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  1. History. Background. A common administration of the Netherlandish fiefs, centered in the Duchy of Brabant, already existed under the rule of the Burgundian Duke Philip the Good with the implementation of a stadtholder and the first convocation of the States General of the Netherlands in 1464. [5] .

  2. Spanish Netherlands, (c. 1579–1713), Spanish-held provinces located in the southern part of the Low Countries (roughly corresponding to present Belgium and Luxembourg). Although the provinces of the Low Countries had for some years and for many reasons been chafing under foreign rule, the revolt.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 30 de oct. de 2023 · The Spanish Netherlands, also known as the Southern Netherlands, was a historical region located in the Low Countries (modern-day Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of the Netherlands and northern France).

  4. 25 de may. de 2024 · Quick Reference. The southern provinces of the Netherlands ceded to Philip II of Spain in the Union of Arras (1579), during the Dutch Revolts. These lands originally included modern Belgium, Luxembourg, part of northern France, and what later became part of the United Provinces of the Netherlands.

  5. 29 de sept. de 2014 · Reconstituted into a bulwark of the Catholic Reformation, the Spanish Netherlands played a pivotal role in propagating the teachings of the Council of Trent. Their sense of mission found its artistic expression in the Flemish baroque. With a strange twist of fate, they also became the birthplace of the Jansenist controversy. General Overviews.

  6. 25 de may. de 2024 · Part I (May 25, 2024) (Show more) Eighty Years’ War, (1568–1648), the war of Netherlands independence from Spain, which led to the separation of the northern and southern Netherlands and to the formation of the United Provinces of the Netherlands (the Dutch Republic).

  7. The Spanish Netherlands: 1579-1714. Although the existence of Belgium as an independent state dates only from 1831, a Belgian identity is evident from 1579. In that year three Catholic provinces of the southern Netherlands form the Union of Arras against the Protestants to the north.