This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. It asks how these visual strategies were shaped by historically specific notions of masculinity and simultaneously helped shape such notions. Concentrating on the first state portrait of William I as King by Joseph Paelinck painted in 1818, it argues that this portrait was part of a ‘staging’ of the Dutch Restoration monarchy. In the absence of ancien régime claims to legitimacy, Restoration monarchies needed to have recourse to theatrical means of legitimisation, but also had to make sure not to provoke associations with the theatrical elements inherent in old regime monarchies. The representation of the King’s bod...
This article provides an overview of some key developments in the historiography of manhood and masc...
In the seventeenth-century Netherlands, drama and politics were interwoven with one another. This wa...
This article examines the place of royal masculinity in the conduct of Henry VIII’s international re...
This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch...
This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch...
Historians of gender often see the construction of hegemonic images of masculinity as the result of ...
Historians of gender often see the construction of hegemonic images of masculinity as the result of ...
This article examines both positive and negative print depictions of King William III, specifically ...
After his ascension to the throne in 1813, William Frederick was quickly accepted as a father-monarc...
With the coronation of King-Stadtholder William of Orange III and Mary II of England in 1689, palace...
The stages of illumination for Walter de Milemete’s De nobilitatibus, sapientiis et prudentiis regum...
This article analyses a conflict between royalist iconography and republican iconoclasm in the visua...
This article explores representations of the manly body and the ways in which its relationship with ...
Gender roles dictated acceptable behavior during the early modem period (1450-1750). Within sixteent...
In 1666, King Charles II felt it necessary to reform Englishmen's dress by introducing a fashion tha...
This article provides an overview of some key developments in the historiography of manhood and masc...
In the seventeenth-century Netherlands, drama and politics were interwoven with one another. This wa...
This article examines the place of royal masculinity in the conduct of Henry VIII’s international re...
This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch...
This article explores visual strategies of legitimisation deployed in the establishment of the Dutch...
Historians of gender often see the construction of hegemonic images of masculinity as the result of ...
Historians of gender often see the construction of hegemonic images of masculinity as the result of ...
This article examines both positive and negative print depictions of King William III, specifically ...
After his ascension to the throne in 1813, William Frederick was quickly accepted as a father-monarc...
With the coronation of King-Stadtholder William of Orange III and Mary II of England in 1689, palace...
The stages of illumination for Walter de Milemete’s De nobilitatibus, sapientiis et prudentiis regum...
This article analyses a conflict between royalist iconography and republican iconoclasm in the visua...
This article explores representations of the manly body and the ways in which its relationship with ...
Gender roles dictated acceptable behavior during the early modem period (1450-1750). Within sixteent...
In 1666, King Charles II felt it necessary to reform Englishmen's dress by introducing a fashion tha...
This article provides an overview of some key developments in the historiography of manhood and masc...
In the seventeenth-century Netherlands, drama and politics were interwoven with one another. This wa...
This article examines the place of royal masculinity in the conduct of Henry VIII’s international re...