Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries

Although the Low Countries formed a political unity only for short periods they have been seen by other European nations as a region in its own right. What created some kind of unity, as experienced by the inhabitants? My concept started from the geographical conditions of a delta of three major ri...

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Main Author: Wim Blockmans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2012-06-01
Series:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5934
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spelling doaj-d14b3bb02ba042b2b4608d1c10457b072021-10-02T17:25:36ZengOpen JournalsBMGN: Low Countries Historical Review0165-05052211-28982012-06-011272Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low CountriesWim Blockmans Although the Low Countries formed a political unity only for short periods they have been seen by other European nations as a region in its own right. What created some kind of unity, as experienced by the inhabitants? My concept started from the geographical conditions of a delta of three major rivers, in a generally flat area facilitating transport. This was a basic condition for urban growth.   The core questions were therefore – what at different times in the various regions, led to that extraordinary level of urbanisation on a European scale? Why and how did the successive ‘golden ages’ come to an end, and what remained in the previous core areas? Why did some regions remain peripheral? How do the various aspects interrelate – geographical conditions, social and political institutional arrangements, economic developments, and how do cultural phenomena fit into these patterns?   This response is part of the discussion forum 'Four Golden Ages' (Wim Blockmans). https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5934Economic development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wim Blockmans
spellingShingle Wim Blockmans
Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Economic development
author_facet Wim Blockmans
author_sort Wim Blockmans
title Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
title_short Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
title_full Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
title_fullStr Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
title_full_unstemmed Four Golden Ages: Regional Interdependency in the Low Countries
title_sort four golden ages: regional interdependency in the low countries
publisher Open Journals
series BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
issn 0165-0505
2211-2898
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Although the Low Countries formed a political unity only for short periods they have been seen by other European nations as a region in its own right. What created some kind of unity, as experienced by the inhabitants? My concept started from the geographical conditions of a delta of three major rivers, in a generally flat area facilitating transport. This was a basic condition for urban growth.   The core questions were therefore – what at different times in the various regions, led to that extraordinary level of urbanisation on a European scale? Why and how did the successive ‘golden ages’ come to an end, and what remained in the previous core areas? Why did some regions remain peripheral? How do the various aspects interrelate – geographical conditions, social and political institutional arrangements, economic developments, and how do cultural phenomena fit into these patterns?   This response is part of the discussion forum 'Four Golden Ages' (Wim Blockmans).
topic Economic development
url https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5934
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