Summary information

Study title

Water’s worth. Urban society and subsidiarity in seventeenth-century Holland

Creator

M.E. Groep-Foncke

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-2x2-5vn2 (DOI)

easy-dataset:190684 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

For this PhD thesis, the reports of human encounters with water were used to evaluate the allocation of duties and responsibilities within Holland’s urban communities between 1600 and 1660. This was done by systematically examining the reports of water-related issues in (a) notarial records and (b) petitions to the urban magistrates, originating from the cities of Alkmaar, Haarlem, The Hague and Rotterdam. Additional archival sources, such as patent applications, tendering documents, and legal records helped to put the findings from the notarial records and petitions into perspective. The overall conclusion of the thesis is that taking water as a viewpoint reveals that the urban communities of Holland were highly subsidiary in nature. Individual townspeople, men and women alike, knew how to fend for themselves, incidentally having recourse to other inhabitants, businessmen, corporations or magistrates. Together, they constituted a tiered society, wherein nearly each entity bore the responsibilities that fitted its capacities.

The dataset incorporates the transcriptions of the archival sources in plain text, broken down by archive; as well as a spreadsheet providing a statistical overview of gender aspects, the representation of groups and individuals, professional occupations, dates, locations, and addressed topics.

Topics

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

DANS Data Station Social Sciences and Humanities

Publication year

2020

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available