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E-raamat: Financing Poor Relief through Charitable Collections in Dutch Towns, c. 1600-1800

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This book examines both the policies of church boards and town councils in organising charitable appeals, as well as the general population's giving behaviour.



In the Dutch Republic, charitable collections were regularly organized by both religious and secular authorities. This book examines the policies of church boards and town councils in organizing these charitable appeals, as well as the general population’s giving behavior. Using archival sources from the towns of Delft, Utrecht, Zwolle, and ’s-Hertogenbosch, Daniëlle Teeuwen shows how these authorities deployed organizational and rhetorical tactics—including creating awareness, establishing trust, and exerting pressure—to successfully promote fundraising campaigns. Not only did many relief institutions manage to collect large annual sums, but contributions came from across the socioeconomic spectrum.
1 Introduction
9(14)
Poor relief in the Dutch Republic
10(4)
Research design
14(9)
2 Organizing poor relief
23(18)
Reforming medieval social care
23(8)
Poor relief in a Golden Age
31(5)
The system under pressure
36(3)
Conclusion
39(2)
3 Financing outdoor poor relief
41(32)
Income
42(19)
Collections and alms boxes
44(5)
Testamentary bequests and Inter vivos gifts
49(1)
Income from capital and real estate
50(4)
Subsidies
54(2)
Developments in the financing of poor relief over time
56(3)
Tolerated religious charities
59(2)
Expenditure
61(5)
Financial management
62(3)
Balancing income and expenditure
65(1)
Crisis management
66(5)
Conclusion
71(2)
4 Organizing collections
73(26)
Types and frequency
74(8)
Regulation and control
82(8)
Between nudge and obligation
90(6)
Conclusion
96(3)
5 The rhetoric of giving
99(24)
Perceptions of poverty and charity
99(3)
Civic exhortations to give
102(8)
Charity as a civic and religious duty
103(3)
Methods of persuasion
106(4)
Religious exhortations to give
110(10)
Preaching in the early modern period
112(2)
Views on wealth and poverty
114(2)
Charity as a Christian duty
116(2)
Guidelines forgiving
118(2)
Conclusion
120(3)
6 Donating to collections
123(26)
The donors
123(9)
Collection gifts
132(14)
Effective policies
132(4)
The boundaries of voluntarism
136(6)
Paying for poor relief
142(4)
Conclusion
146(3)
7 Conclusion
149(12)
Financing poor relief in the Dutch Republic
149(2)
Encouraging charitable giving
151(3)
Donating to collections
154(2)
Differences between localities and developments over time
156(3)
Explaining the success of charitable collections in the Dutch Republic
159(2)
Notes
161(34)
Appendices
195(18)
A Financial administration of poor relief institutions
195(5)
B Income of poor relief institutions
200(5)
C Income of poor relief institutions corrected for inflation
205(5)
D Sermons and religious writings
210(3)
Bibliography 213(14)
Index 227(4)
Amsterdam Studies in the Dutch Golden Age 231
Daniëlle Teeuwen wrote her PhD thesis at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, as part of the NWO-project 'Giving in the Golden Age'. She has published in Continuity and Change, the European Review of Economic History, and Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis. She is currently working as a postdoc researcher within the NWO-project 'Industriousness in an Imperial Economy', in which her research deals with women's and children's labour in the Dutch East Indies (c. 1815-1940).