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E-raamat: Life of Romeyn de Hooghe 1645-1708: Prints, Pamphlets, and Politics in the Dutch Golden Age [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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Romeyn de Hooghe was the most inventive and prolific etcher of the later Dutch Golden Age. The producer of wide-ranging book illustrations, newsprints, allegories, and satire, he is best known as the chief propaganda artist working for stadtholder and king William III. This study, the first book-length biography of de Hooghe, narrates how his reputation became badly tarnished when he was accused of pornography, fraud, larceny, and atheism. Traditionally regarded as a godless rogue, and more recently as an exponent of the Radical Enlightenment, de Hooghe emerges in this study as a successful entrepreneur, a social climber, and an Orangist spin doctor. A study in seventeenth-century political culture and patronage, focusing on spin and slander, this book explores how artists, politicians, and hacks employed literature and the visual arts in political discourse, and tried to capture their readership with satire, mockery, fun, and laughter.I must admit that while I expected to be impressed, knowing the earlier work of this author, the text surpassed my expectations: it is a truly outstanding and in every way excellent contribution to the history of the Golden Age. Romeyn de Hooghe was the foremost engraver of the later Dutch Golden Age, a highly influential figure in the spread of engraving and etching in Europe as far as Russia, immensely productive and also a major figure in the Dutch and international political propaganda and pamphlet wars of the era. Despite his obvious importance, previous efforts had never got beyond brief and in some cases misleading sketches because of the great complexity of the subject matter and because much of this in part murky story remained buried in little studied notarial and unpublished juridical manuscript sources. It needed a lot of painstaking research, patience and a thorough knowledge of many aspects of Dutch history in the Golden Age to be able to succeed in this venture. The author has succeeded in achieving what no one has succeeded in in doing previously - setting out a clear, detailed and convincing, well-supported account of the sometimes seemingly baffling shifts and swerves in De Hooghe's career, fortunes, reputation and political stance. - Jonathan Israel, professor emeritus, Institute for Advanced Study, PrincetonThis book offers a fascinating portrait of the etcher, pamphleteer, pornographer, provocateur, freethinker, spy, author, entrepreneur, husband and father, Romeyn de Hooghe. The account of how he became embroiled in controversy and intrigue throughout his life yields an invaluable perspective of the cultural and political history of the Dutch Golden Age. The book is also remarkably relevant in this age of international political machinations, propaganda, and the distortion and concealment of information by spin doctors and the media. - Huigen Leeflang, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam
List of Figures
9(8)
Acknowledgements 17(2)
Note on Usage 19(1)
Genealogical Tables 20(5)
Abbreviations 25(2)
Introduction 27(4)
1 Under the Spire of the Zuiderkerk
31(20)
The Zuiderkerk
31(2)
The Gift of God
33(6)
Ancestors
39(5)
The Learned Son
44(7)
2 Ingenious Inventions and Rich Designs
51(38)
Setting Up
51(3)
News prints
54(2)
Paris and Beyond
56(5)
Book Illustrations
61(4)
Critical Appreciation
65(2)
The Art of Etching
67(2)
Inventions and Designs
69(3)
Wrestlers and Jews
72(5)
Commercial Success
77(2)
Marriage
79(2)
Houses
81(4)
Claims to Gentility
85(4)
3 Patriotic Prints
89(50)
The Year of Disaster
89(1)
Orangists and Republicans
90(4)
The Elevation of the Prince of Orange
94(5)
The de Witt Brothers Slain
99(4)
French Tyranny
103(7)
Illustrating the War
110(4)
The Gelderland Affair
114(5)
Satire
119(4)
Publishing his Own Work
123(3)
Dedications
126(4)
The Wheel of Fortune
130(5)
Competitors
135(4)
4 A Wandering Whore and a Talking Dog
139(22)
The Wandering Whore
139(2)
The Talking Dog
141(3)
The Forged Chinese Pictures
144(3)
The Nicked Timepiece and the Lace Jabot
147(2)
The (Not So) Secret Life of Maria Lansman
149(2)
Honour and Shame
151(2)
The Anatomist and the Abbe
153(2)
Novels and Drollery
155(6)
5 A Fresh Start
161(30)
Romeyn Evicted?
161(2)
Uncle Pieter's Testament
163(4)
Motives for Moving
167(2)
Before the Consistory
169(3)
Settling Down
172(2)
Moving Up
174(3)
A Drawing Academy and a Stately Mansion
177(4)
A Prestigious Map
181(3)
Client of the Stadtholder
184(3)
A Blueberry Diploma
187(4)
6 The Prince Abandoned and Regained
191(26)
The Great Turkish War
191(5)
The Luxembourg Affair
196(7)
The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes
203(2)
The Glorious Revolution
205(3)
Glorifying the Revolution
208(9)
7 The Harlequin Prints
217(24)
Lampooning the Sun King
217(2)
Arlequin Deodat
219(1)
The Son of a Miller
220(2)
Riding the Hippogryph
222(2)
Frogs and Toads
224(2)
Hypochondriacs
226(1)
Royal Infidelity
227(2)
Three Kings
229(2)
A Royal Enema
231(1)
Royal Cuckolds
232(2)
Driving Home the Message
234(7)
8 Lampooning the Regents
241(26)
The Cows, the Herdsman, and the Wolf
241(4)
The Affair of the Magistrates
245(4)
A New Tune: Toads and Barrel-Riders
249(4)
The French Calendar: The Cock and the Donkey
253(4)
Bigwig and the Privilege-Seeker
257(2)
A Stagecoach Chat
259(3)
The French Blue Shin
262(4)
The Cricket that Spoils the Harvest
266(1)
9 The Pamphlet War
267(28)
A Triplet of Rogues
267(1)
The Quack: Govert Bidloo
268(4)
The Hack: Ericus Walten
272(2)
The Orangist Triumvirate at Work
274(4)
Arch-Cuckold de Hooghe
278(3)
Vilifying Romeyn
281(3)
Scaling Mount Parnassus
284(5)
Arch-Cuckold Shareholder
289(6)
10 The Memorandum of Rights
295(18)
Legal Action
295(2)
Witnesses
297(5)
Romeyn Interrogated
302(2)
Blasphemy
304(3)
A False Libel
307(3)
Embarrassing Letters
310(3)
11 Honour Defended
313(24)
The Chief Sheriff Fooled
313(2)
More Pamphlets
315(2)
Bribery Exposed
317(2)
Malice and the Spirit of Quarrelling
319(1)
Romeyn Spins a Conspiracy
320(4)
Walten Sacrificed
324(6)
Tying Up Loose Ends
330(7)
12 Serving the Stadtholder
337(22)
The Desolate End of Ericus Walten
337(4)
Running a Spy Network
341(5)
Father and Daughter
346(8)
Vassal of Kennemerland
354(5)
13 Composing most Pompously
359(36)
Intendant of the King's Buildings
359(2)
Director of the Lingen Quarries
361(3)
Director of the Triumphal Arches
364(8)
Tampering with the Books
372(2)
Oil Paintings
374(4)
Glasses, Cups, and Medals
378(4)
The World's First Satirical Periodical
382(5)
Self-Portraits
387(8)
14 Final Years
395(22)
A Masterless Man
395(4)
A Man of Letters
399(4)
An Invisible Church
403(6)
Death and Legacy
409(8)
Appendix: Genealogy of the De Hooghe Family
417(30)
Sources
423(1)
Manuscript Sources
423(1)
Pamphlets
424(3)
Published Primary Sources
427(7)
Secondary Sources
434(13)
Index 447
Henk van Nierop is Professor Emeritus of Early Modern History at the University of Amsterdam. He has widely published on the Dutch Revolt and the Dutch Golden Age. He is the author of The Nobility of Holland: From Knights to Regents, 1500-1650 (1993) and Treason in the Northern Quarter: War, Terror, and the Rule of Law in the Dutch Revolt (2009).