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The Revolutionary Character of the Revolt of the Netherlands1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Gordon Griffiths
Affiliation:
University of Washington

Extract

American and British writers have reinterpreted the English, American, French and Russian revolutions, but, since Motley,2 have had little new to say about the Revolt of the Netherlands. My hypothesis is that the Revolt of the Netherlands was indeed a revolution comparable to and deserving a place of priority in the list of great revolutions which have ushered in modern times.

Motley liked to compare the Revolt of the Netherlands with the American Revolution, but what appealed to him in both movements was that they were as he saw them really not very revolutionary. The claims of traditional states' rights were asserted against the innovations of a centralizing monarchy. Neither the Dutch nor the American movement was carried away by a Jacobin zeal for unity. Both were directed against a government which was distant and foreign: the struggle against foreign domination therefore filled the center of the picture of both rebellions, and obscured domestic changes which may have been drastic enough to deserve the term “revolutionary.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1960

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References

2 Motley, John Lothrop, The Rise of the Dutch Republic (New York, 1855), 3 VolsGoogle Scholar.

3 New York, Prentice-Hall, 1938; rev. ed. 1952.

4 For the “medieval” thesis, see Huizinga, J., Nederlandse Beschaving in de Zeventiende Eeuw (Haarlem, H. D. Tjeenk Willink & Zoon, 1941), Chapter I.Google Scholar

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13 “The changes of magistracy … had left the system unchanged; only persons had been changed.” Pieter Geyl, op. cit., p. 241.

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16 Algemene Geschiedenis der Nederlanden (UtrechtDe Haan, Vol. V, 1952; Vol. VI, 1953)Google Scholar.

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34 Enno van Gelder's interpretation, exactly the opposite, as he points out, of the view put forward by Pirenne and Geyl, according to whom an originally national struggle had been distorted into a religious partizan struggle. “De oorzaken…,” p. 156.

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37 Ibid., pp. 519, 524, 528, 531.

38 Ibid., p. 526

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42 Waerachtich Verhael vanden Oproerigen beleyde dWelck Broeder Anthonis Ruyskensvelt Predikere met zijnen aenhanck hebben aengericht binnen der Stadt van Brussel. En tgene des daer uuyt gevolght is. Te wetene. Int uuytsegen van diverssche persoonen, Aftsstellen der beelden, Ende d’Ophouden vander exercitie der Roomscher kerckendienst, (Brussels, Jan van Brecht, 1581), p. 54.

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44 de Potter, Jan, Dagboek, (ed. de St. Genois, J., Ghent, 1861), p. 104Google Scholar.

45 See table of Magistrates of Brussels.

46 See table of Deputies of Brussels.

47 Griffiths, G., William of Hornes, Lord of Hèze and the Revolt of the Netherlands, 1576–1580 (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1954), pp. 13, 27Google Scholar.

48 See table of Magistrates of Malines in Democratic Ideas in the Revolt of the Netherlands”, Archiv fuer Reformationsgeschichte, Jahrgang 50, no. 1 (1959), p. 55Google Scholar.

49 See lists of deputies in N. Japikse, Resolutiën der Staten-Generaal.

page 472 note * Gaps in representation are due to the fact that only names actually recorded in documents have been listed.

page 472 note 1 The historian, who lost his position when the Eighteen were abolished January 26, 1579. Henne, and Wauters, , Histoire de la Ville de Bruxelles I, 499Google Scholar.

page 472 note 2 But see Resolutiën, p. 313, n. 9, where Gu. v. d. Haghen is referred to as “former pensionary,” and p. 311, n. 3.

page 472 note 3 Supplementary to list for 1582, for Antwerp meeting.