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W. R. van Hoëvell

Wolter Robert Baron van Hoëvell (14 July 1812 – 10 February 1879) was a Dutch minister, politician, reformer, and writer. Born into nobility and trained in the Dutch Reformed Church, he worked for eleven years as a minister in the Dutch East Indies. He led a Malay-speaking congregation, engaged in scholarly research and cultural activities, and became an outspoken critic of Dutch colonialism. His activism culminated when he acted as one of the leaders of a short-lived protest in 1848. During the event, a multi-ethnic group of Batavian inhabitants presented their grievances to the local government. As a result of his leadership in the protest, van Hoëvell was forced to resign his position in the Indies.

Wolter Robert van Hoëvell (1863)

After his return to the Netherlands, he served as a member of parliament for the Dutch Liberal party from 1849 to 1862, and from 1862 until his death he was a member of the State Council. He used his political position to continue critiquing the Dutch colonial system; nicknamed "chief of the colonial opposition",[1] he was the first Dutch politician to do so eloquently and knowledgeably, and inspired writers such as Multatuli.

Biography Edit

Youth Edit

Van Hoëvell was born in Deventer to one of the last of the old noble families in the Netherlands. His parents were Gerrit Willem Wolter Carel, Baron van Höevell (born Deventer, 21 April 1778), and Emerentia Luthera Isabella, Baroness van der Capellen (born Haarlem, 31 August 1787); he grew up with six brothers and sisters.[2] While van Hoëvell was still young, the family moved to Groningen[3] where he attended Latin school.[2] Van Hoëvell enrolled in the University of Groningen in 1829 and studied theology. In 1830, he saw military action in Belgium during the abortive attempt by the North-Netherlands to maintain the unity of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. He returned from the war gravely ill, but recovered and then returned to the university.[3] He graduated summa cum laude with a dissertation on Irenaeus in 1836, and in that same year married Abrahamina Johanna Trip, with whom he had two daughters and four sons; one daughter and one son died young.[4]

Ministry and activism in Dutch East Indies Edit

Van Hoëvell left the Netherlands to become a minister in Batavia in the Dutch East Indies,[2] where he led a Malay and Dutch-speaking congregation.[5] In 1838, he received an additional appointment, as historian for the local government, and began traveling throughout the area. He worked in the East Indies until 1848, when he received an official reprimand from the Dutch government[2] for publicizing his views critical of colonialism;[6] consequently he was forced to resign.[1]

1848 protest Edit

 
De Harmonie, Batavia, c. 1870.

Van Hoëvell played an important part in the short-lived protest in Batavia that has been called the "1848 Batavian Revolution". Partly inspired by the February 1848 uprising in Paris, Batavian citizens began to challenge the authorities;[7] one of their grievances was an 1842 decree that dictated that positions in the upper echelons of the Dutch administration could be held only by those who had received the appropriate certificate from the Royal Academy in Delft. The measure discriminated against both "Dutch-born and creole Dutch" who could not or did not want to send their children to the Netherlands for a decade of education. The measure also discriminated against the class referred to as Indo-Europeans, who were thus barred from promotion above the level of "the lowliest civil service jobs."[8] As a consequence of this discrimination across racial barriers, the May 1848 protest could draw a mixed group of citizens, "identified as 'Europeans,' 'creoles,' and 'colored'" by the authorities.[9]

Van Hoëvell emerged as one of the "principal organizers" in the protest[10] and called a meeting, with official approval, to discuss "better access to government jobs for locally born colonizers through expanded educational offerings".[7] Starting on 17 May, van Hoëvell and others met many times with Governor-General Jan Jacob Rochussen to discuss what kind of meeting was to be held and what demands would be made. During this time, van Hoëvell was able to move the proposed meeting place from a private residence to the central hall of De Harmonie, the club house of the Batavian citizen's society, and he organized transportation for whoever wished to come, including his own congregation.[11]

The organizers received permission from Rochussen for their meeting since they had argued that their grievances were social matters, not "matters of state," and that they did not form a political threat to the government.[10] However, on 20 May van Hoëvell printed the kind of anti-government rhetoric he had been asked to refrain from in a journal he published. There were also signals at other public events of growing unease among the locally born Dutch population as well as the large Indo-European population, who had held protests of their own and delivered a petition to Rochussen. Taking all these developments in consideration, Rochussen concluded that the meeting in De Harmonie should be considered subversive and a danger to the state; he let it be known that armed troops were ready to take control of the situation if need be.[12] At 6 PM on 22 May, people were flocking to the club house, and by 7 PM it was packed. Van Hoëvell was quickly proclaimed to be president of the assembly. Soon after, though, the meeting became unruly and the shouts of a few led to a riot. In an increasingly unruly atmosphere, the protestors ousted van Hoëvell from his presidency as quickly as they had raised him to the position, after which he and others left the building. The protest fizzled out soon afterward.[13]

Resignation Edit

By mid-1848, van Hoëvell had become too controversial and perhaps too important to those who disagreed with the local government, and under pressure from the Governor-General[6] he resigned his post on 19 July 1848. After a packed final service in the Willemskerk in August, he was sent off by "half the population of Batavia";[1] his final sermon, based on Epistle to the Hebrews 13:18–19, suggested that he hoped to return to the Indies.[3] Later, he characterized the Governor-General as more powerful than the Dutch king: "he is the sun, at which all eyes are aimed; when he laughs, everyone laughs; if he looks serious, then the entire multitude frowns its face."[14]

Scholarship and other activities in the Indies Edit

In Batavia, he was an active scholar, publishing on linguistics,[15] language, and history. In 1838 he founded a journal, Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch-Indië ("Journal for the Dutch East Indies"), which he edited until 1862,[6] and he edited and translated a fourteenth-century romantic poem written in the Jawi alphabet, the Syair Bidasari.[16] He was chairman of the Batavian Society of Arts and Sciences[2] and its president after 1845,[17] and published a book on the colony's arts and sciences and one on the colony's history.[2] Van Hoëvell traveled widely, studied languages and artifacts, and visited local Muslim rulers; he judged the threat of Islam to be much less insidious than the restrictions from the Dutch government or the danger posed by domestic Catholics.[18] He was awarded with knighthood in the Order of the Netherlands Lion in 1847.[19]

He became a friend and correspondent of Eduard Douwes Dekker, who under the pseudonym Multatuli published Max Havelaar, the 1860 satire that exposed colonial corruption in Java;[6] Dekker was one of the first subscribers to Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch-Indië.[6] Another acquaintance was W. Bosch, chief of the public health services in the colony, who had written critically on the effects of the colonial system on the health of the population,[20] arguing to his superiors that they should help combat poverty, malnourishment, and communicable diseases.[21] Bosch had provided logistical assistance during the events of May 1848, and they remained friends even after van Hoëvell returned to the Netherlands.[22]

Return to the Netherlands: political career Edit

While Rochussen had been glad to see him go, back in the Netherlands van Hoëvell fared better politically. He was vindicated when the government canceled the acceptance of his forced resignation,[1] and he was cleared of any wrongdoing in the events of May 1848.[19] The publication of the Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch-Indië, which had stopped at his expulsion from Batavia, was resumed in 1849,[23] now in a less repressive environment.[24] For some pamphlets, he used the pseudonym Jeronymus.[25] In September 1849, he was elected to the House of Representatives of the Netherlands for the Liberal party and he remained a member of parliament until 1862. He was one of only a handful of Dutch parliamentarians who had actually been to the East Indies, and often spoke eloquently on colonial matters in parliament.[2] He became "one of the most ferocious critics" of the Cultivation System, the government-run system (already criticized by W. Bosch and others) that demanded that the local peasantry set aside a significant portion of their land to grow crops for the Dutch to export. Van Hoëvell was a proponent of private ownership, and argued that the system, besides being immoral, was also economically ineffective.[26] His criticism of Dutch colonial practices extended to the Dutch West India Company; he was a supporter of abolitionism[2] at a time when Dutch colonists owned tens of thousands of slaves, mainly on plantations in Surinam.

In parliament, he continued what had become his mission: to educate the Dutch citizenry on the nature of Dutch colonialism.[6] In his speeches, he occasionally used confidential government information sent to him from the Indies by his friend Bosch.[22] With great expertise and sometimes "disturbing eloquence" he criticized the Dutch government for generating millions from the colonies while denying the locals "education, Christianity, and the blessings of progress".[27]

In 1860, he was one of those politicians who forced Prime Minister and Minister of Colonial Affairs Jan Jacob Rochussen, his former Governor-General, to resign his post, in part because a corruption scandal in the East Indies came to light.[28] In that same year he promoted his friend Multatuli's Max Havelaar, announcing in parliament that the book had sent tremors through the country.[29] On 1 July 1862, he was appointed to the Council of State of the Netherlands, where he served until his death[2] in The Hague on 10 February 1879.[2] His wife died on 9 January 1888.[4]

Legacy Edit

Van Hoëvell, deemed a "radical" for his opinions,[30] stands alongside Dirk van Hogendorp as one of the most important and best-known Dutch anti-colonialists of the nineteenth century before Multatuli—he is regarded as one of Multatuli's predecessors. He was a passionate man, who felt it his duty to inform the Dutch citizenry of the arrogance of the Dutch colonial rulers, the widespread corruption among the native ruling classes, and the imposition of backbreaking labor on the local peasantry. Moreover, according to van Hoëvell, the colonial system harmed relationships between peoples. These were themes that were also discussed by Multatuli in his Max Havelaar.[6] Van Hoëvell's efforts to abolish slavery, especially his 1854 book Slaves and free people under Dutch law, are credited with having hastened the emancipation of Dutch-owned slaves in the East Indies in 1859 and in the West Indies in 1863.[31] The book is included in the Canon of Dutch Literature.[citation needed]

Publications Edit

  • Geschiedkundig overzicht van de beoefening van kunsten en wetenschappen in Nederlands-Indië ("History of the practice of arts and sciences in the Dutch East Indies"). 1839.
  • Episode uit de geschiedenis van Neerlands-Indië ("Episode from the history of the Dutch East Indies"). 1840.
  • Sjaïr Bidasari. Oorspronkelijk Maleisch gedicht met een vertaling en aanteekeningen ("Originally Malay poem with translation and notes"). Batavia, 1844.
  • Beschuldiging en veroordeling in Indië en rechtvaardiging in Nederland ("Accusation and condemnation in the Indies and justification in the Netherlands"). 1850
  • De drukpers en de Javanen ("The printing press and the Javanese"). 1851.
  • Slaven en vrijen onder de Nederlandsche wet ("Slaves and free people under Dutch law"). 1854.
  • Reis over Java, Madura en Bali in het midden van 1847 ("A journey across Java, Madura, and Bali in mid-1847"). 1850.
  • Uit het Indische leven ("From life in the Indies"). 1860. Second edition printed in 1865.

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b c d Fasseur 107.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Dr. W.R. baron van Hoëvell."
  3. ^ a b c De Bie and Loosjes 99.
  4. ^ a b De Bie and Loosjes 101.
  5. ^ Stoler 75.; De Bie and Loosjes 99.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Taylor 152.
  7. ^ a b Goss 13.
  8. ^ Stoler 73-74
  9. ^ Stoler 73.
  10. ^ a b Stoler 76.
  11. ^ Stoler 74–75.
  12. ^ Stoler 76–77.
  13. ^ Stoler 80–86.
  14. ^ Hesselink 69.
  15. ^ His article on Ambonese dialects is cited with approbation in Blagden, Charles Otto (January 1903). "Further Notes on a Malayan Comparative Vocabulary". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland: 167–79. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00030033. JSTOR 25208482. S2CID 164080196.
  16. ^ Frederiks and Branden 355–56.
  17. ^ Laffan 106.
  18. ^ Laffan 104–105.
  19. ^ a b De Bie and Loosjes 100.
  20. ^ Fasseur 105–106.
  21. ^ Hesselink 73–75.
  22. ^ a b Hesselink 80.
  23. ^ Chandra and Vogelsang 889–90.
  24. ^ Fasseur 109.
  25. ^ Also spelled Jeronimus. "Dr. W.R. baron van Hoëvell"; Hesselink 314, 371.
  26. ^ Bertrand 116–17.
  27. ^ Fasseur 108.
  28. ^ Fasseur 226–28.
  29. ^ Laan.
  30. ^ Veer, passim.
  31. ^ Benjamins and Snelleman 364.
Bibliography
  • Benjamins, Herman Daniël; Snelleman, Joh. F. (1914–1917). "Hoëvell (Wolter Robert baron van)". Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch West-Indië (in Dutch). The Hague/Leiden: Nijhoff/Brill. p. 364.
  • Bertrand, Romain (2007). "La 'politique éthique' des Pays-Bas à Java (1901–1926)". Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire (in French). 93 (93): 115–38. doi:10.3917/ving.093.0115. JSTOR 4619238.
  • De Bie, Jan Pieter; Loosjes, Jakob (1931). "HOËVELL (Walther (Wolter of Wouter) Robert Baron van)". Biographisch woordenboek van protestantsche godgeleerden in Nederland (in Dutch). Vol. 4. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 99–102.
  • Chandra, Siddharth; Timothy J. Vogelsang (1999). "Change and Involution in Sugar Production in Cultivation-System Java, 1840–1870". The Journal of Economic History. 59 (4): 885–911. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.41.5486. doi:10.1017/s0022050700024062. JSTOR 2566680. S2CID 14888868.
  • "Dr. W.R. baron van Hoëvell" (in Dutch). Parlementair Documentatie Centrum, Leiden University. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  • Fasseur, Cornelis (1992). Robert Edward Elson (ed.). The politics of colonial exploitation: Java, the Dutch, and the Cultivation System. Translated by Robert Edward Elson. Ithaca: Cornell Southeast Asia Program. ISBN 978-0-87727-707-1.
  • Frederiks, J.G.; Branden, F. Jos. van den (1888–1891). "Hoëvell (Wolter Robert Baron van)". Biographisch woordenboek der Noord- en Zuidnederlandsche letterkunde (in Dutch). Amsterdam: L.J. Veen. pp. 355–56.
  • Goss, Andrew (2011). The Floracrats: State-Sponsored Science and the Failure of the Enlightenment in Indonesia. Madison: U of Wisconsin P. ISBN 978-0-299-24864-2.
  • Hesselink, Elisabeth Quirine Hesselink (2009). Genezers op de koloniale markt: inheemse dokters en vroedvrouwen in Nederlandsch oost-Indie, 1850–1915 (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-90-5629-563-9.
  • Laan, K. ter (1952). "Hoëvell, W.R. baron van". Letterkundig woordenboek voor Noord en Zuid (in Dutch). The Hague/Jakarta: G.B. van Goor Zonen.
  • Laffan, Michael Francis (2011). The Makings of Indonesian Islam: Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past. Princeton: Princeton UP. ISBN 978-0-691-14530-3.
  • Stoler, Ann Laura (2010). Along the Archival Grain: Epistemic Anxieties and Colonial Common Sense. Princeton: Princeton UP. ISBN 978-0-691-14636-2.
  • Taylor, Jean Gelman (2010). "Een gedeelde mentale wereld: Multatuli en Kartini". In Myriam Everard; Ulla Jansz; Ulrika Jansz (eds.). De minotaurus onzer zeden: Multatuli als heraut van het feminisme (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. pp. 147–66. ISBN 978-90-5260-376-6.
  • Veer, P. van 't (1958). "Een revolutiejaar, Indische stijl. Wolter Robert baron van Höevell 1812–1879". Geen blad voor de mond: Vijf radicalen uit de negentiende eeuw (in Dutch). Amsterdam: De Arbeiderspers. pp. 101–44.

External links Edit

Biographical links

hoëvell, wolter, robert, baron, hoëvell, july, 1812, february, 1879, dutch, minister, politician, reformer, writer, born, into, nobility, trained, dutch, reformed, church, worked, eleven, years, minister, dutch, east, indies, malay, speaking, congregation, eng. Wolter Robert Baron van Hoevell 14 July 1812 10 February 1879 was a Dutch minister politician reformer and writer Born into nobility and trained in the Dutch Reformed Church he worked for eleven years as a minister in the Dutch East Indies He led a Malay speaking congregation engaged in scholarly research and cultural activities and became an outspoken critic of Dutch colonialism His activism culminated when he acted as one of the leaders of a short lived protest in 1848 During the event a multi ethnic group of Batavian inhabitants presented their grievances to the local government As a result of his leadership in the protest van Hoevell was forced to resign his position in the Indies Wolter Robert van Hoevell 1863 After his return to the Netherlands he served as a member of parliament for the Dutch Liberal party from 1849 to 1862 and from 1862 until his death he was a member of the State Council He used his political position to continue critiquing the Dutch colonial system nicknamed chief of the colonial opposition 1 he was the first Dutch politician to do so eloquently and knowledgeably and inspired writers such as Multatuli Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth 1 2 Ministry and activism in Dutch East Indies 1 2 1 1848 protest 1 2 2 Resignation 1 2 3 Scholarship and other activities in the Indies 1 3 Return to the Netherlands political career 2 Legacy 3 Publications 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditYouth Edit Van Hoevell was born in Deventer to one of the last of the old noble families in the Netherlands His parents were Gerrit Willem Wolter Carel Baron van Hoevell born Deventer 21 April 1778 and Emerentia Luthera Isabella Baroness van der Capellen born Haarlem 31 August 1787 he grew up with six brothers and sisters 2 While van Hoevell was still young the family moved to Groningen 3 where he attended Latin school 2 Van Hoevell enrolled in the University of Groningen in 1829 and studied theology In 1830 he saw military action in Belgium during the abortive attempt by the North Netherlands to maintain the unity of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands He returned from the war gravely ill but recovered and then returned to the university 3 He graduated summa cum laude with a dissertation on Irenaeus in 1836 and in that same year married Abrahamina Johanna Trip with whom he had two daughters and four sons one daughter and one son died young 4 Ministry and activism in Dutch East Indies Edit Van Hoevell left the Netherlands to become a minister in Batavia in the Dutch East Indies 2 where he led a Malay and Dutch speaking congregation 5 In 1838 he received an additional appointment as historian for the local government and began traveling throughout the area He worked in the East Indies until 1848 when he received an official reprimand from the Dutch government 2 for publicizing his views critical of colonialism 6 consequently he was forced to resign 1 1848 protest Edit nbsp De Harmonie Batavia c 1870 Van Hoevell played an important part in the short lived protest in Batavia that has been called the 1848 Batavian Revolution Partly inspired by the February 1848 uprising in Paris Batavian citizens began to challenge the authorities 7 one of their grievances was an 1842 decree that dictated that positions in the upper echelons of the Dutch administration could be held only by those who had received the appropriate certificate from the Royal Academy in Delft The measure discriminated against both Dutch born and creole Dutch who could not or did not want to send their children to the Netherlands for a decade of education The measure also discriminated against the class referred to as Indo Europeans who were thus barred from promotion above the level of the lowliest civil service jobs 8 As a consequence of this discrimination across racial barriers the May 1848 protest could draw a mixed group of citizens identified as Europeans creoles and colored by the authorities 9 Van Hoevell emerged as one of the principal organizers in the protest 10 and called a meeting with official approval to discuss better access to government jobs for locally born colonizers through expanded educational offerings 7 Starting on 17 May van Hoevell and others met many times with Governor General Jan Jacob Rochussen to discuss what kind of meeting was to be held and what demands would be made During this time van Hoevell was able to move the proposed meeting place from a private residence to the central hall of De Harmonie the club house of the Batavian citizen s society and he organized transportation for whoever wished to come including his own congregation 11 The organizers received permission from Rochussen for their meeting since they had argued that their grievances were social matters not matters of state and that they did not form a political threat to the government 10 However on 20 May van Hoevell printed the kind of anti government rhetoric he had been asked to refrain from in a journal he published There were also signals at other public events of growing unease among the locally born Dutch population as well as the large Indo European population who had held protests of their own and delivered a petition to Rochussen Taking all these developments in consideration Rochussen concluded that the meeting in De Harmonie should be considered subversive and a danger to the state he let it be known that armed troops were ready to take control of the situation if need be 12 At 6 PM on 22 May people were flocking to the club house and by 7 PM it was packed Van Hoevell was quickly proclaimed to be president of the assembly Soon after though the meeting became unruly and the shouts of a few led to a riot In an increasingly unruly atmosphere the protestors ousted van Hoevell from his presidency as quickly as they had raised him to the position after which he and others left the building The protest fizzled out soon afterward 13 Resignation Edit By mid 1848 van Hoevell had become too controversial and perhaps too important to those who disagreed with the local government and under pressure from the Governor General 6 he resigned his post on 19 July 1848 After a packed final service in the Willemskerk in August he was sent off by half the population of Batavia 1 his final sermon based on Epistle to the Hebrews 13 18 19 suggested that he hoped to return to the Indies 3 Later he characterized the Governor General as more powerful than the Dutch king he is the sun at which all eyes are aimed when he laughs everyone laughs if he looks serious then the entire multitude frowns its face 14 Scholarship and other activities in the Indies Edit In Batavia he was an active scholar publishing on linguistics 15 language and history In 1838 he founded a journal Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch Indie Journal for the Dutch East Indies which he edited until 1862 6 and he edited and translated a fourteenth century romantic poem written in the Jawi alphabet the Syair Bidasari 16 He was chairman of the Batavian Society of Arts and Sciences 2 and its president after 1845 17 and published a book on the colony s arts and sciences and one on the colony s history 2 Van Hoevell traveled widely studied languages and artifacts and visited local Muslim rulers he judged the threat of Islam to be much less insidious than the restrictions from the Dutch government or the danger posed by domestic Catholics 18 He was awarded with knighthood in the Order of the Netherlands Lion in 1847 19 He became a friend and correspondent of Eduard Douwes Dekker who under the pseudonym Multatuli published Max Havelaar the 1860 satire that exposed colonial corruption in Java 6 Dekker was one of the first subscribers to Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch Indie 6 Another acquaintance was W Bosch chief of the public health services in the colony who had written critically on the effects of the colonial system on the health of the population 20 arguing to his superiors that they should help combat poverty malnourishment and communicable diseases 21 Bosch had provided logistical assistance during the events of May 1848 and they remained friends even after van Hoevell returned to the Netherlands 22 Return to the Netherlands political career Edit While Rochussen had been glad to see him go back in the Netherlands van Hoevell fared better politically He was vindicated when the government canceled the acceptance of his forced resignation 1 and he was cleared of any wrongdoing in the events of May 1848 19 The publication of the Tijdschrift voor Nederlandsch Indie which had stopped at his expulsion from Batavia was resumed in 1849 23 now in a less repressive environment 24 For some pamphlets he used the pseudonym Jeronymus 25 In September 1849 he was elected to the House of Representatives of the Netherlands for the Liberal party and he remained a member of parliament until 1862 He was one of only a handful of Dutch parliamentarians who had actually been to the East Indies and often spoke eloquently on colonial matters in parliament 2 He became one of the most ferocious critics of the Cultivation System the government run system already criticized by W Bosch and others that demanded that the local peasantry set aside a significant portion of their land to grow crops for the Dutch to export Van Hoevell was a proponent of private ownership and argued that the system besides being immoral was also economically ineffective 26 His criticism of Dutch colonial practices extended to the Dutch West India Company he was a supporter of abolitionism 2 at a time when Dutch colonists owned tens of thousands of slaves mainly on plantations in Surinam In parliament he continued what had become his mission to educate the Dutch citizenry on the nature of Dutch colonialism 6 In his speeches he occasionally used confidential government information sent to him from the Indies by his friend Bosch 22 With great expertise and sometimes disturbing eloquence he criticized the Dutch government for generating millions from the colonies while denying the locals education Christianity and the blessings of progress 27 In 1860 he was one of those politicians who forced Prime Minister and Minister of Colonial Affairs Jan Jacob Rochussen his former Governor General to resign his post in part because a corruption scandal in the East Indies came to light 28 In that same year he promoted his friend Multatuli s Max Havelaar announcing in parliament that the book had sent tremors through the country 29 On 1 July 1862 he was appointed to the Council of State of the Netherlands where he served until his death 2 in The Hague on 10 February 1879 2 His wife died on 9 January 1888 4 Legacy EditVan Hoevell deemed a radical for his opinions 30 stands alongside Dirk van Hogendorp as one of the most important and best known Dutch anti colonialists of the nineteenth century before Multatuli he is regarded as one of Multatuli s predecessors He was a passionate man who felt it his duty to inform the Dutch citizenry of the arrogance of the Dutch colonial rulers the widespread corruption among the native ruling classes and the imposition of backbreaking labor on the local peasantry Moreover according to van Hoevell the colonial system harmed relationships between peoples These were themes that were also discussed by Multatuli in his Max Havelaar 6 Van Hoevell s efforts to abolish slavery especially his 1854 book Slaves and free people under Dutch law are credited with having hastened the emancipation of Dutch owned slaves in the East Indies in 1859 and in the West Indies in 1863 31 The book is included in the Canon of Dutch Literature citation needed Publications EditGeschiedkundig overzicht van de beoefening van kunsten en wetenschappen in Nederlands Indie History of the practice of arts and sciences in the Dutch East Indies 1839 Episode uit de geschiedenis van Neerlands Indie Episode from the history of the Dutch East Indies 1840 Sjair Bidasari Oorspronkelijk Maleisch gedicht met een vertaling en aanteekeningen Originally Malay poem with translation and notes Batavia 1844 Beschuldiging en veroordeling in Indie en rechtvaardiging in Nederland Accusation and condemnation in the Indies and justification in the Netherlands 1850 De drukpers en de Javanen The printing press and the Javanese 1851 Slaven en vrijen onder de Nederlandsche wet Slaves and free people under Dutch law 1854 Reis over Java Madura en Bali in het midden van 1847 A journey across Java Madura and Bali in mid 1847 1850 Uit het Indische leven From life in the Indies 1860 Second edition printed in 1865 See also EditDutch Indies literatureReferences EditNotes a b c d Fasseur 107 a b c d e f g h i j Dr W R baron van Hoevell a b c De Bie and Loosjes 99 a b De Bie and Loosjes 101 Stoler 75 De Bie and Loosjes 99 a b c d e f g Taylor 152 a b Goss 13 Stoler 73 74 Stoler 73 a b Stoler 76 Stoler 74 75 Stoler 76 77 Stoler 80 86 Hesselink 69 His article on Ambonese dialects is cited with approbation in Blagden Charles Otto January 1903 Further Notes on a Malayan Comparative Vocabulary Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 167 79 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00030033 JSTOR 25208482 S2CID 164080196 Frederiks and Branden 355 56 Laffan 106 Laffan 104 105 a b De Bie and Loosjes 100 Fasseur 105 106 Hesselink 73 75 a b Hesselink 80 Chandra and Vogelsang 889 90 Fasseur 109 Also spelled Jeronimus Dr W R baron van Hoevell Hesselink 314 371 Bertrand 116 17 Fasseur 108 Fasseur 226 28 Laan Veer passim Benjamins and Snelleman 364 BibliographyBenjamins Herman Daniel Snelleman Joh F 1914 1917 Hoevell Wolter Robert baron van Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch West Indie in Dutch The Hague Leiden Nijhoff Brill p 364 Bertrand Romain 2007 La politique ethique des Pays Bas a Java 1901 1926 Vingtieme Siecle Revue d histoire in French 93 93 115 38 doi 10 3917 ving 093 0115 JSTOR 4619238 De Bie Jan Pieter Loosjes Jakob 1931 HOEVELL Walther Wolter of Wouter Robert Baron van Biographisch woordenboek van protestantsche godgeleerden in Nederland in Dutch Vol 4 The Hague Martinus Nijhoff pp 99 102 Chandra Siddharth Timothy J Vogelsang 1999 Change and Involution in Sugar Production in Cultivation System Java 1840 1870 The Journal of Economic History 59 4 885 911 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 41 5486 doi 10 1017 s0022050700024062 JSTOR 2566680 S2CID 14888868 Dr W R baron van Hoevell in Dutch Parlementair Documentatie Centrum Leiden University Retrieved 2 December 2011 Fasseur Cornelis 1992 Robert Edward Elson ed The politics of colonial exploitation Java the Dutch and the Cultivation System Translated by Robert Edward Elson Ithaca Cornell Southeast Asia Program ISBN 978 0 87727 707 1 Frederiks J G Branden F Jos van den 1888 1891 Hoevell Wolter Robert Baron van Biographisch woordenboek der Noord en Zuidnederlandsche letterkunde in Dutch Amsterdam L J Veen pp 355 56 Goss Andrew 2011 The Floracrats State Sponsored Science and the Failure of the Enlightenment in Indonesia Madison U of Wisconsin P ISBN 978 0 299 24864 2 Hesselink Elisabeth Quirine Hesselink 2009 Genezers op de koloniale markt inheemse dokters en vroedvrouwen in Nederlandsch oost Indie 1850 1915 in Dutch Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 5629 563 9 Laan K ter 1952 Hoevell W R baron van Letterkundig woordenboek voor Noord en Zuid in Dutch The Hague Jakarta G B van Goor Zonen Laffan Michael Francis 2011 The Makings of Indonesian Islam Orientalism and the Narration of a Sufi Past Princeton Princeton UP ISBN 978 0 691 14530 3 Stoler Ann Laura 2010 Along the Archival Grain Epistemic Anxieties and Colonial Common Sense Princeton Princeton UP ISBN 978 0 691 14636 2 Taylor Jean Gelman 2010 Een gedeelde mentale wereld Multatuli en Kartini In Myriam Everard Ulla Jansz Ulrika Jansz eds De minotaurus onzer zeden Multatuli als heraut van het feminisme in Dutch Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press pp 147 66 ISBN 978 90 5260 376 6 Veer P van t 1958 Een revolutiejaar Indische stijl Wolter Robert baron van Hoevell 1812 1879 Geen blad voor de mond Vijf radicalen uit de negentiende eeuw in Dutch Amsterdam De Arbeiderspers pp 101 44 External links EditBiographical linksW R van Hoevell in the Digital Library for Dutch Literature Hoevell Wolter Robert baron van in the Nieuw Nederlandsch biografisch woordenboek 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W R van Hoevell amp oldid 1178109512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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