Dutch (ethnic group)

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The Dutch
Image:Dutchfolkore.jpg
• Dutch girls in traditional Dutch costumes (1920s)•
</tr>
</tr>
Total population</tr>

est. 25 million - 28 million</br> (14,000,000 - 15,000,000 with full Dutch ancestry) </br> (With addition of Flemings: ~ 34 million)</br>(Red → Dutch-born) </br> (Green → Reported ancestry) </tr>

Regions with significant populations</tr>
Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands Template:!!align="right"| 13,186,600
(Ethnic Dutch)
472,600[1]
(Dutch Eurasians)
Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [2]

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Image:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium Template:!!align="right"| 121,489, of which 59,000 in the border region
(Not including Flemings)
Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [3]

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Template:Country data USA Template:!!align="right"| 5,087,191 (110,000)[4] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [5]

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Template:Country data South Africa Template:!!align="right"| est. 5,000,000 (45,000)[6] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [7]

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Image:Flag of Canada.svg Canada Template:!!align="right"| 923,310 (120,000)[8] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [9]

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Template:Country data BRA Template:!!align="right"| 530,000 - 3,000,000 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [10]

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Image:Flag of Australia.svg Australia Template:!!align="right"| est. 270,000 (85,000)[11] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [12]

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Template:Country data GER Template:!!align="right"| est. 164,000, of which 41,000 in the border region Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [13]

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Template:Country data Suriname Template:!!align="right"| est. 151,000 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [14]

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Template:Country data New Zealand Template:!!align="right"| est. 100,000 (25,000)[15] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [16]

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Template:Country data FRA Template:!!align="right"| est. 83,000 (30,000)[17] Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [18]

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Template:Country data Sri Lanka Template:!!align="right"| 40,000
(Burgher people) Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [19]

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Template:Country data UK Template:!!align="right"| 40,000 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [20]

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Template:Country data DEN Template:!!align="right"| est. 26,000 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [21]

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Image:Flag of Spain.svg Spain Template:!!align="right"| est. 20,000 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [22]

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#REDIRECT Template:Country data Switzerland Template:!!align="right"| 16,143 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [23]

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#REDIRECT Template:Country data Republic of Ireland Template:!!align="right"| 4,292 Template:!!style="padding-left:1em;"| [24]

Template:!-








Language(s)</tr>

Dutch, Frisian </br> Main languages of Dutch emigrants: English and Afrikaans.
</tr>

Religion(s)</tr>

(In alphabetical order)
Agnosticism, Atheism, Protestant (mostly Calvinist), Roman Catholic, other.[25][26][27]</tr>

Related ethnic groups</tr>

(In alphabetical order)
Afrikaners,[28] Flemings,[29] Frisians.[30]</tr>

The Dutch people (Dutch: Nederlanders ) are an ethnic group forming the majority (80.9%) of the population in the Netherlands.[31] Historically the Dutch chiefly lived in the Low Countries and Northern France but since the 12th century have migrated all over the world.[32]

The Dutch predominantly descend from various Germanic tribes,[33][34] and speak Dutch, one of the three most spoken Germanic languages today.[35]

The Dutch region has been permanently inhabited since Neolithic times. Nevertheless the Dutch mainly descend from 7th century immigrants, the Franks, who arrived and settled in the Low Countries during the migration period.[36] They arose from relative obscurity when they, for political, religious, and cultural reasons, revolted against Europe's most powerful nation, Habsburg Spain, in what became a struggle for independence lasting eighty years (1568–1648).

The Dutch emerged victorious and established the first truly independent Dutch state in history: the Dutch Republic, which would soon manifest itself as one of Europe's Great Powers and have complete naval dominance for nearly a century.

During the age of Imperialism the Dutch Empire controlled 3.7 million km2 (1.4 million sq mi) of the Earth's surface and had a total of 80,000,000 inhabitants in 1940.[37]

Today, Dutchmen and their descendants can be found all over the world, most notably in Europe, the Americas, Southern Africa and Oceania, ranging from (near) completely assimilated to isolated communities.

Contents

[edit] Etymology

[edit] Dutch (Diets)

Further information: Dietsch

The origins of the word Dutch go back to Proto-Germanic, the ancestor of all Germanic languages, *theudo (meaning "national/popular"); akin to Old Dutch dietsc, Old High German diutsch, Old English þeodisc and Gothic þiuda all meaning "(of) the common (Germanic) people". As the tribes among the Germanic peoples began to differentiate its meaning began to change. The Anglo-Saxons of England for example gradually stopped referring to themselves as þeodisc and instead started to use Englisc, after their tribe. On the continent the situation was different, and *theudo evolved into two main forms: Diets (Dutch meaning "Dutch (people)", alongside Nederlanders) and Deutsch (German, meaning "German (people)"). At first the English language used (the contemporary form of) Dutch to refer to any or all of the Germanic speakers on the European mainland. Gradually its meaning shifted to the closest Germanic people near them: the Dutch.[38]

[edit] Nederlanders

Nederlanders is the endonym the Dutch use to refer to themselves. Until the Second World War it was used alongside Diets, when the latter was dropped due to extensive use of the word by the German Nazi occupiers and Dutch fascists. The geographical term Nederland (and its plural Nederlanden) originated in the early Middle Ages and was used to denote the low-lying lands situated in the delta of the river Rhine and its tributaries.[39][40][41] In addition, Low Countries (Lage Landen in Dutch) is a commonly used name for the historical region of the Netherlands and Belgium taken together. Although not as old as Diets, the term Nederlands has been in continuous use since 1250.[42]

In English, the gentilic or demonym of the Netherlands is Dutch, not Netherlander. As general adjectives, Netherlandic and Netherlandish (for example, as in Early Netherlandish art) are acceptable, but far surpassed by Dutch in both daily and official use.

[edit] Dutch ethnicity

An ethnic group or ethnicity is a population of human beings whose members identify with each other, usually on the basis of a presumed common genealogy or ancestry.[43] Ethnic groups are also often united by common cultural, behavioural, linguistic, ritualistic, or religious traits. The defining characteristics of the Dutch as an ethnic group (although no longer as obvious as before) are:

  • Religion: Although a single religion no longer plays a dominant role in the Netherlands,[44] Dutch society is nevertheless influenced by Christian tradition, which is imminent in a landscape dominated by church towers, celebration of Christian holidays such as Christmas, Easter and Ascension, and several biblical proverbs and sayings.
  • Language: The Dutch share a common language, Dutch.
  • Culture: The Dutch culture is a north-western European culture, be it with quite a few unique elements. Dutch customs are also different from other European countries.
  • Ancestry: The main specific ancestry of the Dutch are the Franks, a migratory Germanic people (themselves an alliance of a number of smaller tribes) who arrived and settled in the Low Countries during the collapse of the Roman Empire and the migration period.[45][46]

[edit] Terminology

The term Dutch can reflect different definitions, which are listed below.
In this article only the latter 2 definition will be used, as this article only concerns the Dutch as an ethnic group and Dutch ethnicity.

  1. It can refer to the entire population of the (country) the Netherlands. Note that the Kingdom of the Netherlands includes certain Caribbean islands with an ethnically distinct population, and they may or may not be included in the population of the country and hence in the term Nederlanders.
  2. It can refer to those with Dutch nationality and citizenship (which is essentially the same under Dutch law). Thus in nationality law, the term Nederlander denotes a citizen of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and can hence also include persons with clearly non-Dutch ethnicity.
  3. It can refer to the Dutch nation.
  4. It can refer to the Dutch ethnic group.
  5. It can refer to descendants of Dutch emigrants (for example, Dutch-Americans).
(Note that the Pennsylvania Dutch do not fall into this category, the term is a misnomer for a minority of German ancestry)

[edit] Concerning the relation between Dutch citizenship, ethnicity and autochthonity

When concerning Dutch citizenship the Netherlands employ a policy largely based on jus sanguinis ("right of blood"). In other words, citizenship is conferred primarily by birth to a Dutch parent, irrespective of place of birth.

For example, a child of a foreign father and a Dutch mother can automatically receive Dutch citizenship. A child with a Dutch father and a foreign mother can also automatically receive Dutch citizenship, with the added requirement that the father recognize the child as his own.

However, having a single Dutch parent does not make one an autochthonous inhabitant of the Netherlands, as two Dutch parents are required for that status. Nevertheless, having a single Dutch parent or (some) Dutch ancestry does make one (at least partly) ethnically Dutch, but this notion has no legal status in the Netherlands and will not grant easier acces to citizenship.

[edit] Total number of Dutch

The Dutch are a relatively small ethnic group, making up about 0.4% of the world population,[47] and 1.9% of the European population.[48] (2.8% of the European Union is ethnically Dutch).[49]

In the narrowest sense the total number of ethnic Dutch is about 14 to 15 million people. In this sense only people with full Dutch ancestry are counted. The number of people outside the Netherlands, mostly post 1950 emigrants and their children, with full Dutch ancestry is roughly 1,600,000 to 2,000,000.[50]

First-generation emigrants with Dutch nationality are officially treated as Dutch, resident overseas. The children of two Dutch-born emigrant parents are defined by Statistics Netherlands as "autochtoon". This means that the children of the Dutch immigrants to Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, who left the Netherlands after the Second World War (often while still in their twenties) are considered autochthone, even if they do not have Dutch nationality (they may qualify for it).

In a broader sense the number of Dutch people is much higher. This is when for example people with partial Dutch ancestry are included. This way the number of Dutch totals at around 25 million people.

[edit] Ethnogenesis

See also: Germanic peoples

The Dutch nation was defined in the middle of the 19th century, when the current state of the Netherlands emerged after the secession of Belgium, thus also the Dutch-speaking Belgians. This however, did not coincide with the Dutch ethnic group, which had long since emerged.

The Dutch republic for example was the first truly independent Dutch state, before its establishment there had been various personal unions between a number, and in the end all, Dutch fiefs/provinces.

The exact date when the Dutch emerged as a new ethnic group is, like with most other ethnic groups, difficult to determine.[51] The Franks arrived in the Northern and Central Low Countries around the 3rd and 4th century AD (after the retreat of Roman troops) and started the development of a people later known as the Dutch. The Dutch language was spoken and attested around 450 AD,[52] and emerged from Old Frankish. The first people to speak the language did speak Dutch, but they would most likely be classified as being Franks today.

The cultural and linguistic distance between the modern Germanic peoples is rather large. Although in the beginning the Germanic tribes were united by mutual intelligible dialects (and a more or less single mythology), today, of about 50 related Germanic languages, only Afrikaans (a Dutch semi-creol mainly spoken by the Afrikaners, partly the descendants of Dutch colonists) is mutually intelligible with Dutch.[53][54]

[edit] Epic ancestry

Image:Bataafseeed.jpg
The Batavians swear allegiance to Gaius Julius Civilis, by Rembrandt.

The Batavians were a relatively small Germanic tribe, allied to the Roman Empire and romanized, who between 69 and 70 AD rebelled against Rome. The rebels led by Gaius Julius Civilis managed to destroy four legions and inflict humiliating defeats on the Roman army. After their initial successes, a massive Roman army led by Quintus Petillius Cerialis eventually defeated them.

From the 16th century until the early 20th century, the Batavians were falsely regarded as the sole ancestors of the Dutch. Dutch intellectuals saw a parallel between the Dutch revolt against Spain and the Batavian revolt against the Roman Empire. As a result a number of things related to the Dutch are and were named after this tribe. Some examples include:

Modern historians view the Batavians as a minor contributor and historical sources indicate the Batavians most likely joined the much larger tribe of the Franks when they arrived in the Low Countries.

[edit] Regional Dutch subgroups

Before the large-scale political developments of 1384 (the establishment of the Burgundian Netherlands) and for some time afterwards, there was no sense of overlapping political unity among the Dutch, and Dutch soldiers from various regions often fought each other during this largely feudal period, and allegiance towards ones own county or even city was often more important to the Dutch than towards their people as a whole.[55] This began to change as the Dutch entered a proces in which they were being gradually politically unified into a single country/political entity. Today, there is still very much a regional identity among the Dutch, though not nearly as strong as 700 years ago, which is primarily expressed in the continuation or restoration of local traditions and the speaking of a certain dialect of Dutch.

[edit] Genetics and appearance

The Dutch descend from groups of people who settled in Europe during the Paleolithic and Neolithic eras. These people originated in what is now the Middle East and brought with them a distinct set of Y chromosomal and mitochondrial haplotypes as well as Indo-European languages, agriculture and pottery. Hence, the Dutch share a lot of their genetics with other European people; nevertheless, there are some mutations that arose among the Dutch.[56] The percentages of hair colour for the Dutch population are 43% brown, 40% blond and 17% other (note that this includes non-western ethnic minorities, so the actual percentages of blond or brown hair for the Dutch ethnic group are likely to be higher)[57] Generally the Dutch are described as being very tall, and they are indeed among the tallest people on earth, but this is a relatively recent development. It was only in the 1950s that the Dutch passed Americans, who stood tallest for most of the last 200 years. In fact, in 1848, one man out of four was rejected by the Dutch military because he was shorter than 5' 2" (157 cm).[58]

[edit] Related ethno-linguistic groups

Template:Dutch labelled

[edit] Flemings

Main articles: Flanders and Flemings.

The relation between the Dutch and Flemings is a complicated one. The existence of Flemings as an ethnic group is itself debated, and the idea of a Flemish nation or ethnic group is itself fairly recent.[59]

[edit] Relation between Dutch and Flemings

The Flemish once were, and sometimes still are, regarded as "Dutch". It is, however, inaccurate to view the Flemish as a Dutch offshoot. A more accurate view would be to consider the modern Dutch and Flemish as having been a single people which subsequently (due to all kinds of factors) split, with the Dutch 'keeping' the groups name in the international sphere. When this exact split occurred is open to debate (as is, in some circles, the split itself). Some claim it began when the Dutch Republic signed the Treaty of Münster, thus creating essentially the first political division between the Dutch, while others say it wasn't until the start of the Flemish movement at the beginning of the 20th century.[60] As a result of this the Flemish people are generally not regarded as identical nowadays, and most Dutch people see them as a separate ethnic group. At the same time however, the Dutch and Flemish see themselves as the most similar people,[61] and some institutions see "Fleming" as an alternative term for "Dutch".[62]

The situation in Belgium itself was/is very vague. Until 1980, for example, the Flemish community was called the Nederlandse Cultuurgemeenschap (Dutch for "Dutch cultural community") and there are people who deny the existence of the Flemish as an ethnic group, and refer to them as Dutch-speaking Belgians instead.

[edit] Reunification

In the current (2007) political stalemate in Belgium, between the Francophone and Dutch-speaking inhabitants (alongside other tensions) the question whether, if it should come to a dissolution of Belgium, Flanders should join the Netherlands has become a considerable issue.[63]

[edit] Walloons and Northern French

Walloons, the French-speaking Belgians, generally do not speak Dutch today, but in many cases (some) heritage can be linked to the (historical) Dutch. Many Walloon surnames for example are of Dutch origin[64] and some of the most well-known Walloons, such as Jacques Brel, Goswin de Stassart and Paul Émile de Puydt were (often partly) of Dutch(-speaking) heritage. In Northern France Dutch has been the traditional language for over 1,400 years. As a result of this, as well as migration of other Dutch towards the south, over 1,250,000 French people (out of a population of roughly 60 million) have Dutch surnames.[65] The position of these people is somewhat vague as they, although relatively close to the Dutch-culture area, are often frenchified if not entirely French. For example, in the now French city of Calais one can still find people singing traditional Dutch songs, even though the people who sing them have no idea what they mean.[66]

[edit] Afrikaners

Main articles: Afrikaners and Afrikaans.

The Afrikaners are an ethnic group who live in South Africa and Namibia and who are mainly (though not exclusively) of Dutch descent, much in the same way as Dutch Americans, Dutch Australians or Dutch Canadians. There is however one major difference. The Dutch emigrants and, more importantly, their descendants in Canada, the U.S. and Australia, have adopted English as their first language, while Afrikaners did not and today speak a creolized version of Dutch. Their language, Afrikaans, is mutually intelligible with Dutch and it was hence easier to maintain cultural bands between the two, now separate, groups.

Until the early 20th century, at the time of the First and Second Boer Wars, there was a strong sense of unity, this has gradually faded. Most Afrikaners acknowledge that they descend from the Dutch, but they generally do not consider themselves to be ethnic Dutch, and they may not be considered "Dutch" in the Netherlands itself.[67]

[edit] Frisians

Frisian may refer to an ethnic group, a regional or cultural identity, to inhabitants of the Province of Friesland, or to speakers of the West Frisian language.

Historically, Frisia was a county that was relatively uninvolved with Guelders, Utrecht, Holland, Zeeland and Flanders until the early Middle Ages. However, after a series of wars (often followed by revolts) between the Dutch fiefs and the Frisians they were eventually defeated. From the 1400s onwards Hollandic government and civil servants were installed and from then the fortunes of Friesland are intertwined with those of the present-day Netherlands.[68]

Though along with Dutch many Frisians speak the West Frisian language, which is not a Dutch dialect but a historically separate language and have (to some degree) a separate culture they are not treated as a separate group in Dutch official statistics. In this way Frisians are both Dutch and Frisians. It should be noted that the term Frisian in both Dutch and West Frisian is used virtually exclusively for the West Frisians. Frisians in the Netherlands generally do not feel or see themselves as part of a larger group of Frisians, namely the East and North Frisians of Germany and Denmark, but, according to a 1970 inquiry, identify themselves more with the Dutch than with speakers of the other Frisian languages.[69]

[edit] Ethnic nationalism

Image:Dutch in Germany.png
Dutch in early modern Germany (17th-19th century)

There has been some call for a "Greater Netherlands", combining the Dutch-speaking regions in Belgium with the Netherlands, since the late 19th century. This wish was voiced by Dutch, and especially Belgian, fascists during the 1930s, but the occupation of Belgium and the Netherlands by Nazi Germany brought only some tiny border changes. After the Second World War interest in enlarging the Netherlands dwindled.

The Belgian revolution, domination by a francophone elite, and structural disadvantage for Dutch-speaking Belgians led, at the end of the 19th century, to an oppositional "Flemish" (ie. Dutch-speaking Belgian) cultural movement, which soon politicised. It revived interest in the idea of reunification - at present in the form of unity between the Netherlands and Flanders, rather than a recreation of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. Support for the idea has varied: at present no political party represented in the Dutch parliament actively supports it. In Flanders, there are several parties who openly strive for independence (such as the N-VA, Vlaams Belang, VLOTT and Lijst Dedecker), but none of them actively support or reject an union with the Netherlands. Support for the break-up of Belgium is less strong in Wallonia, as Flanders is financially much stronger and independent, and there is no major political support there for unification with France. An obstacle to any break-up of Belgium is that both groups claim the capital Brussels, historically a Dutch-speaking city, currently near 80% francophone, although officially bilingual.

[edit] Dutch diaspora

Main article: Dutch diaspora

Emigrants from the Netherlands since the Second World War went mainly to the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, (until the 1970s) to South Africa, and Dutch immigrants can be found in most developed countries. In several former Dutch colonies and trading settlements, there are isolated ethnic groups of full or partial Dutch ancestry.

[edit] The Dutch in Asia

Image:Neusaap.jpg
The "Dutch" Monkey.

The Dutch have had a profound effect on the history of South East Asia, Taiwan and Japan; the Dutch settlement on Deshima provided for centuries the only means of cultural exchange between Japan and European civilization, and indeed most of the outside world. In many cases the Dutch were the first Europeans the natives would encounter. As a result there has been some considerable ethnic stereotyping. The Japanese described the Dutch as red-haired barbarians[70] and in Malay, the language of the former Dutch East Indies, the name for the Long-nosed Monkey literally translates as "Dutchman", as in Eastern Asian eyes the noses of Europeans were exceedingly large.

[edit] Descendants
Main article: Indo people

After the Indonesian Revolution, most Dutch were either evacuated or evicted from Indonesia. Ever since the earliest days of the VOC several waves of mainly Dutch males decided to stay in the islands now known as Indonesia. Through the centuries there developed a relatively large Dutch-speaking population of mixed Dutch and Indonesian desccent, known as Indos or Dutch-Indonesians. Nowadays the majority of this group lives in the Netherlands.

[edit] The Dutch in Australia and New Zealand

Main articles: Dutch New Zealanders, Dutch Australians
I really accuse my fellow Dutch people of being too quiet and too polite here. We should have made waves, because other groups did and got something for it![71]

A Dutch New Zealander.

Perhaps the most successful integration of Dutch people took place in Australia and New Zealand. After the second World War thousands of Dutch people emigrated to Australia, peaking in the late 1950s and early 1960s. There are 24 Dutch language programmes around Australia and weekly and monthly Dutch news papers plus many social, community and religious clubs. Despite these figures, in both Australia and New Zealand Dutch people are highly integrated. Apart from the typical Dutch surnames many descendants bear, they are largely indistinguishable from the largest ethnic groups, the Anglo-Celtic Australians (85%[72] ) in Australia and other New Zealand Europeans in New Zealand. One major exception exists though. and this concerns senior citizens of Dutch decent, many of whom (because of old age or dementia) have lost the ability to speak English and fall back on their mother tongue; Dutch. A major social problem as they largely lack a way to communicate. Their children generally do not speak Dutch natively or sufficiently.

[edit] The Dutch in the Western Hemisphere

[edit] United States
Main article: Dutch Americans
Image:Dutch-Americans.jpg
A Dutch family in New York (c.1880)

The Dutch had settled in America long before the establishment of the United States of America.[73] For a long time the Dutch lived in Dutch colonies, owned and regulated by the Dutch Republic, which later became part of the Thirteen Colonies. Nevertheless, many Dutch communities remained virtually isolated towards the rest of America up until the American Civil War, in which the Dutch fought for the North and adopted many American ways.[74]

Most future waves of Dutch immigrants were quickly assimilated. There have been three American presidents of Dutch descent: Martin van Buren (8th, first president who was not of British descent, first language was Dutch), Franklin D. Roosevelt (32nd, elected to four terms in office, he served from 1933 to 1945, the only U.S. president to have served more than two terms) and Theodore Roosevelt (26th).

Many Dutch expatriated as well as Americans living in the Netherlands have often described parallels/differences between their respective peoples. According to the American K. A Carrol the Dutch/Netherlands can be compared to the Americans/United States as follows:[75]

  • The Netherlands are flatter than Kansas.
  • The Dutch are as blunt as New Yorkers.
  • The Dutch are more attractive than Californians ... but they drive worse than Texans.
  • Dutch food is like the Midwest -- nothing to write home about.
  • The Dutch live in row houses like in San Francisco.
  • Everything is as neat and proper as Maine.
  • The Dutch are the opposite pole from the big spenders in Las Vegas ... but as festive as the people in New Orleans.
  • Dutch weather is as wet as Washington.
  • The Dutch are as loyal as people in Montana ... and complain like the people in Washington, D.C.
[edit] Canada
Main article: Dutch Canadians
It's hard to get close to Canadians because they are reserved. They are always helpful in emergencies, but then they go back in their shell and want to be private. We Dutch are very open and always ready with comments, criticism and advice. We're not afraid to come out straight and ask, "How much money do you make?" The Canadians think we are rude for this.[76]

A Dutch Canadian.

Image:Dutch2000.png
Percentage of Dutch Americans per U.S. county according to the 2002 U.S. Census.

According to the 2001 Canadian census 923,310 Canadians claim full or partial Dutch ancestry.

The first Dutch people to come to Canada were Dutch-Americans among the United Empire Loyalists. The largest wave was in the late 19th and early 20th century, when large numbers of Dutch helped settle the Canadian west. During this period significant numbers also settled in major cities like Toronto. While interrupted by the First World War this migration returned in the 1920s, but again halted during the Great Depression and Second World War. After the war a large number of Dutch immigrants moved to Canada, including a number of war brides of the Canadian soldiers who liberated the Netherlands.

Dutch Canadians, like Dutch Australians, have a reputation of being highly, if not perfectly, integrated ethnic groups. Nevertheless many Canadians of Dutch descent and recent Dutch expatriates still judge Canadian society by their own, Dutch, standards and morals. Generally they view other Canadians to be slow, laid back and passive. Traits that the Dutch find to be irritating.[77]

They (Canadians) never seem to protest, but just accept most things.[78]

A Dutch expatriate.

[edit] Other notable "Hyphenated Dutchmen"

Some examples of people of Dutch descent among other nations/peoples:

[edit] History

The history of the Dutch, as of most European peoples, is complex and intertwined through migrations and shifting empires. In this section, a short overview of these issues in relation to the approximate area of the current Netherlands is sketched.

In the Roman Empire, the imperial boundary ran east-west through the present Netherlands, along the Rhine. Within the empire, tribal groups included the Belgae (whose name was adopted in 1830 for the new Kingdom of Belgium), and the Batavi (whose name was adopted for the Dutch Batavian Republic). After the Fall of the Roman Empire, by the end of the Migration Period, the Low Countries were inhabited by Frisians, Saxons and the Franks, a Germanic people first recorded living in Pannonia. Of these three groups, the Franks were most dominant,[79] and would in fact conquer large areas of Europe in the subsequent centuries. In 843, the Treaty of Verdun divided the (Frankish) Carolingian Empire into three kingdoms for the three sons of Louis the Pious. The Low Countries became part of Middle Francia under Emperor Lothair I.

In 962, the Holy Roman Empire was established with the coronation of Otto the Great, extending from the Low Countries to Italy. The Holy Roman empire was a largely decentralised state and its authority within the low countries was never very strong. Later, semi-independent fiefdoms formed in the Low Countries; the most powerful being Brabant, Flanders, Guelders, Holland and Luxembourg. The first steps towards political unification of the Low Countries took place under the dukes of Burgundy (until 1473). The Pragmatic Sanction of 1549, issued by Charles V, established the Low Countries as an independent entity, the Seventeen Provinces, with boundaries approximating to the present Benelux, as an entity separate from the Holy Roman Empire and France.

Although the Seventeen Provinces had become a political unity, there were still great regional differences. The eastern (e.g., Guelders and Liege) and southern provinces (Artois) were less densely populated and agrarian. These provinces were also partially oriented towards their (German or French) neighbours. A division between North and South was not foreseeable at the time. The primary contrast was between the rich urbanised coastal provinces (Flanders, Zealand and Holland), and the less developed peripheral domains.[80]

As the Reformation gained influence in Europe, Calvinism became very influential in the Seventeen Provinces, including Artesia and Flanders, the base of the Spanish governors. When Catholic Habsburg Spain turned to repressive policies, this added to general dissatisfaction in the Seventeen Provinces. In 1566, a wave of iconoclastic attacks on Catholic churches began what is now known as the Dutch Revolt. During the succeeding rebellion, the Spanish forces managed to re-establish their power in the southern provinces. In the north, the Dutch Republic emerged, defining for the first time an independent Dutch nation. The economic golden age, and spread of Calvinism, redefined the Dutchman across Europe as a Hollander rather than a Fleming, as had previously been the case.[81]

Image:Dutch-Empire-coloured.png
A map showing the territory that the Dutch held at various points in history.

As the Spanish forces reconquered the Southern cities (in present-day Belgium), of which the fall of Antwerp in 1585 was most notable, many Calvinists, including much of the local economic and cultural elites, fled north. The Southern Netherlands remained under Spanish rule, and remained almost entirely Catholic. In 1648, the Peace of Westphalia recognised the de facto geopolitical division of the former Seventeen provinces. The Dutch Republic prospered and created the trade-based Dutch Empire overseas, while the Southern Netherlands had lost their leading economic role in Europe. In the 18th century, the power of the Dutch republic started to diminish.

After a short lived existence as the Batavian Republic supported by French revolutionaries, and as the vassal state Kingdom of Holland, the Low Countries were for a short time (1810–1813), annexed by the French Empire. At this time, the English occupied the Dutch colonial possessions. Except for the Cape Colony (South Africa) and Ceylon (Sri Lanka), the colonial possessions were returned after Napoleon had been defeated. The lasting division between the Dutch and the Boers (who were Dutch settlers in South Africa) started here. When France was defeated in 1814 and again after the Hundred Days Campaign in 1815, the winning coalition, created the United Kingdom of the Netherlands comprising of the Northern and the Southern Netherlands at the Congress of Vienna. The new state, intended to act as a semi-buffer state between France and Prussia, proved to be unworkable; not only did it include different ethnic and linguistic groups (Walloons, Germans and Dutch), the state was also divided by cultural, religious, and internal economic differences. In 1830, the southern provinces declared their independence in the Belgian revolution. In 1839, the independence of Belgium was recognised by the northern Kingdom of the Netherlands. With the resolution of the status of Luxembourg in 1890, the three states acquired most of their present boundaries. The Netherlands are a constitutional monarchy.

[edit] Influence on the world

See also: Dutch Empire

Although comparatively small in numbers, the Dutch have definitely made their mark on the world, as we know it today. The Dutch Republic was an economic and military power during much of the 17th century, and involved in many conflicts of the time, such as the Anglo-Dutch Wars.The economy was carried by private enterprises, for the first time on that scale and the Dutch East India Company issued the first freely tradable stock, one of the cornerstones of modern economy.

Dutch colonialism still influences the lives of many today. Beginning in the 16th century, Europeans such as the Dutch began to establish trading posts and forts along the coasts of western and southern Africa. Eventually, a large number of Dutch, augmented by French Huguenots and Germans, settled in the Cape Colony. Their descendants in South Africa, the Afrikaners and the Coloureds, are the largest European-descended groups in Africa today, see Demographics of Africa. The Dutch also controlled what is now known as Indonesia, and waged various wars against its native inhabitants in a series conflicts raging from the early 16th to the late 20th century. The area surrounding New York was a Dutch colony and in fact many street names and geographical locations still bear Dutch (though Anglicised) names, see Legacy of the Dutch in New York for more information.

[edit] Notable Dutch people

Further information: List of Dutch people

A significant number of painters and philosophers are Dutch, despite its small population. Remarkable persons include painters like Van Gogh, Rembrandt and Vermeer, and philosophers like Spinoza (though not of Dutch heritage),[82] Erasmus of Rotterdam and Hugo Grotius as well as various poets and writers such as Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft, Joost van den Vondel and Anne Frank[82] and scientists like Christiaan Huygens also made their mark on how we today view the world. The Netherlands were arguably the first nation state of the world and the first republic in modern Europe. During the early 17th century, the economic reforms, empire and ideas made the Netherlands one of the world's richest countries and the first thoroughly capitalist country.[83]

[edit] Culture and society

[edit] Dutch culture

Main article: Dutch culture

Dutch culture is diverse, reflecting regional differences as well as foreign influences owing to the merchant and exploring spirit of the Dutch.[84] The Netherlands and Dutch people have played an important role for centuries as a cultural center, with the Dutch Golden Age regarded as the zenith. During the 20th century Dutch architects played a leading role in the development of modern architecture, and Dutch painters like Rembrandt and Van Gogh are world renowned.[85]

The Dutch people and their culture were historically influenced by the culture of neighbouring regions. France played a substantial role in the history of the Netherlands in the 17th, 18th and early 19th centuries, and there are resulting cultural influences. Cultural contacts with Scandinavia were, and are, much less influential. English-speaking cultural influences have been predominant since the Second World War. The Dutch were also influenced by their colonies, most notably Indonesia.

[edit] Traditional Dutch music

Dutch traditional music, of Dutch Folk, is characterized by simple straightforward bass motives heavily supplemented with fast, often happy, melody. (Click here for an example.) Uncommon among other European folk, in Dutch music the bass line, not the melody, is the musical line that is danced to. This means that though the music itself may sound fast, the dances are usually quite moderate to slow in tempo. The dances themselves are mainly group dances rather than individual or dual dances.[86] Clogs are often worn during dances; however, Dutch clog dancing is very different from its more modern counterpart. It is virtually impossible to perform highly active dances with Dutch clogs (which are entirely made from wood, not just the sole) and hence the clogs function as additional percussion, by stamping rhythmically. Instruments commonly found in Dutch folk are the accordion, flute, fiddle, hurdy gurdy, small (mobile) organs, and the rommelpot.[87]

[edit] Animal culture

Many Dutch people keep pets; in fact, the Dutch have the most animals per capita in the world today;[88] as of 2005, the number of dogs in the Netherlands was estimated at 1,760,000. The population of the Netherlands includes a large number of foreign nationals whose culture is not as dog-friendly,[89] so the actual percentage of ethnic Dutch dog owners is likely higher than the national average. The number of domestic cats is estimated to be almost twice the number of dogs (3,300,000).[90] While the Low Countries generally lack wild animals dangerous to humans — of the mere three snake species that are native to the Low Countries, only one is poisonous (the European viper) — nevertheless, many Dutch are ophidiophobic. Arachnophobia plays as prominent a role.[91] This is something the Dutch have in common with other urbanized societies.[92] Other major animal-related phobias include apiphobia and spheksophobia.[93]

[edit] Religion

Image:Nederlandgodsdienst.png
Predominant religion in the Netherlands before the rise of secularism and the arrival of immigrant faiths.</br> Green: Catholicism</br>Red: Protestantism.
See also: History of religion in the Netherlands

The Dutch population can be separated into two main religious groups: Roman Catholics and Protestants. During and after the Dutch revolt against Spain, Protestantism became the dominant religion in most of the country. The provinces of North Brabant and Limburg and the region of Twente, however, remained predominantly Catholic.

At 30 percent of the population, Catholics form the largest religious group today. Meanwhile, the Dutch belong to many separate Protestant churches, the largest of which are the Dutch Reformed Church (Nederlands Hervormd) and the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Gereformeerd), although in 2004 these merged to form the Protestant Church in the Netherlands.

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries the different religious groups were living completely separately from each other, and from the newly emerging socialist labour movement. These sub-societies were a form of horizontal stratification: people lived and married within their own communities, and the pillars had their own schools and universities, media (newspapers, magazines and radio broadcasting associations), sport clubs, shops, hospitals, unions and political parties. This intense social fragmentation was called verzuiling and led to significant tension within Dutch political life. Pillarisation is described in detail in Arend Lijphart's seminal work on consociationalism, The Politics of Accommodation.

After peaking in influence in the 1950s, the social system of pillarisation started to crumble in the early 1960s during the Dutch postmaterialist revolution, due to secularisation, individualism, consumerism, counter-culture, rising living standards, the emergence of mass media (especially television), increased social and geographical mobility, and agitation by movements such as Provo, D66 and Nieuw Links.

A 2004 study conducted by Statistics Netherlands shows that 50% of the population claim to belong to a Christian denomination, 9% to other denominations and 42% to none. In the same study 19% of the people claim go to church at least once a month, another 9% less than once a month, 72% hardly ever or never.[94][95] There is a small Jewish community of some 40,000 people, mostly in the larger cities.

People of Dutch ancestry in the United States are generally more religious than their European counterparts [14]; the numerous Dutch communities of western Michigan remain strongholds of the Reformed Church in America, a descendant of the Dutch Reformed Church.

[edit] Sports

There are a number of sports which the Dutch possibly invented or Dutch claim to have invented, which then spread worldwide, examples include ice hockey[96] and golf.[97] Apart from these worldwide sports there are also a number of local Dutch sports such as polsstokverspringen, kaatsen, klootschieten, kolven and korfbal.

The most popular sports, both for active participation and audience, are football (soccer), cycling, speed skating, field (not ice) hockey and tennis.

[edit] Traditions of government

The earliest more or less exclusively Dutch politically entity, the Dutch republic, was a confederation of Dutch states and was led by their representatives, the Grand Pensionary (the de facto political leader of the Dutch Republic) and the Stadholder (a descendant of William of Orange) who acted as the Dutch supreme military commander. This system was eventually overthrown in the Batavian Revolution, inspired by the French revolution, in which the Stadholder fled to Britain and the revolutionaries established the Batavian Republic in 1795, which was a more centralised unitary state, not a loose confederation of (at least nominally) independent provinces. The Batavian Republic was actually a vassal state of France, which wanted to tighten its grip by establishing the Kingdom of Holland in 1806 with Napoleon's brother Louis Bonaparte as head of state, and finally by annexation in 1810 for a period of 3 years, until Napoleon was defeated. An independent Dutch state was put back on the map at the Congress of Vienna, comprising of the northern and southern Netherlands for the first time ever, as an independent monarchy, with strong monarchial powers. When the revolutions of 1848 swept across Europe, the King conceded a constitutional monarchy with parliamentary control, which it has been until this day.

[edit] Dutch language

Image:Relation between Dutch English and German.png
A simplified scheme of the linguistic relation between Dutch, English and German.
Main article: Dutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 22 million people, mainly in the Netherlands, Belgium and Surinam. The language was first attested around 470 AD,[98] and is an official language of the Netherlands, Belgium, Suriname, Aruba, and the Netherlands Antilles. Today the Dutch, Flemish and Surinamese governments coordinate their language activities in the Nederlandse Taalunie (Dutch Language Union).

Dutch was an official language in former countries of the Dutch Empire and in South Africa up until 1961, having fallen into disuse since Afrikaans (itself a direct descendant of Dutch) became an official language in 1925.

Linguistically it can be said that Dutch occupies a central position within the West Germanic languages due to the absence of soundshifts such as the Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law, Anglo-Frisian brightening and the Second Germanic consonant shift, which resulted in certain early Germanic languages evolving into English and German.

The Dutch immigrants of the 20th century often quickly began to speak the language of their new country. For example, of the inhabitants of New Zealand, 0.7% say their home language is Dutch,[99] despite the percentage of Dutch heritage being considerably higher.[100]

Algemeen Nederlands ("Common Dutch", abbreviated to AN) is the standard language as taught in schools and used by authorities in the Netherlands, Flanders, Suriname, Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles. The Dutch Language Union defines what AN is and is not, for example, in matters of orthography.

[edit] Oppression of the Dutch language

Following the Belgian Revolution in 1830, the Francophone elite of the newly formed Belgian state greatly oppressed the Dutch language. Dutch at first had no official status, and for a long time Dutch (the native language of most Belgians) was not used in any form of education. During the Great War, Dutch-speaking Belgian soldiers received orders in French, and many were killed because they simply did not understand what they were expected to do. After the Second World War, this largely improved and French and Dutch are currently equal in every legal aspect. In the Netherlands the Dutch language was never oppressed, as the Netherlands lacks, and historically lacked, a second 'majority language'.

[edit] Dutch names

Main article: Dutch name

Dutch surnames (and names of Dutch origin) are generally easily recognisable, mainly because of tussenvoegsels such as van, van der or de. In the United States, partly due to the fame of rich industrials such as Cornelius Vanderbilt, Dutch surnames are often associated with the upperclass of society even though when translated the surnames are often very simplistic. For example, Vanderbilt means "(coming) from De Bilt", De Bilt being a small village in the province of Utrecht.[101] Unlike what is sometimes thought, and unlike the German von, the Dutch van does not denote any aristocratic status.[102]

[edit] Dutch image

He builds your confidence, makes you feel special and gives the clear impression you are getting a fair deal, all while creating the atmosphere of comfort and caring. In truth, he couldn't care less. The only YES he really understands is the ¥€$ you'll bring to him and his company.[103]