scholarly journals ‘Waer vriendenmin gaet, hand aen hand, met liefde voor het Vaderland’ : Het zingen van politieke liederen als verbindende praktijk in het Nederlandse revolutietijdvak (1780-1815)

2021 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 617-638
Author(s):  
Renée Vulto

Abstract Singing Politics. Political song and collective singing practices during the Dutch revolutionary period (1780-1815)In the Dutch revolutionary period of the late eighteenth century, song was often used as a political tool to construct communities that shared interests, ideologies, and feelings. Abstract feelings of unity were made concrete through the experience of collective singing. Despite being continuously employed as a unifying practice, the ways of singing and the feelings that were involved nevertheless changed in accordance with the turbulent circumstances of the time ‐ from the emergence of the Patriots, to the Batavian Revolution, throughout the Napoleonic years, and towards the establishment of a Dutch monarchy. This essay goes beyond analysing songs as textual sources and investigates when, where, and by whom these songs were sung. By approaching the collective singing of political communities as emotional practices, we can develop a new perspective on this episode of Dutch history, in which we acknowledge the feelings and experiences of the historical actors that shaped the developments of that time.

2016 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 315-320
Author(s):  
Jermo Van Nes

It is generally agreed among contemporary scholars that the modern critique of the authorship claim of the New Testament letters addressed to Timothy and Titus originated in early nineteenth-century Germany with the studies of Schmidt and Schleiermacher on 1 Timothy. However, a late eighteenth-century study by the British clergyman Edward Evanson challenges this consensus as it proves Titus to have been suspect of pseudonymity before. This ‘new’ perspective found in Evanson's neglected source also nuances the common assumption that from its very beginnings the critical campaign against the letters' authenticity was mainly driven by linguistic considerations.


Author(s):  
Fiona Amery

‘But what scenes of grandeur and beauty! A tear of pure delight flashed in his eye! Of pure and exquisite delight and rapture; to look down on the unexpected change already wrought in the works of art and nature, contracted to a span by the new perspective, diminished almost beyond the bounds of credibility’.1 So wrote Thomas Baldwin in his account of his hot air balloon flight from Chester to Warrington in Lancashire on 8 September 1785. This telling description of his emotional response to the prospect of the earth from the balloon car epitomises Baldwin’s dual concern with aesthetic pleasure and scientific understanding. He felt elated viewing the land anew from his aerial position, amazed at the transformation it revealed and the experimental opportunities it presented.


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