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  1. Johan de Witt was the grand pensionary of the province of Holland in 1653. This was a stadholderless period in the Republic because Prince William III was still a minor. The accomplished Johan emerged as the actual leader of the civil government, over which the States General, rather than the stadholder, held sway. This led to considerable tension.

  2. 21 de may. de 2018 · Johan de Witt followed his father’s lead, and while becoming more and more politically influential, he remained stringently anti-Orange. His intelligence and eloquence, in addition to his father’s status, helped Johan de Witt become the ruler of Holland. He was named councilor pensionary (the political leader) in 1653 when he was 28-years-old.

  3. The Dutch statesman Johan de Witt (1625-1672), as councilor pensionary of Holland from 1653 to 1672, led the Dutch Republic after the end of its war of independence. Aman of keen intelligence, displayed notably in his contributions to mathematics and actuarial science, Johan or Jan de Witt used his post as chief minister of the States of ...

  4. Johan de Witt ( Dordrecht, 1625. szeptember 24. – Hága, 1672. augusztus 20.) holland államférfi, aki 1653 és 1672 között a Holland Egyesült Tartományok főminisztere volt. Michiel de Ruyter tengernaggyal a holland flotta újjászervezőjeként, a holland történelem egyik legnagyobb államférfiaként tartják számon.

  5. Johan de Witt, též Jan de Witt. ( 24. září 1625 – 20. srpna 1672) byl nizozemský politik v 17. století, v době největší nizozemské koloniální expanze. Byl rovněž významným matematikem a právníkem, své matematické teorie aplikoval i do ekonomické správy země.

  6. Johan de Witt represents in his person one of the great. periods of the Dutch Republic and one of the most characteristic tendencies of its régime. Born in 1625, the son of a burgomaster of Dordt, he became Grand Pensionary of the province of Holland. in 1653, when he was 28 years old.1 In that position he estab.

  7. 24 de ene. de 2023 · Johan de Witt served as the equivalent of the country’s Prime Minister from 1653 onwards, though the actual title he held was the Grand Pensionary. All went well for many years. The Dutch Republic continued to punch way above its weight in terms of its European and colonial trade dominance , bringing enormous wealth into cities such as Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Dordrecht.