Death of the Devil. The Two Dutch Enlightenments -- 35. The Colonial Empire. The Territories. Commerce, Shipping, and Seamen in the Indies. Power, Politics, and Patronage. Religion and Discipline -- 36. The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747. The New Regime. The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713. The Austrian Netherlands and the North after 1713. Neutrality and Domestic Stability, 1713-1746 -- 37. Economic Decline -- Relative and Absolute. Urban Decay. Wealth and Poverty -- 38. The Churches. Dutch Reformed, Protestant Dissenters, Catholics, and Jews. The Loosening of Internal Confessional Barriers -- 39. The Enlightenment. The Dutch Impact. The 'Radical' Enlightenment. The Decline of the Universities. The Decline of the Visual Arts. The Enlightenment in the Austrian Netherlands. The Enlightenment in the Colonial Empire. The Later Dutch Enlightenment -- 40. The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751 -- 41. The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the 'South'. Politics during the Minority of William V, 1751-1766. New Directions in the Austrian Netherlands. The Early Years of William V's Stadholderate, 1766-1780 -- 42. The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787 -- 43. The Fall of the Republic. The Orangist Counter-Revolution, 1787-1795. The Conservative Revolution in the 'South' and the New 'Netherlands Republic'. The End of the United Provinces -- 44. Denouement. The Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Abolished by Napoleon. |
title_auth | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / |
title_exact_search | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / |
title_full | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / Jonathan Israel. |
title_fullStr | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / Jonathan Israel. |
title_full_unstemmed | The Dutch Republic : its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / Jonathan Israel. |
title_short | The Dutch Republic : |
title_sort | dutch republic its rise greatness and fall 1477 1806 |
title_sub | its rise, greatness and fall, 1477-1806 / |
topic | HISTORY General. bisacsh Machtpolitik gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4168427-8 Politik gnd Politisches System gnd Unabhängigkeitskrieg gnd http://d-nb.info/gnd/4186823-7 Wirtschaft gnd Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden. gtt Regions & Countries - Europe. hilcc History & Archaeology. hilcc Netherlands, Belgium & Luxembourg. hilcc |
topic_facet | Netherlands History House of Habsburg, 1477-1556. Netherlands History Eighty Years' War, 1568-1648. Netherlands History 1648-1795. Netherlands History Batavian Republic, 1795-1806. Netherlands History. Pays-Bas Histoire. Pays-Bas Histoire 1477-1556 (Maison de Habsbourg) Pays-Bas Histoire 1568-1648 (Guerre de Quatre-Vingts Ans) Pays-Bas Histoire 1648-1795. Pays-Bas Histoire 1795-1806 (République batave) HISTORY General. Netherlands Niederlande Machtpolitik Politik Politisches System Unabhängigkeitskrieg Wirtschaft Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden. Regions & Countries - Europe. History & Archaeology. Netherlands, Belgium & Luxembourg. Pays-Bas 1795-1806 (République batave) Pays-Bas Civilisation. Pays-Bas 17e siècle. Pays-Bas 18e siècle. HOLANDA HISTORIA CASA DE HABSBURG, 1477-1556. HOLANDA HISTORIA GUERRAS DE LA INDEPENDENCIA, 1556-1648. HOLANDA HISTORIA 1648-1795. HOLANDA HISTORIA REPUBLICA BATAVIA, 1795-1806. History |
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