Netherlands
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== History == | == History == | ||
- | While preserving European neutrality (the struggle against Belgium was declared an internal conflict) the Netherlands faced all the fiercer challenges in their colonies. In 1830 an uprising in Java had to be subdued by force. A war against the Sultanate Ateh, joined by various local princes, erupted on Sumatra in 1873 and could only be ended in 1904. The Cape Province, Ceylon, and the Gold Coast had been lost to Great Britain. In domestic policies an agreement was reached between the crown and the growing liberal movement in 1848. Wilhelm II, under influence by Liberal leader Jan Rudolf Thorbecke, installed a liberl constitution which transformed the country into a parliamentary monarchy. Thorbecke became the first prime minister and fortified the - by the time's standards - modern system of government. Internally, the Netherlands stabilized herself permanently, with only the census based suffrage being a major point of conflict till universal and equal suffrage was intriduced in 1917. Only in 1894 a Social Democratic Party formed which, unlike her European cousins of the time, aimed at reforms and not revolutions. Their strict neutrality qualified the Netherlands as host for the great congresses of 1899 and 1905, during which, among other things, the Den Haag Convention with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land was agreed upon. After the country had preserved its neutrality during the Weltkrieg | + | While preserving European neutrality (the struggle against Belgium was declared an internal conflict) the Netherlands faced all the fiercer challenges in their colonies. In 1830 an uprising in Java had to be subdued by force. A war against the Sultanate Ateh, joined by various local princes, erupted on Sumatra in 1873 and could only be ended in 1904. The Cape Province, Ceylon, and the Gold Coast had been lost to Great Britain. In domestic policies an agreement was reached between the crown and the growing liberal movement in 1848. Wilhelm II, under influence by Liberal leader Jan Rudolf Thorbecke, installed a liberl constitution which transformed the country into a parliamentary monarchy. Thorbecke became the first prime minister and fortified the - by the time's standards - modern system of government. Internally, the Netherlands stabilized herself permanently, with only the census based suffrage being a major point of conflict till universal and equal suffrage was intriduced in 1917. Only in 1894 a Social Democratic Party formed which, unlike her European cousins of the time, aimed at reforms and not revolutions. Their strict neutrality qualified the Netherlands as host for the great congresses of 1899 and 1905, during which, among other things, the Den Haag Convention with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land was agreed upon. After the country had preserved its neutrality during the Weltkrieg, Netherlands had special relationships with Germany, in particular in economy...The rising economic problems in Germany, if they extends to the Low Countries, would break an emotional barrier in the heart of the Dutch people, hesitating over French syndicalism or the dreams of Greater Netherlands... |
== Politics == | == Politics == |
Revision as of 23:58, 3 December 2016
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Motto Ik zal handhaven (I shall stand fast) | ||||
Anthem Het Wilhelmus | ||||
Official Languages | Dutch | |||
Capital | Amsterdam | |||
Head of State | Queen Wilhelmina | |||
Head of Government | Hendricus Colijn | |||
Establishment - Indipendence from the Spanish Empire | ||||
Declared | July 26 1581 | |||
Recognized | January 30 1648 | |||
Government | Parliamentary Monarchy | |||
Currency | Dutch guilder | |||
Area | 41 526 km² | |||
with colonies | 2 025 780 km² | |||
Population | About 8 millions |
Netherlands is a country in Central Europe. It borders Germany to the east and Flanders-Wallonia to the west. It also borders the German and Portoguese colonies in Asia through the Dutch East Indies and the Caribbean Federation and Brazil in South America.
Contents |
History
While preserving European neutrality (the struggle against Belgium was declared an internal conflict) the Netherlands faced all the fiercer challenges in their colonies. In 1830 an uprising in Java had to be subdued by force. A war against the Sultanate Ateh, joined by various local princes, erupted on Sumatra in 1873 and could only be ended in 1904. The Cape Province, Ceylon, and the Gold Coast had been lost to Great Britain. In domestic policies an agreement was reached between the crown and the growing liberal movement in 1848. Wilhelm II, under influence by Liberal leader Jan Rudolf Thorbecke, installed a liberl constitution which transformed the country into a parliamentary monarchy. Thorbecke became the first prime minister and fortified the - by the time's standards - modern system of government. Internally, the Netherlands stabilized herself permanently, with only the census based suffrage being a major point of conflict till universal and equal suffrage was intriduced in 1917. Only in 1894 a Social Democratic Party formed which, unlike her European cousins of the time, aimed at reforms and not revolutions. Their strict neutrality qualified the Netherlands as host for the great congresses of 1899 and 1905, during which, among other things, the Den Haag Convention with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land was agreed upon. After the country had preserved its neutrality during the Weltkrieg, Netherlands had special relationships with Germany, in particular in economy...The rising economic problems in Germany, if they extends to the Low Countries, would break an emotional barrier in the heart of the Dutch people, hesitating over French syndicalism or the dreams of Greater Netherlands...
Politics
Queen of the Netherlands: Wilhelmina
Minister-President of the Council: Hendricus Colijn
Minister for Foreign Affairs: Frans B. van Blokland
Minister of Finance: Pieter Oud
Ministry of Justice: Josephus H.H. van Schaik
Head of the GS III: Johan W. van Oorschot
Minister of Defence: Adriaan Dijxhoorn
Chief of the Royal Netherlands Army: Izaak Reynders
Chief of the Royal Netherlands Navy: Johannes Furstner
Chief of the Royal Netherlands Air Force: Marius Raaijmakers
Military
Army
The Royal Netherlands Army is quite large for such a small country; it consist of eight infantry divisions (four of them with an artillery brigade) for the defence of the mainland and three infantry divisions located in Batavia for the defence of the Dutch East Indies (and the repression of the occasional rebellion).
Navy and Air Force
While the Royal Netherlands Air Force is basically non-existent, the Royal Netherlands Navy consist of three light cruisers, two destroyers, three submarines and four transport flotilla. Its main purpose is the defence of the Dutch Merchant Marine and the protection of the commerce with the Dutch East Indies and the other colonial possessions.
Foreign Relations
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Good relations with Germany, Kingdom of Spain, National France and Austria.
Unfriendly relations with Commune of France.
Colonial empire
Dutch colonial possessions in America: Dutch Guyana, Dutch Antilles
Dutch colonial possessions in Asia: Dutch East Indies