
Representative Government in the Dutch Provinces
Author(s) -
Bert Drejer
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
contributions to the history of concepts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.163
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 1807-9326
DOI - 10.3167/choc.2020.150105
Subject(s) - representation (politics) , politics , historiography , government (linguistics) , conceptual history , subject (documents) , the republic , history , sociology , epistemology , political science , social science , law , philosophy , linguistics , library science , computer science
This article reconsiders the way political representation was understood in the early modern Netherlands by focusing on the contemporary contribution of Simon van Slingelandt. His views of the representative nature of the government of the Dutch Republic were deeply polemical when he developed them, but went on to have a profound influence on the later literature and are notably sustained in modern histories of the subject. The best way to nuance the view of political representation our historiography has inherited from Van Slingelandt is by returning to the earlier views he set out to discredit. By examining both views, I thus hope to shed some new light on the representative nature of early modern Dutch government.