oligarchy between the regent-dynasties
Boelens Loen,
De Graeff,
Bicker (van Swieten),
Witsen and
Johan de Witt in the
Dutch Golden Age . The painting shows the protagonists around the Amsterdam regent
Cornelis de Graeff (middle) and his relatives
Johan de Witt (right),
Cornelis de Witt (left) and
Andries Bicker (second from left) as well as some events from this decade. (Painting by
Matthias Laurenz Gräff, 2007) Formally, little changed in the constitutional arrangements of the republic, compared to those of the preceding
Habsburg Netherlands. For instance, though there was no more scope for the stadtholders to represent a deposed king, the new republic found a new role for them, though they now received their commissions from the sovereign provincial states. Equally, the same 18 cities made up the states that held the vote before. What changed after the revolt was the political makeup of these institutions. In most cities the old
regenten were
purged, and replaced with adherents to the new political order. In general, Catholic
regenten were replaced with supporters of the "New Religion" (as were the Catholic members of the
ridderschappen, the groups of nobles that represented the countryside in the States). The new groups of
regenten turned out to be representatives of a new economic elite that soon managed to bring about a rapid economic rise of the Netherlands, as described in
Economic History of the Netherlands (1500–1815). In these early days access to political office was still relatively open. The new power holders belonged to the newly rich classes, but they did not
represent them, nor was membership in these classes a prerequisite for office. If one speaks of a "regent class" the word "class" is therefore used in a loose sense. • the replacement of the Orangist regents after the death of stadtholder
William II by
Cornelis de Graeff,
Andries Bicker among others, issuing into the
First Stadtholderless Period • the replacement of the followers of
Johan de Witt by Orangist regents in the
Rampjaar 1672 • the replacement of Orangist regents by their opponents after the death of stadtholder
William III, issuing in the
Second Stadtholderless Period • the restoration of the Stadtholderate in 1747, which brought the Orangists to power again • the
Patriot revolt of 1785 and • the suppression of that revolt in 1787 by Prussian intervention • the overthrow of the Stadtholderate in 1795, which brought the Patriot regents, ousted in 1787, to power again. To consolidate his own position, Stadtholder William III encouraged the
regenten who were in power during his regime, to make mutual arrangements, in which they promised to reserve government positions for scions of allied families, the so-called
contracten van correspondentie ("contracts of correspondence"). Such arrangements were also used by their opponents when those reverted to power. Such arrangements helped to close the oligarchy even more in the 18th century, which explained the increasing intensity of the partisanship between the Orangist and Republican (under various names) factions during that era. During that century the
regenten (of both factions) became more and more removed from the merchant classes, from which their forebears had come. They instead became representatives of the
rentier class that came into being because of the enormous growth of the Dutch public debt as a consequence of the turn-of-the-century conflicts with France. This economic interest militated against forceful political reforms, and reforms in public finance, that would have been necessary to successfully withstand the political and economic crises that confronted the republic after 1780. This perceived lack of capacity for reform helped to bring about the attempted revolution of 1785 and the successful revolution of 1795 that eventually helped replace the regent-oligarchy with a short-lived democracy in the first years of the
Batavian Republic. ==References==