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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Udasmoro, Wening, Setiadi Setiadi und Aprillia Firmonasari. „Between Memory and Trajectory: Gendered Literary Narratives of Javanese Diaspora in New Caledonia“. International Journal of Interreligious and Intercultural Studies 5, Nr. 1 (02.06.2022): 74–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.32795/ijiis.vol5.iss1.2022.2851.

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The purpose of this research is to explore the memory and the trajectory of the Javanese diaspora on the novels written by two female authors of Javanese descent in New Caledonia using a gender perspective. The Javanese diaspora in New Caledonia is a community that has left their homeland (Java) to start a new life in their destination land (New Caledonia) since 1896. They are descendants of the contract coolies (laborers) sent by the Dutch colonial government who controlled the Dutch Indies, including Java, at the request of French colonial government. The delivery of contract coolies was based on an agreement called the “Koeli Ordonatie” which had become a legal regulation and was implemented since the 1880s. It was a regulation signed by the Governor-General of the Netherlands Number 138 whose purpose was to fid unskilled laborers willing to work in the Dutch colonies, especially in the plantations and mining. The coolies, especially from Java, were mostly used as manual laborers in various parts of Dutch colonies, such as in Suriname. Seeing that this Dutch policy brought positive results for the exploitation of natural resources in the Dutch colonies, the French colonial government asked the help from the Dutch colonial government to recruit the laborers to be sent to French colonial region, New Caledonia.
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Nelissen, Frans A., und Arjen J. P. Tillema. „The Netherlands Antilles and Aruba, an Embarrassing Legacy of the Dutch Colonial era? Dutch Duties Revisited“. Leiden Journal of International Law 2, Nr. 2 (November 1989): 167–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156500001254.

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Decolonization in the late twentieth century sometimes differs markedly from the classicalpost-war decolonizationphenomenon. While colonies were then fighting for their independence, today (ex) colonies might have to spend their energy on efforts to prevent being forced into independence. In the case of the Antilles and Aruba, the Dutch seem to view the islands as a somewhat embarrassing legacy of the Dutch colonial era and are seeking to sever all constitutional links with the islands although sofar the Netherlands Antilles have refused to discuss independence at all, while Aruba appears to have some second thoughts about its 1996-independence choice. The issue raises questions of international law, most of them concerning the right of all peoplestoself-determination. The authorsdescribeandanalyze Dutch policy and conclude that it is not in line with Dutch duties under international law.
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Jacobs, J. Bruce. „The Rise of the Dutch Empire: the Broader Context of the Dutch Colonisation of Taiwan“. International Journal of Taiwan Studies 2, Nr. 2 (09.09.2019): 365–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24688800-00202008.

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Unlike other European countries, Holland grew as perhaps the world’s first democracy with great wealth and relative egalitarianism, meritocracy rather than an aristocracy, and an absence of true monarchy. Holland’s great wealth also led to a worldwide colonial empire that competed with the other great European colonial empires. It was the Dutch who conquered Taiwan and brought the island under the first of six foreign colonial rulers. Like other colonial rulers around the world, the Dutch were racist, abused human rights, and indulged in slavery. Thus, although atypical at home, the Dutch in ruling their colonies, including Taiwan, were typical of colonial governments around the world.
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Scott, Cynthia. „Renewing the ‘Special Relationship’ and Rethinking the Return of Cultural Property: The Netherlands and Indonesia, 1949–79“. Journal of Contemporary History 52, Nr. 3 (30.11.2016): 646–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022009416658698.

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This article questions how the return of cultural property from metropolitan centers of former colonial powers to the successor states of former colonies have been considered positive – if rare – examples of post-colonial redress. Highlighting UNESCO-driven publicity about the transfer of materials from the Netherlands to Indonesia, and tracing nearly 30 years of diplomacy between these countries, demonstrates that the return of cultural property depended on the ability of Dutch officials to vindicate the Netherlands’ historical and contemporary cultural roles in the former East Indies. More than anything, returns were influenced by the determination of Dutch officials to find and maintain a secure cultural role in Indonesia in the future. This article also considers how Dutch policies were initially independent from, but later coincided with, the anti-colonial activism that emerged within the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) around the issue of cultural property return to former colonies. Yet, rather than reveal a mediating role for UNESCO, this article re-positions the return debate within a broader framework of shifting post-colonial cultural relations negotiated bilaterally between the Netherlands – as a former colonial power – and the leaders of the newly independent state of Indonesia.
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Samsudi, S., Agung Kumoro W, Dyah Susilowati Pradnya Paramita und Anita Dianingrum. „Aspek-Aspek Arsitektur Kolonial Belanda Pada Bangunan Pendopo Puri Mangkunegaran Surakarta“. ARSITEKTURA 18, Nr. 1 (30.04.2020): 166. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/arst.v18i1.40893.

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<p class="Abstract"><em>Dutch colonial architecture that developed in Indonesia, throughout the colonial period (around the 17<sup>th</sup> century to 1942) was a combination of colonial and local culture to respond to the Indonesian climate. Dutch colonial architecture in Indonesia is a work of Dutch colonial heritage in Indonesia during the colonial period. The result was the Dutch East Indies style with a "colonial" image and adapted to the local environment that responded to climate. Colonial architecture grafted architecture from European countries into colonies. The aspects of Dutch colonial architecture in the "Pendopo Puri Mangkunegran" building were studied to find out the elements of Dutch colonial architecture. "Pendopo Puri Mangkunegarn" is a vernacular architecture / Javanese architecture with a pillar structure system, allegedly there is an architectural element from the outside due to acculturation. The results of this study will be encouraged to know aspects of Dutch colonial architecture in the "Pendopo Puri Mangkunegaran" building from aspects of floor plans, structures, materials and other architectural elements. The results of this study are also expected to contribute knowledge in the field of architecture related to acculturation of foreign cultures that have an impact on local architecture.</em></p>
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Ariwibowo, Andika. „PENDIDIKAN SELERA DALAM PERKEMBANGAN RESTORAN HINDIA BELANDAPENDIDIKAN SELERA DALAM PERKEMBANGAN RESTORAN HINDIA BELANDA DAN RIJSTTAFEL DI BELANDA PADA PERIODE KOLONIAL DAN RIJSTTAFEL DI BELANDA PADA PERIODE KOLONIAL“. Paradigma: Jurnal Kajian Budaya 14, Nr. 1 (30.04.2014): 56–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.17510/paradigma.v14i1.1382.

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This article discusses the early development of rijsttafel and Dutch East Indies restaurants in the Netherlands during colonial period between the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries. The study takes a closer look at the early development of rijsttafel and Dutch East Indies restaurants in the Netherlands during the colonial period, as well as the role of actors in introducing rijsttafel and Dutch East Indies ethnic food in the Netherlands. This study aims to provide an alternative way of studying the history of culinary and gastronomic development and the influence of Dutch East Indies culture in the Netherlands. The historical sources used are newspapers, cookbooks, and guidebooks on Dutch East Indies cuisine, gastronomy, and restaurants in the Netherlands in the colonial period. The development of rijsttafel and Dutch East Indies restaurants in the Netherlands demonstrates the strong influence of colonial cultural imperialism in diversifying flavors in Europe in the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries. The early trajectory of rijsttafel in the Netherlands also shows that culinary dishes and gastronomic cultures from colonies such as the Dutch East Indies can be adapted and modified into various flavors that suit the tastes of Dutch society.
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Zijlstra, Suze. „Competing for European Settlers“. Journal of Early American History 4, Nr. 2 (09.07.2014): 149–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18770703-00402005.

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This article deals with the quest for settlers of the colonial governments in Dutch Suriname and English Jamaica in the 1660s and 1670s. The governors of both newly conquered colonies were eager to further develop the plantations and considered acquiring new colonists as essential. However, not many people were willing to move to the Caribbean and experienced colonists were particularly hard to recruit. This article compares the attempts of the governments of Suriname and Jamaica to attract colonists from other colonies. While a strong rivalry existed between colonies of different European countries, this article will demonstrate that competition between colonies of the same country was also intense. These colonial governments disregarded broader imperial interests when it was in their own colony’s interest, which demonstrates their relatively independent attitude and the local focus of their loyalty.
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Koot, Christian J. „Constructing the Empire: English Governors, Imperial Policy, and Inter-imperial Trade in New York City and the Leeward Islands, 1650–1689“. Itinerario 31, Nr. 1 (März 2007): 35–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300000061.

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AbstrsctThis article uses a comparative perspective to consider the role that English governors played in facilitating inter-imperial trade with the Dutch in New York City and the ports of the English Leeward Islands, including Bridgetown, Barbados, during the seventeenth century. As governors struggled to establish viable colonies these men worked to supply needed trade goods, often allowing their colonists to turn to Dutch colonies and the Netherlands as trading partners, understanding the ways in which these executives negotiated between imperial policies, primarily the Navigation Acts, and the needs of their charges is crucial to understanding how colonies developed. Further, investigating the ways in which governors fostered, regulated, or prevented inter-imperial trade with the Dutch illustrates how governors and colonists implemented and adapted mercantile policy in different colonies, places that depended upon the transfer of culture, goods and entrepreneurial activities across imperial boundaries. Complementing recent scholarship describing the extent of inter-imperial and cross-national trade in the seventeenth-century Atlantic, this article examines the impact English governors had on local merchant communities and their efforts to trade with the Dutch.
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Arutyunyan, Ruben. „Effect of Dutch Expansion in Malaya on Local Public Authority System“. Bulletin of Kemerovo State University. Series: Humanities and Social Sciences 2023, Nr. 4 (25.12.2023): 496–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/2542-1840-2023-7-4-496-504.

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The Dutch expansion in Malaya was associated with the Dutch East India Company, also known as the Dutch VOC. It influenced the development of public authority institutions in Malaya and the Indonesian islands. The VOC had a trade monopoly in the East Indies and adopted state governmental methods and functions in the region. The Charter of 1602 gave the Company rights to maintain a military garrison, build forts, appoint judges, and conclude treaties outside Europe. In the first half of the XVII century, the Dutch defeated the Portuguese in their colonial rivalry for the Indonesian islands and Malaya. As the VOC expanded its boundaries, it used the structure of public authority to manage the colonies. The author analyzed the structure of the VOC public administration, its bodies, and public institutions in Malacca and other colonial cities. The Dutch colonial court system in Malaya and the Indonesian islands included European and traditional courts. However, Batavia had a local authority known as the College van Schepenen while the island of Java had Adat and Islamic courts.
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Wan, Sim Hinman. „Disciplining Otherness in the Tropics“. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 81, Nr. 4 (01.12.2022): 420–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2022.81.4.420.

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Abstract During the seventeenth century, philanthropy offered the Dutch a self-disciplinary opportunity to expend their globally attained fortunes. As Janus-faced emblems of the wealth and poverty generated by a merchant society, monumentally scaled almshouses, hospices, orphanages, and reformatories in both the Dutch Republic and its colonies commemorated leadership that privileged moderation over extravagance. In Disciplining Otherness in the Tropics: Dutch Philanthropic Sites and the Urbanization of Indonesian Ports, 1640–1730, Sim Hinman Wan considers buildings for organized philanthropy as integral to the Dutch settlement of Batavia and Amboina in Indonesia, arguing that the presence of philanthropic establishments in the peripheral territories of Asian inhabitants served to subject these neighborhoods to colonial power. Dutch builders configured architecture and urban space in these cosmopolitan port cities to reinforce an ethnoculturally determined social hierarchy.
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Dissertationen zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Loriaux, Stéphanie. „Luid tussen twee stilten: vergeten vrouwenstemmen uit tempo doeloe. De Indisch-Nederlandse literatuur uit het negentiende-eeuwse damescompartiment“. Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/211227.

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Demaret, Mathieu. „Portugais, Néerlandais et Africains en Angola aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles : construction d'un espace colonial“. Thesis, Paris, EPHE, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016EPHE4022/document.

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L'objectif de cette thèse est de s'interroger sur la nature de la présence portugaise en Angola au 16e et au 17e siècles. Cette période correspond au début de l'essor du commerce transatlantique des esclaves dans l'Atlantique sud. Nous insistons sur les spécificités de cette présence : premièrement, nous mettons l'accent sur son caractère territorial, par opposition à la plupart des autres régions d'Afrique où la présence européenne s'est limitée à l'établissement de comptoirs commerciaux sur la côte ; deuxièmement, nous accordons une importance particulière à la rivalité luso-néerlandaise qui s'est déroulée dans la première moitié du 17e siècle et qui a correspondu à un des premiers affrontements territoriaux inter-européens en Afrique sub-saharienne. Dans les quatre premiers chapitres, qui recouvrent la période allant de 1483 – date de l'arrivée des Portugais à l'embouchure du Congo – à 1671 – date de la victoire décisive des Portugais sur le Ndongo pour le contrôle de l'hinterland de Luanda – , nous abordons la question de l'espace colonial. Il s'agit d'analyser les étapes de la formation de cet espace en nous centrant sur les interactions entre les différents pouvoirs politiques, aussi bien africains qu'européens. Nous nous intéressons ainsi aux efforts de délimitation spatiale de la part des pouvoirs coloniaux, conséquence aussi bien de la présence physique des agents coloniaux que de la production d'un savoir géographique. Dans le cinquième et dernier chapitre, nous mettons l'accent sur l'émergence de la nouvelle société que nous qualifions de coloniale, en analysant les caractéristiques et des dynamiques sociales des agents qui la composent
This thesis aims to question the nature of the Portuguese presence in Angola during the 16th and 17th centuries, a period which corresponds to the rise of the transatlantic slave trade in the South Atlantic Ocean. We pay particular attention to the distinctive features of the Portuguese presence: firstly, we insist on its territorial nature, that differentiates it from other African areas where Europeans went no further than setting up trading posts on the coastline; secondly, we focus on the Luso-Dutch rivalry that took place during the first half of the 17th century, leading to one of the first intra-European confrontations on sub-Sahara African soil. The first four chapters address the question of the colonial territory: they cover the period from 1483, when the Portuguese reached the mouth of the Congo River, to 1671, date of the decisive Portuguese victory over the Ndongo kingdom for the control of the Luanda hinterland. We analyse the stages in the formation of this territory by focusing on the interactions between African and European political powers. This focus leads us to take a special interest in the colonial powers' attempts at delimiting the colonial territory, a delimitation based on both the action of the colonial agents and the production of new geographical knowledge. In the fifth and final chapter, we analyse the social dynamics and characteristics of the agents that constitute what we see as a new emerging colonial society
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Zuber, Charles. „Islands of the Imagination: Representations of the Spice Islands from Pre-Colonial to Post-Colonial Times“. Thesis, Griffith University, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10072/366374.

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The term 'Spice Islands' has been used as a descriptor in m. The thesis begins with a chapter on my exhibition titled Islands of the Imagination. It describes the form the exhibition took, and how the various elements were developed and finalised. One of the most significant components was the canvases which reworked various signs of the Spice Islands. These canvases continued my interest in popular culture and deployed a variety of codes in order to find new ways of discussing the Spice Islands. Other significant elements included artefacts such as spices, Birds of Paradise and coins from my visit to the Moluccas. There were projected photographs taken by myself in the Moluccas, and also I showed many slides made by myself from publications that inspired the idea of the thesis itself. Some of my key photographs for the exhibition are included in an appended CD. any precolonial, colonial and postcolonial contexts. This thesis has charted some of the reasons why this is so, and the images which have been mobilised when the term is used. In the analysis of the images, and the production of my exhibition in 1999, the methodologies used derive primarily from Cultural Studies approaches. Part One, 'From Mythological Islands to the Moluccas,' describes some of the many and varied ways in which these islands were encountered over the last 500 years, and in doing so provides historical contexts for the images in my exhibition. The Spice Islands were initially mythological islands in the Western imagination from which came the most valuable of all spices: nutmeg, mace and cloves. It was these spices that fuelled the desires of European society and led to epic sea voyages. The Spice Islands remained less than real in both written descriptions and maps as the Portuguese entered uncharted waters, and there were many ideas in circulation about where the Spice Islands, or Moluccas, were to be found. The chroniclers of Magellan's voyage brought back to Europe the first evidence of the existence of the Spice Islands in illustrative and descriptive forms. In the 16th century, this pioneering journey was viewed as more significant for its discovery of the Spice Islands than for the circumnavigation of the world - the event for which it is now best known. Over time, the Dutch were to replace the Iberians as the colonisers of this area, and Dutch representations of the Spice Islands came into broader circulation in Europe. The images that were generated specifically from the Moluccas during the early years of the Dutch East India Company's presence in the islands were far removed from the Golden Age of Dutch art. This is manifested in the subjects that were illustrated, and also the techniques used to illustrate them. The crudeness of these images parallels the perception of these lands as being as far away from Holland as anyone imagined it was possible to travel. The Spice Islands were something other than civilised. In the 18th century, the Spice Islands became known in a much more specific, quantifiable way. They became a site from which investigations took place into the various forms of exotic flora and fauna. This was to be a significant departure from the early representations of erupting volcanoes and warships that appeared in many colonial publications. By the 1790s, French and British plantations were sprouting far away from the Dutch Spice Islands. There were now British and French Spice Islands in different parts of the globe. The term 'Spice Islands' itself was developing its own worth, and becoming as valuable as the spices themselves. By the 19th century, there were the original Spice Islands from which the term is derived but also other islands growing spices in diverse locations that could - and still do - claim legitimacy for the title 'Spice Islands'. In turn, the words 'Spice Islands' grew into a franchise/identity/logo, with other islands and commodities using the term in a transnational, transglobal capacity. Part Two, 'The Spice Islands as a Fractured Sign', suggests ways in which we might envisage an account of the Spice Islands as signs in a semiotic landscape of various media, including newspapers, magazines, websites and museums. This methodology also helps the understanding of my exhibition and the form that it took. It suggests that Spice Islands had become commodities in a somewhat different sense as they emerged as part of the tourist industry. The 'Spice Islands' existed wherever tour operators wanted them to. In popular culture, the Spice Islands could be imagined (with the aid of commercial tourism enterprises) as existing almost anywhere that was warm, a long way from Europe, and part of a trade that was associated with the colonial era. The thesis concludes with images derived from the Maluku wars that started in 1999, soon after my return from the Indonesian Spice Islands. Media reports on the wars provided yet more representations which connected the Spice Islands to the Moluccas once again. The conclusion suggests that to research images of Spice Islands is also to research the background to the fear of terrorism, the representations of Indonesia, religious wars and a wide range of political concerns that affect us today.
Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Griffith Business School
Griffith Business School
Full Text
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Luciani, Fernanda Trindade. „Munícipes e escabinos: poder local e guerra de restauração no Brasil holandês (1630-1654)“. Universidade de São Paulo, 2008. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-30112009-152527/.

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Este trabalho investiga as formas de organização do poder local durante os 24 anos em que os neerlandeses dominaram as capitanias do Norte do Estado do Brasil (1630-1654). Como ao longo de tal período não se verifica uma continuidade na administração local, a investigação teve em vista a compreensão da estrutura e da dinâmica política das Câmaras Municipais da legislação portuguesa, que perduraram até o ano de 1637, assim como das Câmaras de Escabinos (Kamers van Schepenen), que foram criadas conforme previam as instruções da República das Províncias Unidas, contribuindo, assim, para o estudo das diferentes formas de administração local no Brasil Colônia. Nosso objetivo mais além, ao abordar como tal transformação no poder local foi sentida pela elite açucareira e pelos moradores das capitanias conquistadas, relacionando esse contexto ao da reação luso-brasileira contra os invasores a partir de 1645, destacando, então, o papel que as Câmaras Municipais exerceram nesse período de guerra de Restauração (1645-1654). Para tanto, nossa pesquisa insere-se em discussões mais amplas e críticas sobre, por um lado, administração e poder no Império Português, sobretudo no que se refere às relações entre os poderes locais coloniais e o poder central da metrópole, e, por outro, a expansão comercial e territorial dos Países Baixos por meio de suas companhias de comércio no século XVII. Partindo da análise do poder local no Brasil Holandês entendemos ser possível pensar os diferentes sistemas de dominação colonial, o português e o neerlandês, que se confrontaram nesse período e território.
This work researches the organizational forms of local government in the 24 years of Dutch domination over the northern Estado do Brasil (1630-1654). As on the course of that period there was no stability in local government, this investigation has in sight an understanding of the structure and political dynamics both of the Portuguese Municipal Councils (Câmaras Municipais), which lasted until the year 1637, and of the Councils of Schepens (Kamers van Schepenen or Câmaras de Escabinos), created according to the instructions established by the Dutch Republic, and thus contributing to the study of the different forms of local government in colonial Brazil. Our aim is to go further by treating how that transformation in local government was felt by sugar aristocracy and by the inhabitants of the dominated captaincies, relating this context to the one of a luso-brazilian reaction against the invaders after 1645, and then attending to the role played by the Municipal Councils in the war of Restoration period (1645-1654). In that, our research falls in a larger and more critical debate about, in one hand, both government and rule in the Portuguese Empire, especially in which refers to the relationship between colonial local government and the central metropolitan government, and in the other, commercial and territorial expansion of the Lower Countries through their commercial companies in the seventh century. From the analyses of local government in Dutch Brazil it is possible to question the differing systems of colonial domination, both Portuguese and Dutch, which confronted each other in this time and period.
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Lenk, Wolfgang. „Guerra e pacto colonial : exercito, fiscalidade e administração colonial da Bahia (1624-1654)“. [s.n.], 2009. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/285730.

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Orientador: Jose Jobson de Andrade Arruda
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Economia
Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-13T08:56:08Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Lenk_Wolfgang_D.pdf: 2107631 bytes, checksum: 6a81f9eeb531aafd5eba4b653d436f40 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009
Resumo: As invasões holandesas da Bahia e de Pernambuco puseram o domíno português à prova. Considerada a fragilidade política e militar de Portugal no momento, esta tese parte da constatação de que sua vitória deveu-se essencialmente a elementos internos a sua colônia: o levante de senhores de engenho pernambucanos contra a Companhia holandesa das Índias Ocidentais. Postulase que a política colonial adotada para o governo da Bahia possibilitou que a defesa da capitania, ao longo do conflito, fosse financiada pela economia colonial, sem que os atritos resultantes comprometessem a segurança do mesmo domínio. Para tanto, levantou-se os termos do envolvimento da sociedade colonial na guerra. Na movimentação militar, ponderou-se a capacidade de mobilização daquela população, em função do escravismo. Trabalhou-se a composição, a disciplina e a remuneração do exército em Salvador. Levantou-se os termos do socorro de homens e provisões do Reino durante a guerra. Dentro deste quadro, procurou-se compreender a fiscalidade na Bahia e a relação entre a Fazenda real e a açucarocracia.
Abstract: The Dutch ocupation of Bahia and Pernambuco put the portuguese rule of its colony to a test. Considering the military and political frailty of Portugal at the time, the present work considers the fact that its victory was mainly a result of colonial factors: in particular, the revolt of the sugar mill owners of Pernambuco against the Dutch West India Company. Our thesis is that the colonial policy adopted in the government of Bahia induced the colony's wealth to finance the costs of the defense, avoiding at the same time that political tensions caused by taxation and colonial exploitation undermined its security. In that sense, this work builds an analysis of the involvement of Bahian inhabitants in the war, particularly the relationship of the slaveholder society with the army. Furthermore, there is attention to the provisioning of men, weapons and supplies by the Portuguese Crown, as well as its naval policy. Finally, the work has sought to describe the terms through which the Royal Tresury and the political body of the colony dealt with taxation and defense problems during that time.
Doutorado
Historia Economica
Doutor em Desenvolvimento Economico
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Cox, Matthew Jon. „The Javanese self in portraiture from 1880-1955“. Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/16310.

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This thesis, The Javanese self in portraiture from 1880-1955 examines changing understandings and representations of the Javanese self in painted and photographic portraits spanning 75 years from 1880-1955. During this period, Indonesian modern art followed a trajectory from its 19th century beginnings within the domain of exclusive privilege, through the socially engaged Persagi painters to the opening of the first National art school, Akademi Seni Rupa Indonesia. In tandem there was a dramatic shift in the public’s understanding of two concepts: the modern individual and the nation state of Indonesia. The two however are not mutually inclusive and in many cases the modern individual precluded the nation. One must consider that the colonial state, rather than the Republic, was the defining structure into which many of the major players in Indonesian modern art were born and in which they operated. Furthermore, certain individuals crystallised their sense of national consciousness whilst living abroad and in many instances working in conjunction with the Dutch. In some cases the modern individual was situated in an isolated position, far outside any notions of a shared experience with an imagined community. Whilst this thesis is concerned with the biographies of individuals and is deeply committed to a social history of art, the focus on individuals is not made in order to reveal broader assumptions regarding society, but rather to reveal nuanced and sometimes very personal expressions of modernism. Because the appearances of modernism were not always concurrent or consistent with societal modernity, we cannot plot an uninterrupted or continuous path for Indonesian modern art. Yet a number of societal changes that came about during the period from high colonialism to independence affected class structure and gender, giving rise to altered states of selfhood and new methods of artistic expression. It is precisely the complex set of transactions between the individual, larger society and the economic and political conditions of the time that this thesis sets out to articulate in order to reveal a number of significant characteristics regarding the possibilities of self representation in portraiture. First, the early history of Indonesian modern art is plotted in terms of cooperative relationships between Javanese aristocrats and Dutch men. Secondly, that whilst appearing conservative and pro-Dutch, these Javanese artists were critical in initiating a discourse on modern art and in establishing a position of cultural nationalism, domestically and abroad. Finally, the conjunction of the first two points demonstrates that the history of modern Indonesian art began much earlier than previously believed and, perhaps even more significantly, was attached to the idea of Indonesian cultural and national self-determination at a very early stage of its development.
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Santoso, Arnila Hevena. „Protestant Christianity in the Indonesian context colonial missions, independent churches and indigenous faith /“. Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2006. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p088-0147.

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Jaelani, Gani. „La question de l'hygiène aux Indes-Néerlandaises : les enjeux médicaux,culturels et sociaux“. Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0033/document.

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Cette étude est destinée à la question de l’hygiène aux Indes-Néerlandaises, (Indonésie après l’époque coloniale). Aux périodes étudiées (XIXe-milieu du XXe siècle) ce pays étant administré par les Pays-Bas, cette question sera donc examinée dans son rapport avec le colonialisme. L’hygiène était en effet liée à la politique coloniale qui mettait en avant l’exploitation des ressources naturelles pour l’intérêt économique des colonisateurs. Le médecin joue un rôle important dans la construction de l’impérialisme. D’abord, il assure la santé des Européens – des soldats, des planteurs et des administrateurs coloniaux – sous les tropiques. La santé des Indigènes – qui constituent la main-d’œuvre, et au sein desquels parfois éclate une épidémie qui menace le territoire – attire également son attention. Enfin, en élargissant le sens du mot « santé » à la santé mentale et sociale, le médecin ne traite plus seulement de l’hygiène médicale, voire de l’hygiène corporelle, mais aussi de l’hygiène sociale et culturelle ; il ne s’occupe plus seulement de préserver et d’améliorer la santé du corps, mais aussi de préserver et de protéger la moralité de la société. La lutte contre des facteurs destructeurs sociaux comme l’abus d’alcool, la criminalité, la prostitution, la pornographie et l’homosexualité est menée, car ces fléaux sociaux sont considérés comme un obstacle pour une société qui est en train de construire sa modernité
This research seeks to elaborate the question of hygiene in the Dutch Indies, former name of Indonesia. The fact that during the period studied this country was a colony of the Netherlands, the subject will be investigated in its relation to colonialism. In the colonial world, hygiene is inevitably related to the colonial politic which emphasizes on the exploitation of natural resources for the economic interest of the colonizer. The well-being of the population and the good health of the workers must then be assured, hence public health programs become significant. Questioning the health issue, this activity could not be dissociated from medicines. The role of physicians as the main actors became important in the construction of colonial state. This is due to several reasons. First, they assured the health of the Europeans – the military members, the planters, and the colonial administrators – in the Tropics. The health of Indigenous people – regarded as the manpower – also drew physicians’ attention, especially when there was an epidemic that threatened the population. Finally, by extending the sense of the word “health” to mental and social health, physicians no longer dealt only with the hygiene of the body, but also the social and cultural hygiene; they do not only engage in the improvement of health, but they also had to preserve and protect the morality of the society. The struggle against the unfavorable elements in the social life like alcohol abuse, criminality, prostitution, pornography and homosexuality was deployed because these elements are considered as a major barrier against the process to construct a modernity society
Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengkaji persoalan higienitas di Hindia-Belanda, negara yang kini bernama Indonesia. Mengingat penelitian ini membahas periode kolonial Belanda, maka persoalan higienitas akan dianalisis dalam hubungannya dengan kolonialisme. Dalam sebuah negara kolonial, persoalan ini tentu saja erat terkait dengan politik kolonial yang selalu mengedepankan praktik eksploitasi sumber alam untuk kepentingan ekonomi penjajah. Itu sebabnya kesehatan penduduk dan tenaga kerja harus dijamin, dan dari situlah program kesehatan masyarakat kemudian muncul. Pembahasan mengenai hal ini tentu saja tidak bisa dilepaskan dari dunia kedokteran, dan oleh karena itu peran dokter menjadi sangat penting dalam pembentukan imperialisme. Terdapat beberapa alasan untuk ini. Pertama, para dokter ini berperan dalam memberi jaminan kesehatan untuk orang-orang Eropa seperti tentara, tuan kebun dan pegawai administrasi kolonial selama mereka tinggal di daerah tropis. Kondisi kesehatan penduduk pribumi juga kemudian menarik perhatian mereka, terutama ketika wabah epidemi menyerang. Ini karena, bagaimana pun, orang pribumi dianggap sebagai sumber tenaga kerja yang sangat penting. Terakhir, dengan memperluas makna “kesehatan” ke ranah kesehatan mental dan sosial, para dokter ini tidak lagi hanya mengurusi soal kesehatan tubuh, tetapi juga sibuk dalam urusan higienitas sosial dan budaya; artinya mereka tidak hanya sibuk mengurusi orang sakit dan meningkatkan kualitas kesehatan masyarakat, tetapi juga memberi perhatian serius terhadap persoalan moral di dalam masyarakat. Perang terhadap penyalahgunaan alkohol, kriminalitas, pelacuran, pornografi, dan homoseksualitas dicanangkan, sebab “penyakit-penyakit” sosial ini dianggap sebagai penghambat sebuah masyarakat modern
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Stavrianou, Jennifer Dawn. „Yinka Shonibare. Post Colonial Discord and the Contemporary Social Fabric of 2017“. Kent State University / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=kent1492814338595612.

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Gates, Susan. „The historical foundations of ethnic Chinese economic dominance in Indonesia : Dutch colonial rule /“. Title page and introduction only, 1990. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09AR/09arg259.pdf.

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Bücher zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Englar, Mary. Dutch colonies in America. Minneapolis, Minn: Compass Point Books, 2009.

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Parker, Lewis K. Dutch colonies in the Americas. New York: PowerKids Press, 2003.

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Huey, Lois Miner. American archeology uncovers the Dutch colonies. New York: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2010.

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Boxer, C. R. The Dutch seaborne empire, 1600-1800. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1990.

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Chartrand, René. The forts of colonial North America: British, Dutch, and Swedish colonies. Oxford: Osprey Pub., 2010.

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Wiarda, Howard J. The Dutch diaspora: Growing up Dutch in new worlds and the old : the Netherlands and its settlements in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2007.

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Fabend, Firth Haring. A Dutch family in the middle colonies, 1660-1800. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1991.

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A Dutch family in the middle colonies, 1660-1800. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1991.

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Zandvliet, K. The Dutch encounter with Asia, 1600-1950. Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, 2002.

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Caroline, Roodenburg-Schadd, Hrsg. Mauve tot Mondriaan: Made in Laren. Bussum: Uitgeverij THOTH, 2014.

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Buchteile zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Williams, Oscar. „Blacks under the Dutch“. In African Americans and Colonial Legislation in the Middle Colonies, 3–23. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003248934-1.

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Maat, Harro. „Rice Breeding in the Dutch Colonies“. In The International Library of Environmental, Agricultural and Food Ethics, 143–72. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2954-3_6.

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Bosman, Lex. „Government Buildings in the Dutch colonies (Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries)“. In Public Buildings in Early Modern Europe, 119–30. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.archmod-eb.4.00171.

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Shefrin, Jill. „Chapter 13. “Travel […] is a part of education”“. In Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition, 296–314. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/clcc.15.13she.

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Early modern and Enlightenment children travelled. They toured, emigrated, visited family, or fled persecution. Silvia Cole, the Dutch-English granddaughter of a Huguenot, moved to London. An Austrian ambassador’s daughter read English children’s books. Colonial civil servants and military officers fathered children while posted abroad, sometimes with local women. Teachers, female and male, also travelled, whether as religious, political, or economic migrants. Writing masters travelled to the American colonies. The French Revolution spread educators across Europe. Booksellers and printers published in more than one language and advertised to colonial markets. Drawing on paratexts, life writing, manuscripts, ephemera, and marginalia, this chapter seeks commonalities of reading experiences among children living abroad or in the care of foreign teachers, exploring how booksellers catered to both groups.
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Bloembergen, Marieke, und Ellen Klinkers. „Dutch Colonial Police“. In Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 1201–11. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_464.

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Kolb, Waltraud, und Sonja Pöllabauer. „Women as interpreters in colonial New Netherland“. In Introducing New Hypertexts on Interpreting (Studies), 126–46. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/btl.160.07kol.

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This contribution presents a case study of Sara Kierstede (aka Roelof, Van Borsum, Stouthoff), a Dutch-speaking New Netherland settler and 17th-century interpreter who was proficient in Dutch and Native American languages and served as interpreter in a male-dominated colonial environment in settings that today would be labeled as public service interpreting (PSI) or, in some instances, diplomatic interpreting. Following a microhistorical approach, rooted in Translator Studies, we discuss the agency and positioning of Kierstede as one of the few female interpreters in a multilingual colonial contact zone. We use different historical and secondary sources and reinterpret them from a translatological perspective to explore Kierstede’s interactions and relations with other stakeholders as linguistic go-between and official provincial interpreter in Dutch colonial encounters and her role as an influential woman and cultural mediator in the self-contained network of relationships that characterised Dutch colonial society in New Amsterdam.
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Wibowo, Arif Sarwo, Muhammad Nur Fajri Alfata und Tetsu Kubota. „Indonesia: Dutch Colonial Buildings“. In Sustainable Houses and Living in the Hot-Humid Climates of Asia, 13–23. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8465-2_2.

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yamomo, meLê, und Theresa Beyer. „“Framing Europe”—meLê yamomo Interviewed by Theresa Beyer“. In New Music and Institutional Critique, 195–205. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-67131-3_16.

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AbstractYamomo is interviewed by Theresa Beyer about his views on efforts to decolonise New Music, issues of critique that this raises, and how his biographical experience being Dutch and Filipino causes him to reflect on his status in between coloniser and colonised. For Yamomo, decolonialism, as with feminism and queerness before it, has already been eaten up by capitalism and now serves as a way of acquiring more capital. He argues that within contemporary music, the goal must not be to replace one system with another, but rather to focus on understanding the methods through which hierarchies and power positions are perpetuated in order to inform our decision-making as practitioners.
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Kroeze, Ronald. „Colonial Normativity? Corruption in the Dutch–Indonesian Relationship in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries“. In Palgrave Studies in Comparative Global History, 173–208. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0255-9_7.

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AbstractKroeze takes the Dutch–Indonesian histories of colonial state formation as a common base to test several hypotheses that are informed by debates in the historiography of corruption and (post-)colonialism. One is that corruption is never a neutral objective term, and that when it is used in a colonial context it serves to set or challenge norms that underly colonial power structures. By invoking scandals and asking for reform, elites challenged existing norms in order to maintain exclusive power structures of (late) colonial state formation and economic exploitation. Kroeze also argues that cases of colonial corruption show how the metropole and colony were interlinked and influenced each other. Political changes in the metropole, such as the growing influence of more morally outspoken Protestant and Liberal politicians, as well as experiences of misuse in the colony, together caused the emergence of the Dutch equivalent of the civilising mission: the so-called “Ethical Policy”.
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Miller, Manjari Chatterjee. „The Reticence of the Netherlands“. In Why Nations Rise, 49–68. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190639938.003.0003.

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In the late 19th century the Dutch entered a second Golden Age. This chapter details how the Dutch were considered the second greatest colonial power after the United Kingdom, became one of the richest countries in Europe at the time, and began military reforms. But they were extremely reticent in their foreign policy behavior, giving up colonies and engaging in passive diplomacy. Despite its colonies and wealth, the narratives within the Netherlands denied that the Dutch were imperialist, and showed little appetite for active behavior on the world stage. The behavior of the Dutch was surprising not simply when compared to the world powers of the time—these great powers were, after all, arguably in a stronger strategic position than the Netherlands. Rather the Dutch were reticent even when compared to the smaller European powers of the day who jockeyed for influence, particularly with respect to colonies.
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Konferenzberichte zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Brandão do Carmo, Filipe. „O PARADIGMA DA CIDADE-RIO NOS IMPÉRIOS PORTUGUÊS E ESPANHOL. Belém e Valdivia no século XVII“. In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Grup de Recerca en Urbanisme, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.12781.

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In the early 17th century, Portugal and Spain shared territory and enemies, with Portugal experiencing previously peaceful countries such as Holland and England as threats to its colonies and trade and Spain experiencing attacks from the English and Dutch in its overseas colonies. Loosely consolidated colonial cities were established to consolidate footholds in under-exploited territories and for the defense of these territories. The foundation and maintenance of these cities were subject to the intervention of military and military engineers, aiming this article to understand the urban form resulting from this action, using urban morphology as a discipline of analysis. Although they do not correspond exactly, by analyzing the layouts of both cities, we realize that they are characterized by similar principles, such as orthogonality and the proximity of the main squares near the river, as well as the role of natural obstacles as boundaries and defense. Although the physical distance between the two cities is considerable, the Portuguese and Spanish intentions and layouts converged in a typology identified by us here. Keywords: Iberoamerican Cities; Colonial History; Belém; Valdivia. No início do século XVII, Portugal e Espanha compartilharam território e inimigos, com Portugal a ver países anteriormente pacíficos como a Holanda e a Inglaterra como ameaças às suas colônias e comércio e Espanha a sofrer ataques de ingleses e holandeses nas suas colónias ultramarinas. Cidades coloniais pouco consolidadas foram estabelecidas para consolidar pontos de apoio em territórios pouco explorados e para a defesa destes territórios. A fundação e manutenção dessas cidades foram objecto da intervenção de militares e engenheiros militares, procurando este artigo perceber a forma urbana resultante desta actuação, recorrendo à morfologia urbana como disciplina de análise. Embora não correspondam exatamente, ao analisar-se os traçados de ambas as cidades, percebemos que são caracterizados por princípios semelhantes, como a ortogonalidade e a proximidade das principais praças junto ao rio, bem como o papel dos obstáculos naturais como limite e defesa. Embora a distância física entre as duas cidades seja considerável, as intenções e traçados portugueses e espanhóis convergiram numa tipologia por nós aqui identificada. Palavras-chave: Cidades iberoamericanas; História Colonial; Belém; Valdivia.
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Putra, Purwanto. „Propaganda “Kolonisatie” of The Dutch Colonial Government“. In 2nd International Indonesia Conference on Interdisciplinary Studies (IICIS 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.211206.016.

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Nóbrega, Leonardo, und Ricardo Trevisan. „SOBRE ÁGUAS PRETÉRITAS: Presenças da Cidade Maurícia no Recife, Pernambuco, Brasil“. In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Grup de Recerca en Urbanisme, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.12635.

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Mauritius City (1637-1654) emerged as a moment of Batavian interference in the history of Brazilian cities. The Brazilian urbanization had, during colonial times, the Portuguese constructive character as the main logical and formal reference and after the expulsion of the Dutch, this character was also present in Recife, with thesuperposition of constructions and infrastructure by a new logic of occupation. With this study, we seek to investigate in what way the Dutch presence is still present in the current city, either in a sense of logical permanence, i.e., through attributes that guide the city form, or sensitive permanence, urban areas that resemble, as landscape, the former city. In this way, we seek to construct an identity narrative that recognizes the genesis of Recife as relevant to the cultural landscape of the current city. Keywords: Landscape, Memory, Dutch Brazil, Cultural identity. A Cidade Maurícia (1637-1654) surgiu como um momento de interferência dos batavos na História das Cidades do Brasil. A urbanização brasileira teve, durante os tempos coloniais, o caráter construtivo português como a principal referência lógica e formal e após a expulsão dos holandeses, esse caráter se fez presente também no Recife, com a sobreposição das construções e da infraestrutura por uma nova lógica de ocupação. Com esse estudo, buscamos investigar de que maneira a presença dos holandeses ainda se faz presente na urbe atual, seja num sentido de permanência lógica, ou seja, através de atributos que guiam a forma da cidade, ou de permanências sensíveis, áreas urbanas que se assemelham, enquanto paisagem, à cidade pretérita. Desse modo, buscamos construir uma narrativa identitária que reconheça a gênese do Recife como relevante à paisagem cultural da cidade atual. Palavras-chave: Paisagem, Memória, Brasil holandês, Identidade cultural.
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Tamon, Max, Aksilas Dasfordate und Yohanes Burdam. „Minahasa Raad (Minahasa Board) In the Dutch Colonial Period“. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Social Science 2019 (ICSS 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icss-19.2019.90.

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Pageh, I. Made. „Catus Patha or Sadpatha ? : Dutch Colonial Hegemony in Ngudi Hyang Widhi in Post Colonial Bali“. In Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Law, Social Sciences and Education, ICLSSE 2023, 1st June 2023, Singaraja, Bali, Indonesia. EAI, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.1-6-2023.2341411.

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Lestari, Endang Sri, und Evi Purnamasari. „Adaptation Of Dutch Colonial Architecture to Palembang's Humid Tropical Climate“. In 5th International Conference of Contemporary Affairs in Architecture and Urbanism – Full book proceedings of ICCAUA2020, 11-13 May 2022. Alanya Hamdullah Emin Paşa University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.38027/iccaua2022en0145.

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Rolim, Renan Cornélio Vieira de Souza, Laura Gilabert-Sansalvador und María José Viñals. „Mosteirinho de São Francisco in Paudalho, Brazil: Building Typology Adaptation in Colonial Architecture“. In 3rd Valencia International Biennial of Research in Architecture, VIBRArch. València: Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/vibrarch2022.2022.15185.

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The Mosteirinho de São Francisco, in the city of Paudalho (Brazil), is a unique example of Franciscan religious architecture that reflects a very specific historical context of the area. It was built during the period of Dutch domination of Northeastern Brazil (1630-1654), characterized by territorial disputes and religious persecution between Dutch (Protestants) and Portuguese (Catholics). Designed in this emergency context, the building was conceived with a simple and compact layout, adapting the typology and spaces of a Franciscan convent to the site and specific circumstances. An example of this is the addition of two connected aisles to the nave, providing an architectural promenade around this main space: a modest but ingenious adaptation of the cloister concept. Nowadays the building is completely abandoned, in an advanced state of decay and in a judicial process regarding its property. Even its heritage protection is at risk. This paper presents the results of an architectural research about this building with the aim of claiming the importance of its preservation.
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Davis, Felecia. „Memorial and Museum for the African Burial Ground, New York, New York“. In 1995 ACSA International Conference. ACSA Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.intl.1995.67.

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In 1991 excavation for a 34 story Federal office tower at Broadway between Duane and Reade streets in lower Manhattan unearthed for the public a site titled on colonial maps as the "Negro Burial Ground." This place which occupied the margins of the Dutch colonial city, later the edge of the encroaching palisade construction, was the final resting place for free Africans, slaves and other impoverished people. In the seventeenth century the grounds were the only space where Africans free and slave could meet together so that the burial ground was also a political rallying space. This burial ground was the Africans only autonomous space, the only space where they were allowed to congregate with regularity in large numbers.
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Marbun, Dahlena Sari, und Umar Zein. „Malaria in the Dutch East Indies: A Study on Indigenous Health During Colonial Times“. In International Conference on Multidisciplinary Research. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0008882901230127.

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Sarathan, Indra, Randy Ridwansyah und Wildan Insan Fauzi. „Robinson Crusoe as a Textbook - In Schools During the Dutch Colonial Period in West Java“. In Tenth International Conference on Applied Linguistics and First International Conference on Language, Literature and Culture. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0007171405860591.

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Berichte der Organisationen zum Thema "Colonies (Dutch)"

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Dell, Melissa, und Benjamin Olken. The Development Effects of the Extractive Colonial Economy: The Dutch Cultivation System in Java. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w24009.

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