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» The Dutch Gentry, 1500-1650
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MS Word
The Dutch Gentry, 1500-1650
Family, Faith, and Fortune
(Click to Enlarge)
By Sherrin D. Marshall
ISBN:
0-313-25021-9
ISBN-13:
978-0-313-25021-7
DOI:
DOI:10.1336/0313250219
252 pages, bibliog.
Greenwood Press
Publication:
4/15/1987
List Price:
$91.95
(
UK Sterling Price: £51.95
)
Availability:
Media Type:
Hardcover
Series Title:
Contributions in Family Studies
Series Number:
11
Reviews:
This detailed study of Dutch gentry families affords many historical insights and challenges and current assumptions about the nature of family life during the early modern period. Marshall offers an in-depth portrait of the Dutch gentry, their family organization and relationships, and the role of lineage, religion, law, custom, economics, and politics in their daily lives.
—Journal of the California Graduate School of Family Psychology
Marshall studies the Dutch gentry in Utrecht province over three generations, utilizing a wide variety of archival and genealogical sources. The author writes that reciprocal relationships were the critical elements within the gentry family. Members of the core family possessed certain rights in relation to each other. Affectional feelings between husbands and wives, and parents and children, were quite real. Children were perceived as being children, not as some type of adult, and family members could often choose whom they married. The gentry exhibited an intense devotion to their lineage, and treated the ancestral holdings as a sacred trust to be improved and then passed on to the next generation. Marshall also studies the gentry's strong religious beliefs, economic affairs, and role in the Dutch Revolt. The author concludes that although the revolt brought substantial change to certain families, the gentry's basic concepts survived the uprising and influenced the Dutch Republic's government. Overall, Marshall's excellent study sees Dutch society during this period as being structurally closer to modern Europe than those in other countries. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
—Choice
Family studies in early modern history have become a battlefield littered with conflicting interpretations of hierarchy, patriarchy, amount of individualism, nature of marriage, origins of childhood, and so on. Now Sherrin Marshall brings to the field the Dutch, a society often portrayed as bourgeois and dominated by restraint and propriety. Marshall examines the families of the gentry--the lesser nobility--in the `bourgeois republic' and offers a new interpretation of the Revolt of the Netherlands.... The family material reads easily and is wonderfully devoid of jargon.... The text, which is more descriptive than analytical, supplies a variety of evidence that does not refute previous views of the family but rather surmounts them, often producing a middle ground in the historiographical debates. By avoiding pamphlets, sermons, and the like, which often theorize about families, and relying instead on documents such as wills, court testimony, and letters--sources in which people do not talk much about ideologies--Marshall produces few generalizations and much nuance. She concludes that the gentry sought and obtained reciprocity in their family affairs and expected it elsewhere--in religion and politics especially.
—Journal of Marriage and the Family
Description:
This detailed study of Dutch gentry families affords many valuable historical insights and challenges current assumptions about the nature of family life during the early modern period. Marshall offers an in-depth portrait of the Dutch gentry, their family organization and relationships, and the role of lineage, religion, law, and custom, economics, and politics in their daily lives.
Table of Contents:
Figures
Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Core Family Unit and the Lineage: Identity, Relations, and Realities
"Dutiful Love and Natural Affection": Parent-Child Relationships in the Early Modern Netherlands
Marriage and Marital Strategies in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Gentry Families
Survivors and Status: Widows and Widowers in Gentry Families
"One, no Other": The Place of Religion in the Mentality of Early Modern Dutch Gentry Families
Land, Luck, and Lifestyle: Gentry Families and Fiscal Realities
Change and Continuity During a Time of Crisis: The Gentry Families and the Revolt of the Netherlands
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
LC Card Number:
86-7647
LCC Class:
DJ152
Dewey Class:
305.5
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