Adrianus Valerius

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Adrianus (Adriaen) Valerius (1575-1625), Dutch poet and composer of the 16C, known mostly for his poems dealing with peasant and burger life and those dealing with the Dutch War of Independence, assmbled in his great work "Nederlandtsche gedenck-clanck."

Valerius was born in 1575 in Middelburg to an ethnic French notary, François Valéry. His father had a somewhat prosperous career as a notary and customs official, and had in 1592 obtained a position as Court Scribe to Pieter van Reigersbergh, the Bürgermeister (mayor) of the City of Vere in the province of Zeeland. Six years later, Valerius was named the Toll and Customs Controller for Vere, starting a prosperous career as both a burger and a patrician of his city. HAving married the Bürgermeister's daughter in 1605, he advanced to Tax Collections and later was appointed into the City Council.

A poet of not unconsiderable talent, Valerius worked on the great Zeelander compendium "Zeeusche Nacthegael" with a number of other poet-colleagues. The work would be published in 1623. His primary individual opus, on the other hand, is the collection of folk poems and melodies on the Dutch Wars (1555-1625) "Nederlandtsche gedenck-clanck," which he had collected and edited for thirty years and up until his death in 1625. The collection would appear posthumously published by his son, François in 1631, gaining instant popularity. The work, steeped in Protestant moralization and chiliastic attitudes, was both anti-Catholic and anti-Spanish and was studied in Zeeland both at home and Church as part of familial religious edification.

Valerius' historical significance lies neither in his poetry's artistic expression, which was stunted and often bare, nor in the originality of his work, which is often viewed as derrivative, rather, his compendium served as a mirror on his time and mores, while the strong sense of Dutch nation and identity that permeate this collection would serve to make his work a popular favourite in the Netherlands in times of trouble (i.e. the German occupation of the Netherlands in the Second World War).

At the same time, the German translation of his most well known song Wilt Heden Nu Treden (known in English as We Gather Together): Wir treten zum Beten or Altniederländisches Dankgebet (Old Dutch Thanksgiving Prayer), became a potent symbol of the Throne and Altar-alliance of German civil religion until 1918.

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