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Public Opinion and Changing Identities in the Early Modern Netherlands

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Was there such a thing as 'public opinion' before the age of newspapers and party politics? The essays in this collection show that in the Low Countries, at least, there certainly was. In this high...
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  • 01 December 2006
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Was there such a thing as 'public opinion' before the age of newspapers and party politics? The essays in this collection show that in the Low Countries, at least, there certainly was. In this highly urbanised society, with high literacy rates and good connections, news and public debate could spread fast in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, enabling the growth of powerful opposition movements against the Crown, the creation of the Dutch Republic, and of the distinctive Netherlandish culture of the Golden Age.

Contributors include: Hugh Dunthorne, Raingard Esser, Jonathan Israel, Gustaaf Janssens, Henk van Nierop, Guido Marnef, M.E.H. Nicolette Mout, Andrew Pettegree, Judith Pollmann, Paul Regan*, Andrew Sawyer*, Jo Spaans, Andrew Spicer*, and Juliaan Woltjer. (* Supervised by Alastair Duke)
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Price: $179.00
Pages: 310
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions
Publication Date: 01 December 2006
ISBN: 9789004155275
Format: Hardcover
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"Excellent collection". Charles H. Parker, Saint Louis University. In: Sixteenth Century Journal, Vol. 39, no. 3 (Fall 2008), pp. 785-786.
Judith Pollmann is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern Dutch History at the University of Leiden. She is the author of Religious Choice in the Dutch Republic. The Reformation of Arnoldus Buchelius (1565–1641) (1999) and of numerous articles on the religious history of the early modern Netherlands. She is currently working on a book on Catholic identity and religious change in the Habsburg Netherlands, 1520–1635.
Andrew Spicer is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern European History at Oxford Brookes University. His The French-speaking Reformed Community and their Church in Southampton, 1567–c. 1620 (1997) was based on his University of Southampton doctoral thesis. He has co-edited Society and Culture in the Huguenot World (2002), Sacred Space in Early Modern Europe (2005), Defining the Holy. Sacred Space in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (2006), and is currently completing The Calvinist Church in Early Modern Europe.