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Dutch colonial empire

The Dutch colonial empire (Dutch: Nederlandse koloniale rijk) comprised the overseas territories and trading posts controlled and administered by Dutch chartered companies—mainly the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch West India Company—and subsequently by the Dutch Republic (1581–1795), and by the modern Kingdom of the Netherlands after 1815.[2] It was initially a trade-based system which derived most of its influence from merchant enterprise and from Dutch control of international maritime shipping routes through strategically placed outposts, rather than from expansive territorial ventures.[3][2] The Dutch were among the earliest empire-builders of Europe, following Spain and Portugal and one of the wealthiest nations of that time.

Dutch colonial empire
Nederlandse koloniale rijk (Dutch)

 

1595–1600

1598–1663

1940–1945

1949

1949–1962

1954

1975[1]

With a few notable exceptions, the majority of the Dutch colonial empire's overseas holdings consisted of coastal forts, factories, and port settlements with varying degrees of incorporation of their hinterlands and surrounding regions.[3] Dutch chartered companies often dictated that their possessions be kept as confined as possible in order to avoid unnecessary expense,[4] and while some such as the Dutch Cape Colony and Dutch East Indies expanded anyway (due to the pressure of independent-minded Dutch colonists), others remained undeveloped, isolated trading centres dependent on an indigenous host-nation.[3] This reflected the primary purpose of the Dutch colonial empire: commercial exchange as opposed to sovereignty over homogeneous landmasses.[3]


The imperial ambitions of the Dutch were bolstered by the strength of their existing shipping industry, as well as the key role they played in the expansion of maritime trade between Europe and the Orient.[5] Because small European trading-companies often lacked the capital or the manpower for large-scale operations, the States General chartered larger organisations—the Dutch West India Company and the Dutch East India Company—in the early seventeenth century.[5] These were considered the largest and most extensive maritime trading companies at the time, and once held a virtual monopoly on strategic European shipping-routes westward through the Southern Hemisphere around South America through the Strait of Magellan, and eastward around Africa, past the Cape of Good Hope.[5] The companies' domination of global commerce contributed greatly to a commercial revolution and a cultural flowering in the Netherlands of the 17th century, known as the Dutch Golden Age.[6] In their search for new trade passages between Asia and Europe, Dutch navigators explored and charted distant regions such as Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania, and parts of the eastern coast of North America.[7] During the period of proto-industrialization, the empire received 50% of textiles and 80% of silks import from the India's Mughal Empire, chiefly from its most developed region known as Bengal Subah.[8][9][10][11]


In the 18th century, the Dutch colonial empire began to decline as a result of being overwhelmed from the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War of 1780–1784, in which the Dutch Republic lost a number of its colonial possessions and trade monopolies to the British Empire and French colonial empire, along with the conquest of the Mughal Bengal at the Battle of Plassey by the British East India Company.[12][13][14] Nevertheless, major portions of the empire survived until the advent of global decolonisation following World War II, namely the East Indies and Dutch Guiana.[15] Three former colonial territories in the West Indies islands around the Caribbean SeaAruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten—remain as constituent countries represented within the Kingdom of the Netherlands.[15]

with company rule (1603–1949), Dutch Malacca (1641–1795, 1818–1825), and Dutch New Guinea (until 1962)

Dutch East Indies

(1605–1825)

Dutch India

(1612–1872)

Dutch Gold Coast

(1954–2010)

Dutch Antilles

(1614–1667, 1673–1674)

New Netherlands

(1616–1975)

Dutch Guianas

(1624–1662), and Keelung (Fort Noord-Holland; 1663–1668)

Dutch Formosa

(1625–1680)

Dutch Virgin Islands

(1627–1825)

Dutch Bengal

(1630–1654)

Dutch Brazil

(1638–1710)

Dutch Mauritius

(1640–1796)

Dutch Ceylon

(1652–1806)

Dutch Cape Colony

(1665–1795)

Dutch Malabar

(1667–1954)

Dutch Surinam

(1674–1678)

New Holland (Acadia)

This list does not include several former trading posts stationed by Dutch, such as Dejima in Japan.

The Dutch Empire in 1630

The Dutch Empire in 1630

The Dutch Empire in 1650

The Dutch Empire in 1650

The Dutch Empire in 1674

The Dutch Empire in 1674

The Dutch Empire in 1700

The Dutch Empire in 1700

The Dutch Empire in 1750

The Dutch Empire in 1750[citation needed]

The Dutch Empire in 1795

The Dutch Empire in 1795[citation needed]

The Dutch Empire in 1830

The Dutch Empire in 1830

The Dutch Empire prior to World War II

The Dutch Empire prior to World War II

The Dutch Empire in 1960

The Dutch Empire in 1960

The Dutch Empire in 1975

The Dutch Empire in 1975

Dutch colonization of the Americas

Dutch Language Union

List of Dutch East India Company trading posts

Ministry of the Colonies (Netherlands)

; Galen A. Irwin (2005). Governance and Politics of the Netherlands (2nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-4039-3529-7.

Andeweg, Rudy B.

(1957). The Dutch in Brazil, 1624–1654. Oxford: Clarendon. OCLC 752668765.

Boxer, C. R.

Bromley, J.S.; E.H. Kossmann (1968). Britain and the Netherlands in Europe and Asia: Papers delivered to the Third Anglo-Dutch Historical Conference. Palgrave Macmillan UK.  978-1-349-00046-3.

ISBN

Corn, Charles (1998). The Scents of Eden: A History of the Spice Trade. Kodansha.  1-56836-249-8.

ISBN

Dewulf, J. (Spring 2011). "The Many Meanings of Freedom: The Debate on the Legitimacy of Colonialism in the Dutch Resistance, 1940–1949". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 12 (1). :10.1353/cch.2011.0002. S2CID 162354782.

doi

Elphick, Richard; Hermann Giliomee (1989). The Shaping of South African Society, 1652–1840 (2nd ed.). Cape Town: Maskew Miller Longman.  0-8195-6211-4.

ISBN

(2003). The Dutch East India Company: Expansion and Decline. Zutphen, Netherlands: Walburg. ISBN 978-90-5730-241-1.

Gaastra, Femme S.

Klooster, Wim. The Dutch Moment: War, Trade, and Settlement in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World (2016)

Klooster, Wim, and Gert Oostindie. Realm between Empires: The Second Dutch Atlantic, 1680-1815 (Cornell UP, 2018) 348 pp.

online review

Koekkoek, René, Anne-Isabelle Richard, and Arthur Weststeijn. "Visions of Dutch Empire: Towards a Long-Term Global Perspective." Bijdragen en Mededelingen Betreffende de Geschiedenis der Nederlanden 132.2 (2017): 79–96.

online

Legêne, Susan. "The European character of the intellectual history of Dutch empire." BMGN-Low Countries Historical Review 132.2 (2017). Archived 25 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine

online

Noorlander, Danny L. Heaven's Wrath: The Protestant Reformation and the Dutch West India Company in the Atlantic World (Cornell UP, 2019).

Noorlander, D. L. "The Dutch Atlantic world, 1585–1815: Recent themes and developments in the field." History Compass (2020): e12625.

(1953). Asia and Western dominance, 1498–1945, by K.M. Panikkar. London: G. Allen and Unwin.

Panikkar, K. M.

Poddar, Prem, and Lars Jensen, eds., A historical companion to postcolonial literatures: Continental Europe and Its Empires (Edinburgh UP, 2008), "Netherlands and its colonies" pp 314–401. also entire text online

excerpt

Postma, Johannes M. (1990). The Dutch in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1600–1815. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.  0-521-36585-6.

ISBN

Wesseling, H.L. (1997). Imperialism and Colonialism: Essays on the History of Colonialism. London: Greewood.  978-0-313-30431-6.

ISBN

(in Dutch)

De VOCsite

Dutch and Portuguese Colonial History

(in Dutch)

VOC Kenniscentrum

on YouTube

Dutch East Indies Documentary

showing the Dutch empire 1600–1800.

The Atlas of Mutual Heritage database