2005
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9780511817311
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The Dutch Republic in the Seventeenth Century

Abstract: War without EndFormal unification did not come about until 26 June 1548, when the Diet of the Holy Roman Empire, assembled in the German city of Augsburg, decided at the emperor's behest to bring together the patchwork of Netherlandish provinces under one separate Kreits, a self-governing entity of states within the empire. The formation of the Low Countries was confirmed the following year, when all seventeen provinces endorsed Charles V's Pragmatic Sanction, which stipulated that Charles's successors were to… Show more

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Cited by 120 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…As the name of the inscribed property suggests (Seventeenth-Century Canal Ring Area of Amsterdam) the area is a result of the 17 th century, the Dutch 'golden age' (Prak, 2005). The OUV is related mostly to remainders of this era.…”
Section: Seventeenth-century Canal Ring Area Inside the Singelgrachtmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As the name of the inscribed property suggests (Seventeenth-Century Canal Ring Area of Amsterdam) the area is a result of the 17 th century, the Dutch 'golden age' (Prak, 2005). The OUV is related mostly to remainders of this era.…”
Section: Seventeenth-century Canal Ring Area Inside the Singelgrachtmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to economic prosperity in the 17th century, Amsterdam had to expand in order to accommodate the large growth of its population. From the start of the first expansion (1585), the city grew from 30.000 to 105.000 inhabitants in less than 40 years, as a result of immigration (Prak, 2005). In the first expansion, the Singel was completed.…”
Section: Seventeenth-century Canal Ring Area Inside the Singelgrachtmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…63 Amsterdam alone provided 228 men, but did they all really come from the metropolis? As early as the sixteenth century, Holland controlled the largest merchant fleet in Europe, with an estimated carrying capacity of 40-50,000 tons.…”
Section: New Knowledge About Professional Seamen and Their Strategic mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Housed in maximum security in the city hall, the bank stored an enormous reserve in bullion and hard money, maintaining the credit of the city and indeed the credit of the republic. The province of Holland provided nearly 60% of the republic’s annual budget, much of which came from taxes levied in Amsterdam; the Exchange Bank was empowered to lend money to the city at low interest rates and helped to make Amsterdam a world money market as well as a safe deposit – so safe that money in the bank was valued at a premium over circulating coins 17 . This bank was separate from the Amsterdam Loans Bank, also an important financial institution; Tulp served as a commissioner on the board of the Loans Bank on a number of occasions and also as a treasurer for the city of Amsterdam 18 .…”
Section: Tulp In the Dutch Republicmentioning
confidence: 99%