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Netherlands

Nick Pelling suggests that credit should go not to the Netherlands but much further south to Catalonia.

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Rowena Hammal explains why the United Provinces enjoyed a ‘Golden Age’ in the first half of the Seventeenth Century.

Nick Pelling suggests that credit should go not to the Netherlands but much further south to Catalonia.

Geoffrey Parker considers the far-reaching consequences of a sudden change of plan by the king of Spain in 1567.

Graham Darby explains how and why the creation of the Dutch state preceded the existence of Dutch national feeling.

Paul Doolan describes the unique 400-year-long trading, intellectual and artistic contacts between the Dutch and the Japanese.

Stewart MacDonald introduces the humanist scholar whose writings made him one of the most significant figures of 16th-century Europe.  

Jan Herman Brinks examines the Dutch myth of resistance and finds collaboration with the Nazis went right to the top.

Mack Holt argues that the early-modern obsession with tradition was sometimes a deliberate smokescreen for innovation.

Richard Pflederer on the technological and cartographical advances of the early modern naval powers of Holland and England

Charles Boxer examines the impact of 1688 on Anglo-Dutch relationship with nations east of Suez.

Charles Wilson sets the scene for a special issue celebrating the tercentenary of the Glorious Revolution and England's 'Dutch Connection'.


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