Early Modern Media and the News in Europe includes fifteen chapters, all written by Joop W. Koopmans, which are focused on the early news industry in relation to politics and society, particularly from the Dutch perspective.
Author(s): Joop W Koopmans
Series: Library of the Written Word, 70
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 379
City: Leiden
Contents
Acknowledgements
Figures and Tables
Figures
Tables
Introduction
Chapter 1. Storehouses of News: the Meaning of Early Modern News Periodicals in Western Europe
1. The Genre’s Name
2. From Messrelationen to Mercuries and Yearbooks
3. Purpose, Meaning, Audience and Editors of News Periodicals
4. Conclusion
Chapter 2. The Presentation of News in the Europische Mercurius (1690–1756)
1. Title and Title Page, the Publishers and the Editors
2. The Organisation of the Europische Mercurius
3. Geographical Divisions; the Netherlands and Its Neighbours
4. Geographical Divisions: the Other Territories
5. Conclusion
6. Appendix: Explanation in Verse of the Title Page Engraving of the Europische Mercurius of 1726
Chapter 3. The Glorification of Three Prussian Sovereigns in the Europische Mercurius (1690–1756)
1. Brandenburg-Prussia at the Source
2. The Reign of Elector-King Frederick III/I (1690–1713): Cursory Reporting
3. The Reign of King Frederick William I (1713–1740): Described in More Depth
4. The Reign of Frederick II the Great (1740–1756): Glory and Criticism
5. Conclusion
Chapter 4. Politics in Title Prints: Examples from the Dutch News Book Europische Mercurius (1690–1756)
1. The Freedom Hat, the Janus Temple and Other Political Symbolism
2. The Triumphal Entry of King-Stadtholder William III in 1691
3. Jacobite Adder’s Brood in 1723
4. Polish Lutherans Decapitated in Toruñ in 1725
5. Epilogue
Chapter 5. Publishers, Editors and Artists in the Marketing of News in the Dutch Republic Circa 1700: the Case of Jan Goeree and the Europische Mercurius
1. Jan Goeree in the Triangle of Publisher, Editor and Artist
2. The Use of Illustrations as a Selling Point and Other Merchandising Policies
3. Conclusion
Chapter 6. Research in Digitized Early Modern Dutch Newspapers and the News Value of Advertisements
1. Categories of Early Advertisements
2. The News Value of Early Advertisements
3. Final Remarks
Chapter 7. Anything but Marginal: the Politics of Paper Use and Layout in Early Modern Dutch Newspapers
1. The Dutch Standard: Two Pages in Folio with Two News Columns Each
2. Anthoni de Groot’s Experiments in His ’s Gravenhaegse Courant
3. Marginal Printing in Other Dutch Newspapers
4. The End of Marginal Printing
5. Concluding Remarks
Chapter 8. A Sense of Europe: the Making of This Continent in Early Modern Dutch News Media
1. Argument One: Europe in Dutch News Media Titles
2. Argument Two: Europe in Dutch Newspapers’ Content
3. Argument Three: News about Europe in a Eurocentric Layout
4. Argument Four: the Presence of Europe in News Prints
5. Conclusion
Chapter 9. Supply and Speed of Foreign News to the Netherlands during the Eighteenth Century: a Comparison of Newspapers in Haarlem and Groningen
1. Two Dutch Newspapers and the Origin of Their News
2. International News on Its Way to Haarlem and Groningen
3. Impact of the Slow Dissemination of News
4. Conclusion
Chapter 10. The Early 1730s Shipworm Disaster in Dutch News Media
1. The Shipworm Infestation in Contemporary Dutch Newspapers
2. Other News Sources about the Shipworm
3. Final Remarks
Chapter 11. The Varying Lives and Layers of Mid-Eighteenth-Century News Reports: the Example of the 1748 Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle in Dutch News Media
1. The 1748 Peace in Dutch Newspapers
2. The 1748 Peace in Dutch News Digests
3. News Digests between Newspapers and Historiography
4. Final Remarks
Chapter 12. The 1755 Lisbon Earthquake and Tsunami in Dutch News Sources: the Functioning of Early Modern News Dissemination
1. Dutch News Media about the Tsunami and Earthquake
2. Sources and Routes
3. Speculation, Reflection, and the Concept of Contemporeinity
4. Final Remarks
5. Appendix
Chapter 13. Wars in Early Modern News: Dutch News Media and Military Conflicts
1. Rumours of Wars, Newsletters, Pamphlets, Engravings and Maps
2. Reporting Wars in Newspapers, News Digests and Other Periodicals
3. Governments and War News
4. The Beginning of the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War in Dutch News Media
5. Conclusion
Chapter 14. Dutch Censorship in Relation to Foreign Contacts (1581–1795)
1. English Complaints and Preventive Policy
2. Censorship for Scandinavia and Russia
3. Pressure from Prussia and Complaints by the Emperor
4. Criticisms of the Press from the Southern Neighbours Pre-empted
5. Evaluation
Chapter 15. Spanish Tyranny and Bloody Placards: Historical Commonplaces in the Struggle between Dutch Patriots and Orangists around 1780?
1. Interest in the Dutch Revolt around 1780
2. Text One: the Petition by the Luzac Brothers (1770)
3. Text Two: the pamphlet To the People of the Netherlands (1781)
4. Text Three: Patriotic Poetry by Joannes Nomsz (1785)
5. Commonplaces and Contested Authority
Bibliography
Index of Personal Names
Index of Geographical Names