The Dutch Republic is often presented as having relative freedom of press already in the seventeenth century. However, it has been argued that censorship increased during the eighteenth century because of more efficient co-ordination between authorities. This paper examines this claim by examining trials and bills in the provincial court of Holland (Hof van Holland). This court handled cases of appeal from urban courts and tried censorship cases from The Hague ‐ the political centre of the Dutch Republic. It could also propose litigation regarding censorship. Censorship convictions in this court were nevertheless rare between 1750 and 1800. The court did go at lengths to propose novel censorship laws, only to find that enactment of those la...
Between 1815 and 1830 Northern and Southern members of the States General clashed over how to behave...
In the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) Europeans witnessed a considerable number of dev...
\'Whosoever tears off this poster will be treated to a bullet\'. Pamphlets, petitions and public pol...
The Dutch Republic is often presented as having relative freedom of press already in the seventeenth...
SOEN Violet (ed.), VANYSACKER Dries (ed.), FRANÇOIS Wim (ed.) Church, censorship and reform in the e...
State Communication and Public Politics in the Dutch Golden Age describes the political communicatio...
The Assembly of the States-General in the Dutch Republic before 1795 and the information that it rel...
This doctoral research explores the juridical boundaries of the freedomof the press in 19th-century ...
This study seeks to describe the public communication practices of the authorities in the Dutch Gold...
Printed pamphlets were the new media of the seventeenth century, comparable with the current interne...
Straight or crooked: Corruption, inequality and civil rights in the early modern Netherlands With th...
In The Netherlands the last decades of the 18th century were characterised by grave social and polit...
Following the Brabant Revolution and the declaration of independence of the Southern Netherlands, Vi...
Following the Brabant Revolution and the declaration of independence of the Southern Netherlands, Vi...
From the second half of the eighteenth century onwards, the inhabitants of the northern provinces of...
Between 1815 and 1830 Northern and Southern members of the States General clashed over how to behave...
In the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) Europeans witnessed a considerable number of dev...
\'Whosoever tears off this poster will be treated to a bullet\'. Pamphlets, petitions and public pol...
The Dutch Republic is often presented as having relative freedom of press already in the seventeenth...
SOEN Violet (ed.), VANYSACKER Dries (ed.), FRANÇOIS Wim (ed.) Church, censorship and reform in the e...
State Communication and Public Politics in the Dutch Golden Age describes the political communicatio...
The Assembly of the States-General in the Dutch Republic before 1795 and the information that it rel...
This doctoral research explores the juridical boundaries of the freedomof the press in 19th-century ...
This study seeks to describe the public communication practices of the authorities in the Dutch Gold...
Printed pamphlets were the new media of the seventeenth century, comparable with the current interne...
Straight or crooked: Corruption, inequality and civil rights in the early modern Netherlands With th...
In The Netherlands the last decades of the 18th century were characterised by grave social and polit...
Following the Brabant Revolution and the declaration of independence of the Southern Netherlands, Vi...
Following the Brabant Revolution and the declaration of independence of the Southern Netherlands, Vi...
From the second half of the eighteenth century onwards, the inhabitants of the northern provinces of...
Between 1815 and 1830 Northern and Southern members of the States General clashed over how to behave...
In the century after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) Europeans witnessed a considerable number of dev...
\'Whosoever tears off this poster will be treated to a bullet\'. Pamphlets, petitions and public pol...