BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review (Jan 2010)

The Dutch Republic as a Bourgeois Society

  • Maarten Prak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18352/bmgn-lchr.7117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 125, no. 2-3
pp. 107 – 139

Abstract

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Historians have often portrayed the Dutch Republic as the first ‘bourgeois’ society. What they had in mind was an early example of a society dominated by the sort of middle class that emerged in most other European countries after the French and Industrial Revolutions. In this article, ‘bourgeois’ is perceived in a slightly different way. By looking at the ‘bourgeois’ as ‘citizens’ – often, but not necessarily, middle class in a social sense – the article paints a picture of a plethora of blossoming urban civic institutions. Such civic institutions also existed in other European countries. What set the Dutch Republic apart, however, and indeed made it an early example of a ‘bourgeois’ society, was the dominance of these civic institutions in the Republic’s socio-political life. This article is part of the special issue 'The International Relevance of Dutch History'.

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