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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $87.95

Format:
Paperback
1262 pp.
32 halftones, 5 maps, tables, 156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198207344

Publication date:
June 1998

Imprint: OUP UK


The Dutch Republic

Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall 1477-1806

Jonathan Israel

Series : Oxford History of Early Modern Europe

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. Jonathan Israel gives the definitive account of the emergence of the United Provinces as a great power, and explains the 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.

Readership : Scholars and students of early modern European history; students of cultural studies, art, and literature for that period, especially those interested in the Dutch Golden Age.

Reviews

  • `Israel traces a complex political story in clear, relatively engaging fashion.'
    Brien Bartels, History, March 2000.
  • From reviews from the cloth edition:
    `This is a magnificent doorstop of a book ... As an account of what made possible one of the most dazzling "Golden Ages" in European history it is unlikely to be bettered.'
    Sunday Telegraph
  • `Israel's book is an extraordinary achievement ... a splendid summation of knowledge and a powerful work of historical analysis. It takes its place as the most authoritative treatment we have of a society which, in all its precarious complexity, did more than any other to bring modernity to Europe.'
    The Times
  • `Israel has produced a classic essentially organised on a narrative basis ... the first in a new Oxford History of Early Modern Europe ... Few series could have started on such a promising note. Aside from the scholarship and fluency, the price is right ... Any scholar would be delighted to write a book of such learning, vigour and confidence. Very few indeed have done so, and no other has matched Israel on his topic.'
    Times Higher Educational Supplement
  • `Israel, a first-rate scholar, has produced the definitive work on the Low Countries for this spectacular but complex period of history...an integrative study that draws on the best scholarship and explains the interconnectedness in a clear and lucid fashion. It will be appreciated by the scholar and understood by the general reader...a major contribution to the field and a superb production; the bibliography, plates, and maps alone are worth the price. It should be in every library.'
    Choice
  • `Not only is there a wealth of solid information on international rlations, a field in which the author is an expert, but he also takes pains to elucidate the wider European significance of purely Dutch phenomena...a book of immense learning. It is delightful to see how skilfully he arranges the evidence so as to lure the reader into sharing his view of a particular case. He argues, he debates, and then he stuns the reader with a sweeping statement...since he writes for a general public, his revisionism never turns into polemicism...an immensely stimulating book, a thoughtful synthesis that is scholarly, intelligently argued and elegantly written. It is indispensable for anyone interested in the the history of the Netherlands or of early modern Europe in general, a master-work bound to set the standard for future generations of historians...an astonishing work. The reader is dazzled by its sheer magnitude and its exceptionally wide scope.'
    The Low Countries
  • `The Dutch Republic is history conceived on a sufficiently grand scale to match the significance of the subject. The sheer breadth of Israel's erudition is little short of astonishing and he tackles all aspects of Dutch history...the range of the work is admirably inclusive, and it is hard to point to any significant omissions or to an inadequate treatment of any important topic. There can be no doubt that The Dutch Republic is a landmark in the English-language contribution to the study of Dutch history. It will be an essential work of reference for many years to come. The writing is clear and lively, and the illustrations are well chosen and provided with useful explanatory notes. The publisher is to be congratulated on providing readers with such a large and well-produced work at so reasonable a price.'
    Times Literary Supplement
  • `For the new Oxford History of Early Modern Europe to be launched with a study of the Dutch Republic is both appropriate and auspicious. ...it would be hard to think of a British scholar better qualified to write a wide-ranging account of the early modern Low Countries - and to set a standard for the series as a whole - than Jonathan Israel. ... he has a remarkably wide knowledge of both the archival and the printed sources of Netherlands history; and he brings to his task an energy, conviction and directness of manner that holds the attention, is constantly informative and frequently prompts the reader to reconsider accepted views.'
    English Historical Review

Preface
Lists of maps, tables, and abbreviations
Part 1: The Making of the Republic, 1477-1588
1. Introduction
2. On the Threshold of a Modern era
3. Humanism and the Origins of the Reformation, 1470-1520
4. Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559
5. The Early Dutch Reformation, 1519-1565
6. Society Before the Revolt
7. The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566
8. Repression Under Alva, 1567-1572
9. The Revolt Begins
10. The Revolt and the Emergence of a New State
Part 2: The Early Golden Age, 1588-1647
11. Consolidation of the Republic, 1588-1590
12. The Republic becomes a Great Power
13. The Institutions of the Republic
14. The Commencement of Dutch World Trade Primacy
15. Society after the Revolt
16. Protestantization, Catholicization, Confessionalization
17. The Separation of Identities: the Twelve Years Truce
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
21. The Republic Under Siege, 1621-1628
22. The Republic in Triumph, 1629-1647
23. Art and Architecture, 1509-1648
24. Intellectual Life, 1572-1650
Part III: The Later Golden Age, 1647-1702
25. The Stadholderate of William II, 1647-1650
26. Society
27. Confessionalization, 1647-1702
28. Freedom and Order
29. The Republic at its Zenith I: the 1650s
30. The Republic at its Zenith II:1659-1672
31. 1672: Year of Disaster
32. The Stadholderate of William III, 1672-1702
33. Art and Architecture, 1645-1702
34. Intellectual Life, 1650-1700
35. The Colonial Empire
Part IV: The Age of Decline, 1702-1806
36. The Republic of the Regents, 1702-1747
37. Society
38. The Churches
39. The Enlightenment
40. The Second Orangist Revolution, 1747-1751
41. The Faltering Republic and the New Dynamism in the `South'
42. The Patriot Revolution, 1780-1787
43. The Fall of the Republic
44. Denouement
Bibliography
Index

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Jonathan Israel is Professor of Dutch History and Institutions at the University of London. He is the author of many well-respected books in European and particularly Dutch history.

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Special Features

  • `Israel's book is an extraordinary achievement' (The Times)