
A sweeping survey of Dutch literary heritage, this volume opens by placing the nation’s earliest verses within the broader currents of European culture. The author argues that the classic histories of the nineteenth century have become outdated, and he sets out to weave recent manuscript discoveries and fresh aesthetic insights into a more complete picture of the language’s evolution.
Divided into two main sections, the work first examines courtly poetry—from the heroic epics of the Middle Ages to the devotional lyricism of mystics like Hadewych—before turning to the vibrant “voice of the towns,” where communal tales such as the Reynard cycle and early lyrical expressions take center stage. Detailed introductions, chronological overviews, and thoughtful commentary reveal how literary forms mirrored shifting social identities and emerging national consciousness.
Written with the rigor of a seasoned scholar yet mindful of a wider audience, the book invites listeners to explore the foundations of Dutch letters, offering a rich, contextual journey through centuries of poetic and prose traditions.
Language
nl
Duration
~16 hours (974K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-12-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1856–1923
A leading Dutch literary historian, critic, and professor, he helped shape how readers understood the history of Dutch literature around the turn of the twentieth century. His work combines close reading with a broad interest in culture, language, and national literary tradition.
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