Struggling sovereignty. Workshop on the Spanish Netherlands in the Late Seventeenth Century

This workshop aims to gather ongoing research pertaining to the history of the Spanish Netherlands from roughly 1650 to 1700 and to attempt a reappraisal of their position within the European power struggles as well as within the Spanish Empire.

Call for Pa­pers

Please send your papers until March 31st, 2025 to yves.huybrechts@uni-paderborn.de. The proposals should contain no more than 300 words and be accompanied by a short CV.

Ge­ne­ral in­for­ma­ti­on about the work­shop

Organiser University of Paderborn
Venue Idem
Postal code 33098
Country Deutschland / Germany
Format in Präsenz
From 29th September 2025
Til 30th September 2025
Deadline CfP 31st March 2025
Contact yves.huybrechts@uni-paderborn.de

 

De­s­crip­ti­on

Struggling Sovereignty. Workshop on the Spanish Netherlands in the Late Seventeenth Century

What is the state of historical research regarding the political, institutional and economic history of the Spanish Netherlands in the second half of the Seventeenth Century? What do we know about how they faced a general context of frequent wars, rapidly changing borders and alliances, as well as scientific curiosity and colonial expansion? The possessions of the Spanish Habsburgs in the Southern Low Countries, roughly corresponding to today's Belgium and Luxembourg (without Liège), the so-called Spanish Netherlands, lay at a strategic crossroads between the maritime powers, France and the Germanic lands. Its urban density, many navigable rivers, productive agricultural sector and relatively high industrial output made them a target over which Europe quarrelled. Many questions of grand strategy, especially revolving around French hegemony, pivoted on the question of who controlled the Spanish Netherlands. Simultaneously, this area was gripped by the perception of general crisis – in particular economically – as well as being neglected by the Spanish monarch. Yet, in current debates on the struggles of the time, the Spanish Netherlands are often treated as the mere object of larger interests and powers, not as an autonomous subject. How this “state” actively responded to the challenges and whether it at all qualified as a state, or rather as a mere dependency of Spain, is seldomly asked. This workshop aims to shed light on the active part of these Netherlands in the many dilemmas they faced economically, militarily and financially. How did they survive in the battlefield of struggling sovereignty?

This workshop serves to create a network between ongoing research, as well as discuss and reappraise the position as a central part of Europe between 1650 and 1700. While the idea of the Spanish Monarchy as being caught in “decadencia” in the last decades of the seventeenth century has been thoroughly revised by Spanish historians, the position and fate of the Low Country possessions still leaves much to be investigated. The old ideas of this area being reduced to a miserable fate, of suffering from a succession of unfit governors that made urgently needed reforms impossible or even blocked the state formation process can, persist because research has largely neglected the period before the Anjou regime or the advent of Austrian rule.

This is regrettable, since particularly this period is considered to have been decisive for the birth of the modern state and the European state system. A more concentrated look on the role of the Spanish Netherlands themselves as a state would therefore provide exciting new insights/questions of statehood, state policies (e.g. regarding the economy), state formation, sovereignty as well as rivalries between European states are overarching themes of the workshop but we welcome papers on all subjects in some way related to the history of the Spanish Netherlands in the Late Seventeenth Century.

Pos­si­ble Sub­jects

  1. The role of state agents at the "central" and local level;
  2. Diplomatic efforts and means of diplomacy of the governors-general;
  3. The organisation of the Spanish-Netherlands' defences against French aggression
  4. Territorial policy, e.g. the offering of parts of the territory in return for support;
  5. Conflicts between the Spanish central institutions and the Brussels court over finances, military, economy, etc.
  6. The interference of neighbouring powers in the Spanish Netherlands;
  7. Attempts to reorganise governmental structures as well as the economy;
  8. The informal networks of the higher nobility in the Spanish Netherlands;
  9. The influence of juridical treatises and pamphlets on questions concerning the position of the Spanish Netherlands;
  10. The role of the changing governors and their personal networks and expertise.

Other proposals are more than welcome!
We look forward to receiving your paper proposals. Kindly send them to yves.huybrechts@uni-paderborn.de until March 31st, 2025. Proposals should contain no more than 300 words and be accompanied by a short CV.