History of religion in the Netherlands
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The history of religion in the Netherlands has been characterized by considerable diversity of religious thought and practice.
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[edit] Before the Reformation
Before the Reformation, the Netherlands formed part of the Roman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire and followed their religions.
Before the advent of Christianity the Netherlands were populated by Celtic tribes in the South, which adhered to Celtic polytheism and Germanic tribes in the North, which adhered to Germanic paganism. After the Roman Empire occupied the South, Roman mythology became important there, as well as religions from the Middle East, including Judaism, Mithraism and later Christianity.
In the 8th century Anglo-Saxon missionaries like Boniface attempted to Christianize the land inhabited by the Frisians. The Frisians resisted: Boniface was killed in 754 in Dokkum by the Frisians for chopping down a holy tree. The missionaries gradually succeeded in the conversion of the North in the 8th century.
In the Middle Ages the Catholic Church became an important institution in the year 1000 the Bishop of Utrecht had inherited half the Netherlands. Christian teachings also led to laws against prostitution, gambling and money lending.
[edit] Reformation
During the Renaissance and the Reformation an independent Dutch religious tradition began to take shape in an independent Netherlands.
In the 14th and 15th century, the first calls were heard for religious reform. Geert Groote established the Brethren of the Common Life, an influential mystical order. Another prominent reformer was the humanist Erasmus who harshly criticised what he considered the excesses of the Roman Catholic Church.
The 16th and 17th century were characterized by the Reformation, which greatly influenced the history of the Netherlands. The first wave of Reformation, initiated by Martin Luther, did not come to the Netherlands. The second wave of Reformation, Anabaptism, became very popular in the counties of Holland and Friesland. Anabaptists were very radical and believed that the apocalypse was very near. They refused to live the old way, and began new communities, creating considerable chaos. A prominent Dutch anabaptist was Menno Simons, who initiated the Mennonite church. Another Anabaptist, Jantje van Leyden became the ruler of a newly founded city, New Jerusalem. Anabaptists survived throughout the centuries and they were recognized by the States-General of the Netherlands in 1578. Institutionalized Dutch baptism stood for a model for both English and American Baptists.
The third wave of the Reformation, Calvinism, arrived in the Netherlands in the 1560s, converting both parts of the elite and the common population, mostly in Flanders. The Spanish government, under Phillip II started harsh prosecution campaigns, supported by the Spanish inquisition. In reaction this persecution, Calvinists rebelled. First there was the Beeldenstorm in 1566, which involved the destruction of religious depictions in Churches. In 1568 William the Silent, a convert to Calvinism, started the Eighty Years' War to liberate the Calvinist Dutch from the Catholic Spaniards. The counties of Holland and Zealand were conquered by Calvinists in 1572. Only a few people were calvinist in Holland and Zeeland at that time. The estates of Holland, led by Paulus Buys decided to support the prince of Orange. All churches in the Calvinist territories became Calvinist and most of the population in these territories converted to Calvinism. Because the Netherlands had ceded from Spain over religious issues, it practiced tolerance towards people of different religions and opened its borders for religious dissenters. Descartes for instance lived in the Netherlands for most of his adult life.
In the early 17th century the Roman Catholic Jesuits launched large conversion campaigns, using celebrations, music and education programmes to attract people[citation needed]. The number of adherents of Catholicism began to grow again, especially in rural areas. At the same time, the cities received an influx of Protestant immigrants from Germany, Flanders and France and developed a Protestant character. Orthodox Calvinists had no interference from the liberals in the front-line areas next to the Spanish Netherlands. They converted a belt of land from the south west (the province of Zeeland), via the Veluwe, to the north of the Netherlands (until the city of Staphorst). This remains Orthodox Calvinist until this day. During the Twelve Years' Truce (between 1609 and 1621) in the Eighty Years war, the Netherlands saw a civil war along religious lines. The Synod of Dordrecht tried to bring an end to an internal theological conflict within the Calvinist church between two tendencies of Calvinism the orthodox Gomarists or Contra-Remonstrants and the liberal Arminians or Remonstrants. Civil war broke out in the 1610s between orthodox and liberal Calvinists. The liberal sovereign estates of Holland left the Republic. The orthodox side (prince Maurice of Orange and the other provinces) won and the official head of state of the county of Holland, Johan van Oldebarnevelt, was executed. Calvinism became the official state religion and political offices could only be occupied by Calvinists. Other religions were tolerated, but were not permitted to practise their religion in public.
In 1648 the independence of the Netherlands was recognized by the Treaty of Westphalia, the Netherlands did not only include the seven relatively independent Protestant provinces of the Dutch Republic but also a Roman Catholic Generaliteitsland, which was governed by the States-General, this area roughly includes the current provinces of North Brabant and Limburg, which remained Roman Catholic. The Netherlands became known for its religious tolerance and became a refuge for persecuted and a home for many migrants. The proportion of first-generation immigrants from outside the Netherlands among the population of Amsterdam was nearly 50% in the 17th and 18th centuries.[citation needed] Jews had their own laws and formed a separate society. Many Jews, especially from Antwerp, migrated to Amsterdam. The Netherlands also hosted religious refugees, including Huguenots from France and Puritans from England (the most famous of the latter being the Pilgrims).
[edit] 19th century
The 19th century witnessed a rising conflict between Catholics, liberal Calvinists and orthodox Calvinists, and a Dutch solution, pillarization.
Invading forces of Revolutionary France in 1795, which established the Batavian Republic, brought equal rights and emancipation for all religions in the Netherlands. In 1813 the calvinist Republic united with the catholic Southern Netherlands to form the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. The union split in 1839 after the Belgian Revolution, which was partially motivated by religious differences between Protestants and catholics. The position of Catholics of the Kingdom of the Netherlands became worse again. The Catholic hierarchy became forbidden and Catholics were forbidden to hold religious marches in all provinces except for Noord Brabant and Limburg.
The Netherlands was ruled by liberal calvinist elite, which dominated the bureaucracy and the Dutch Reformed Church. In 1886 a group of Orthodox Calvinists, led by Abraham Kuyper split from the Dutch Reformed Church. In 1892 they founded the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, one of the major neo-calvinist denominations. Kuyper also organized a whole range of religiously inspired organizations, he was inspired by his conception of the separation of Church and State, sphere sovereignty. He founded an orthodox Calvinist newspaper, labour union, schools, a university and a political party. During this period Catholics began to do the same. The Netherlands became separated between three religious pillars, an orthodox Calvinist, a Catholic and a neutral one. These were subcultures which did not interfere which each other. During the 20th century a separate socialist pillar would also develop. This phenomenon is called pillarization. There was considerable religious tolerance between these subcultures and they cooperated with each other at the level of government. There were incidents however: Roman Catholic and Protestant boys were prevented from playing together by the police. Protestants did not attend funerals of Roman Catholic friends. The annual Easter procession in a certain Roman Catholic village always marched past Protestant houses, and all the windows of those houses were smashed with stones by boys joining the procession. Jews had become fully integrated into Dutch society after the 1795. Most Jews were aligned with the socialist pillar. They formed a considerable minority: one eighth of the population of Amsterdam was Jewish.
[edit] The Second World War
In 1940 the Netherlands became occupied by Nazi Germany. Most of the Dutch Jewish community was exterminated by the Nazis during this occupation.
In February 1941, there was a general strike in Amsterdam and the surrounding areas against the first razzia. This was the largest act of resistance against the persecution of Jews during the Second World War. The main resistance groups were of Orthodox Calvinists and Communists, although the other religions and ideologies also had their own resistance groups. An important action of the resistance movement was hiding Jews from Nazis. There were 140,000 Jews in the Netherlands in 1940. 20,000 of them were free from persecution, because they were married to non-Jews, or because some of their parents and grandparents were non-Jews. Another 20,000 Jews hid from the Germans. From the 101,000 Jews that were deported, only 1,000 were alive after the war. The percentage of Dutch Jews that were exterminated was much higher than in other countries, including Germany.
[edit] Secularization
After the Second World War the major religions began to decline, while a new religion, Islam, began to increase in numbers.
During the 1960s and 1970s pillarization began to weaken and the population became less religious. In 1971, 39% of the Dutch population were members of the Roman Catholic church; by 2005, their share of the population had dropped to 27% (KASKI data). The proportion of adherents of mainline Protestantism declined in the same period from 31% to 12%.[1] An additional 5% of the population adheres to other Protestant churches. With only 44% of the Dutch currently adhering to a church, the Netherlands is one of the least religious countries of Europe. During the 1980s and 1990s the Dutch policy on abortion, euthanasia, homosexuality and prostitution became very liberal. As a result of the declining religious adherence the two major strands of Calvinism, the Dutch Reformed Church and the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, together with a small Lutheran group began to cooperate, first as the Samen op weg Kerken ("Together on the road churches") and since 2004 as the Protestant Church in the Netherlands, a united Protestant church.
During the same period Islam increased from nearly 0% to 6%. The main Islamic immigrants came from Surinam and Indonesia, as a result of decolonization, Turkey and Morocco, as migrant workers, and Iraq, Iran, Bosnia and Afghanistan as refugees. In the early 21st century religious tensions between native Dutch people and migrant Muslims is increasing. After the rise of the populist politician Pim Fortuyn, who sought to defend the Dutch liberal culture against what he saw as a "backwards religion",[2] stricter immigration laws were enacted. Religious tensions heightened after Theo van Gogh was killed in 2004 by Mohammed Bouyeri, a conservative Muslim.