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- Vroedschap abstract "The vroedschap (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈvrutsxɑp]) was the name for the city council in the early modern Netherlands; the member of such a council was called a vroedman, literally a \"wise man\". A honorific title of the vroedschap was the vroede vaderen, the \"wise fathers\"Most early modern Dutch cities were ruled by a government of male burghers or poorters (bourgeois) who were members of the regent class, the ruling elite. During late Medieval times, the regents had in all cities gradually managed to exclude men of the artisan class from membership, making themselves a sort of hereditary city nobility. In the Dutch Republic, a city administration consisted of the magistrate and the vroedschap. The magistrate (or city government) consisted of a number, often four, of burgomasters assisted by a number of aldermen (schepenen), and looked after the daily administration of the city. In most cities, the mayors were chosen for a period of four years. The previous (and usually the youngest) mayor was responsible for the schutterij, the civil militia. The vroedschap appointed the magistrate, mostly from its own ranks; sometimes other members of the regent class were proposed. There was a complicated system of drawing lots and in many cities a shortlist was made from which the stadtholder, the highest provincial executive official, could choose; from 1748 this became a general system for the Dutch Republic.The vroedschap was convened on financial questions, sometimes on national politics, and always for elections for the appointment of important local posts. Thus, the vroedschap mainly served the economic interests in which its members had an important share. In contrast to magistrates, vroedschapsleden (\"members of the city council\") were appointed for life. The council consisted of ten to forty citizens, that met weekly or less often. They chose one or two new mayors and representatives to the Provincial States in January each year.Membership was in principle a question of uitverkiezing (cooptation) and inheritance. Family ties were very important, but also good breeding and social status. Vroedmannen had to satisfy two conditions: membership of the Calvinist church and the possession of a house. Although city administrations, by present standards, were more oligarchic than meritocratic, family ties never formed a formal legal basis for election.In times of crisis, the stadholder sometimes appointed new vroedschapsleden in a province, to ensure that his followers were in power, a so-called wetsverzetting (\"change of the legislative\"). This happened in 1619, 1672, 1748 and 1787. There was no legal basis for such an act.".
- Vroedschap thumbnail 1786_Vroedschap_Utrecht.jpg?width=300.
- Vroedschap wikiPageID "12495825".
- Vroedschap wikiPageLength "3081".
- Vroedschap wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Vroedschap wikiPageRevisionID "680499799".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Burgess_(title).
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Burgomaster.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Category:Dutch_words_and_phrases.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Category:Early_Modern_Netherlands.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_history_of_the_Netherlands.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink City_council.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Co-option.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_Republic.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern_period.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Meritocracy.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Netherlands.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Oligarchy.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Poorter.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Provinces_of_the_Netherlands.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Schepen.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Schutterij.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink Stadtholder.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLink File:1786_Vroedschap_Utrecht.jpg.
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "City Council".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "Vroedschap".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "city councel".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "city council".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "town council".
- Vroedschap wikiPageWikiLinkText "vroedschap".
- Vroedschap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA-nl.
- Vroedschap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Vroedschap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Vroedschap subject Category:Dutch_words_and_phrases.
- Vroedschap subject Category:Early_Modern_Netherlands.
- Vroedschap subject Category:Political_history_of_the_Netherlands.
- Vroedschap hypernym Name.
- Vroedschap comment "The vroedschap (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈvrutsxɑp]) was the name for the city council in the early modern Netherlands; the member of such a council was called a vroedman, literally a \"wise man\". A honorific title of the vroedschap was the vroede vaderen, the \"wise fathers\"Most early modern Dutch cities were ruled by a government of male burghers or poorters (bourgeois) who were members of the regent class, the ruling elite.".
- Vroedschap label "Vroedschap".
- Vroedschap sameAs Q1862230.
- Vroedschap sameAs Vroedschap.
- Vroedschap sameAs Vroedschap.
- Vroedschap sameAs Froedskip.
- Vroedschap sameAs Vroedschap.
- Vroedschap sameAs m.02w8_q4.
- Vroedschap sameAs Q1862230.
- Vroedschap wasDerivedFrom Vroedschap?oldid=680499799.
- Vroedschap depiction 1786_Vroedschap_Utrecht.jpg.
- Vroedschap isPrimaryTopicOf Vroedschap.