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Full Description
State Communication and Public Politics in the Dutch Golden Age describes the political communication practices of the authorities in the early modern Netherlands. Der Weduwen provides an in-depth study of early modern state communication: the manner in which government sought to inform its citizens, publicise its laws, and engage publicly in quarrels with political opponents. These communication strategies, including proclamations, the use of town criers, and the printing and affixing of hundreds of thousands of edicts, underpinned the political stability of the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic.
Based on systematic research in thirty-two Dutch archives, this book demonstrates for the first time how the wealthiest, most literate, and most politically participatory state of early modern Europe was shaped by the communication of political information. It makes a decisive case for the importance of communication to the relationship between rulers and ruled, and the extent to which early modern authorities relied on the active consent of their subjects to legitimise their government.
Contents
Preface
List of Figures
List of Tables
Conventions
Abbreviations
1: Selling the Republican Ideal
I. Political Legacies
2: The Politics of Placards
3: From Rebellion to Republic
II. Negotiating the Republic
4: Justifying the Law
5: Crying and Affixing the Law
6: Printing and Selling the Law
III. The Paradox of Print
7: Print and the Ommelander Troubles
8: The Public Struggles of True Freedom
9: Their High Mightinesses turn Newsmongers
IV. From the Disaster Year to the Dutch Armada
10: State Communication and Catastrophe
11: Pamphlet Wars and Declarations
Coda
12: The Prince is Dead, Long Live the Republic
Bibliography
Index



