Violence in the polders There is a staunch Whig tradition in Dutch historiography coupled with a strong inclination to emphasize moderation and tolerance as key features in Dutch history. The explanation for the relatively low level of violence, however, is rather weak or missing altogether. This article presents a case that links the low level of violence to three positive factors: the Netherlands was situated, geopolitically speaking, in the eye of the storm; there were relatively few cases of famine; and, it had no iron and coal basins that could easily be exploited. Violence, therefore, tended to manifest itself in the form of strict social control: specifically developed through the process of keeping tight control of religious differ...
In this review article, Pepijn Brandon discusses Petra Groen (ed.), De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Van ops...
After May 1940 a national soul searching took place in the Netherlands to uncover the reasons for th...
Historians have often portrayed the Dutch Republic as the first ‘bourgeois’ society. What they had i...
Violence in the polders There is a staunch Whig tradition in Dutch historiography coupled with a st...
This article raises an issue of the physical violence on the basis of several texts from the sevente...
The dominant state. The Gent revolt (1449-1453) in nineteenth and twentieth century historiographyIn...
Although the iconoclastic scare must have been enormous and the actual impact of the attacks of summ...
This article compares the Flemish and Dutch revolts in order to distinguish patterns of rebelliousne...
This article develops in-depth the ambivalence between dissent and peacemaking on the Eve of the Rev...
This article attempts to add to our understanding of the relations between the Netherlands and its c...
In this review article, Pepijn Brandon discusses Petra Groen (ed.), De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Van ops...
Although the iconoclastic scare must have been enormous and the actual impact of the attacks of summ...
Since the 1990s, research has been carried out worldwide into the relationship between ‘civil societ...
AbstractIn The Hague, on August 20th, 1672, the Grand Pensionary of Holland, Johan DeWitt and his br...
The religious history of the Netherlands during the last two centuries exhibits some of the same dyn...
In this review article, Pepijn Brandon discusses Petra Groen (ed.), De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Van ops...
After May 1940 a national soul searching took place in the Netherlands to uncover the reasons for th...
Historians have often portrayed the Dutch Republic as the first ‘bourgeois’ society. What they had i...
Violence in the polders There is a staunch Whig tradition in Dutch historiography coupled with a st...
This article raises an issue of the physical violence on the basis of several texts from the sevente...
The dominant state. The Gent revolt (1449-1453) in nineteenth and twentieth century historiographyIn...
Although the iconoclastic scare must have been enormous and the actual impact of the attacks of summ...
This article compares the Flemish and Dutch revolts in order to distinguish patterns of rebelliousne...
This article develops in-depth the ambivalence between dissent and peacemaking on the Eve of the Rev...
This article attempts to add to our understanding of the relations between the Netherlands and its c...
In this review article, Pepijn Brandon discusses Petra Groen (ed.), De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Van ops...
Although the iconoclastic scare must have been enormous and the actual impact of the attacks of summ...
Since the 1990s, research has been carried out worldwide into the relationship between ‘civil societ...
AbstractIn The Hague, on August 20th, 1672, the Grand Pensionary of Holland, Johan DeWitt and his br...
The religious history of the Netherlands during the last two centuries exhibits some of the same dyn...
In this review article, Pepijn Brandon discusses Petra Groen (ed.), De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Van ops...
After May 1940 a national soul searching took place in the Netherlands to uncover the reasons for th...
Historians have often portrayed the Dutch Republic as the first ‘bourgeois’ society. What they had i...