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- Volume 127, Issue 4, 2014
Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis - Volume 127, Issue 4, 2014
Volume 127, Issue 4, 2014
Language:
English
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oa Nieuwe diplomatieke geschiedenis van de premoderne tijd
Authors: Maurits Ebben & Louis SickingAbstract New Diplomatic History in the Premodern Age. An Introduction The study of medieval and early modern diplomacy has long been considered one of the most conservative subdisciplines in the field of history. During the last three decades, however, diplomatic history has undergone profound changes. This introductory article shows how these changes were triggered by developments in other disciplines a Read More
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oa Heren die parlementeren
More LessAbstract A passion for palaver. Brabantine diplomatic activity, c. 1400 Long before the Italian Renaissance laid the foundations of the modern diplomatic system, states maintained well-structured diplomatic relations. This article describes how these worked in practice between medium-sized territorial principalities. Its basis is the diplomatic paper trail left by two political issues c.1400 that caused much ado in the Low Co Read More
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oa Personen, grenzen en politieke eenheden in de veertiende eeuw
More LessAbstract Personal agency, borders and political units in the fourteenth century. The duchy of Guelders and the history of international relations Theories that offer a historicized account of international relations often consider the late middle ages as a period of fundamental change. Territorial political units, geographically defined borders, and distinctions between internal and external gradually developed and becam Read More
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oa Kopieergedrag
More LessAbstract Copy that. The forms and functions of copies in the late medieval letter exchange of Hanseatic towns This article argues that copies distributed as part of the political communication in northern Europe were more than a substitute for the originals or simply an efficient way of spreading information. The case of the Hanseatic towns shows that copies could be refined instruments of diplomacy: they could be a w Read More
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oa Als God op Aarde
More LessAbstract The diplomatic battle over precedence between France and Spain by way of arguments, 1564-1610 Conflicts over precedence were a disruptive but integral part of European diplomacy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This article will explain both the insolubility and the importance of such conflicts, by analyzing the actual arguments made by French and Spanish publicists between 1564 and 1610 who ar Read More
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oa Uwer Hoog Moogenden Onderdaenigsten Dienaers
More LessAbstract Consuls and Dutch Diplomacy in Spain, 1648-1661 This article investigates the position of the consuls in the diplomatic network of the Dutch Republic as defenders of the interests of Dutch merchants and as quasi-public officials. Although consuls did not enjoy diplomatic status, Dutch consular practice in Spain between the Peace of Munster (1648) and 1661 shows that they were more than suppliers of economic Read More
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oa Publieke opinie, buitenlandse politiek en het einde van de Spaanse Successieoorlog
By Donald HaksAbstract Public opinion, foreign policy, and the end of the War of the Spanish Succession Did public opinion have an impact on foreign policy in early modern times? States put in much effort publicly to legitimize their foreign policy. But they did not always prevent open discussion. England during the War of the Spanish Succession is a case in point. The revolution of 1688-9, the growing influence of parliament on foreign policy, op Read More
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