Covering defeat or disaster in print required considerable journalistic finesse in the Southern Netherlandish news market, since the primary role of privileged courantiers in the Habsburg empire was to provide accounts of royal successes. This article investigates the ways in which the Antwerp printer-publisher Abraham Verhoeven and Brussels newsman Pierre Hugonet covered two main Atlantic events with a negative outcome for the Habsburg monarchy: the Dutch invasion of Brazil in 1624 and the English capture of Jamaica in 1655 respectively. By comparing these major Atlantic news stories, this article will deepen our understanding of how these gazetteers, who differed in professional background and operated decades apart, dealt with defeat suf...
Historians of the French Wars of Religion and the Dutch Revolt have long observed the interconnected...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
This article expands on the themes of choice and diversity within a national, competitive news marke...
Covering defeat or disaster in print required considerable journalistic finesse in the Southern Neth...
The Dutch conquest of Salvador de Bahia in Brazil in May 1624 constituted the first major defeat for...
This article compares the content and quality of mid-eighteenth-century news accounts about the 1748...
This article investigates the interaction between society, government and news media during the 1730...
The article presents the emergence of the three major French-language gazettes published in the Dutc...
Printed pamphlets were the new media of the seventeenth century, comparable with the current interne...
This article explores the often dire financial situations of early modern newspaper publishers in th...
This article examines late seventeenth-century news management through the lens of the Haarlem journ...
The South African War (1899-1902) caused a stir in the Netherlands. The Dutch public overwhelmingly ...
The foundations of change. Integration and diversification in the Antwerp book trade during the seco...
In the article the author deals with the question why was it possible for William III of Orange to i...
Historians of the French Wars of Religion and the Dutch Revolt have long observed the interconnected...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
This article expands on the themes of choice and diversity within a national, competitive news marke...
Covering defeat or disaster in print required considerable journalistic finesse in the Southern Neth...
The Dutch conquest of Salvador de Bahia in Brazil in May 1624 constituted the first major defeat for...
This article compares the content and quality of mid-eighteenth-century news accounts about the 1748...
This article investigates the interaction between society, government and news media during the 1730...
The article presents the emergence of the three major French-language gazettes published in the Dutc...
Printed pamphlets were the new media of the seventeenth century, comparable with the current interne...
This article explores the often dire financial situations of early modern newspaper publishers in th...
This article examines late seventeenth-century news management through the lens of the Haarlem journ...
The South African War (1899-1902) caused a stir in the Netherlands. The Dutch public overwhelmingly ...
The foundations of change. Integration and diversification in the Antwerp book trade during the seco...
In the article the author deals with the question why was it possible for William III of Orange to i...
Historians of the French Wars of Religion and the Dutch Revolt have long observed the interconnected...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
This article expands on the themes of choice and diversity within a national, competitive news marke...