Everything about Pieter Geyl totally explained
Pieter Catharinus Arie Geyl (
December 15,
1887 –
December 31,
1966) was a
Dutch historian well known for his studies in early modern Dutch history and in
historiography.
Geyl was born in
Dordrecht and graduated from the
University of Leiden in
1913. His thesis was on Christofforo Suriano, the Venetian Ambassador in the Netherlands from 1616 to 1623. Geyl worked as a teacher at a
gymnasium (grammar school) in
Schiedam (1912-1913) before going on to serve as the
London correspondent for
Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant newspaper. During this time, Geyl befriended many influential people in
Britain. He was married twice, first to Maria Cornelia van Slooten in
1911 (died
1933) and secondly to Garberlina Kremer in
1934.
In
1919 Geyl took up a professorship in Dutch history at the
University of London, where he taught until
1935. In 1935, Geyl returned home to become a professor at the
University of Utrecht. In
1940, Geyl wrote an article on how historians view
Napoleon that was due to be published in June 1940. After the German occupation in May 1940, the publishers declined to publish Geyl's article out of the fear that comparisons could be made between Napoleon and
Adolf Hitler. In September 1940, Geyl used his article for the basis of series of lectures at the
Rotterdam School of Economics. In October 1940 the
SD (Security Service) of the
SS took Geyl hostage in retaliation for what the Germans alleged to be maltreatment of Germans interned in the
Dutch East Indies. Geyl spent thirteen months at the
Buchenwald concentration camp. Even after his release from Buchenwald, Geyl continued to be held by the Germans at a Dutch prison until he was finally released for medical reasons in February
1944.
In 1945 Geyl became the chair of history at University of Utrecht. In his opening address, he called for his students to disprove political and cultural myths that could lead to movements like
National Socialism. Geyl was a critic of the
Sonderweg interpretation of German history that argued that
Nazi Germany was the inevitable result of the way German history developed. In particular, Geyl defended the German historian
Leopold von Ranke against the charge of being a proto-Nazi.
Geyl was best known as a critic of the British historian
Arnold J. Toynbee, who maintained that he'd discovered "laws" of history that proved how civilizations rise and fall. Geyl often debated Toynbee both on the radio and in print. He accused Toynbee of selective use of evidence to support pre-conceived notions, and of ignoring evidence that didn't support his thesis. In addition, Geyl considered Toynbee's theory to be simplistic, ignoring the full complexity of the past; he regarded Toynbee's theory of "Challenge and Response" to explain historical change as too loose and a catch-all definition. Finally, Geyl was opposed to Toynbee's claim that Western civilization was in terminal decline.
Geyl was noted for challenging the then-popular theory that the Dutch and
Flemings had little common history. Geyl made the claim that there was a "Great Netherlands" history and that the Dutch and Flemings only separated during the
Eighty Years' War (better known as the Dutch Revolt in the English-speaking world) against
Spain in the 16th century. Geyl argued that the revolt failed in the south not because of political, cultural or religious differences, but only because the geography in the north with its lakes, bogs and rivers favored the rebels and the geography in the south with its flat plains favored the
Spanish Army. Had it not been for the accident of geography, Flanders would have been part of the
Dutch Republic.
Geyl was also was noted for arguing that the
House of Orange and the Dutch people were often in conflict, especially during the 18th century. Geyl accused
William IV of Orange of using the uprising of the
Doelisten (a group of Amsterdam burgers) against the ruling elite to seize power for himself in 1748. Another
revisionist claim made by Geyl was that the marriage of William of Orange (later
William III of England) to
Mary II was the main cause of the first
Anglo-Dutch War in the 17th century.
Geyl's most famous book was
Napoleon For and Against, an account of how French historians of different ages and views have regarded the French Emperor. From Napoleon's time to the present French historians have presented Napoleon as either a
Corsican adventurer who brought death and destruction to
France or as a patriotic Frenchman who brought glory and prosperity. Geyl used his book to advance his view that all historians are influenced by the present when writing history and thus all historical writing is transitory. In Geyl's view, there never can be a definitive account for all ages because every age has a different view of the past. For Geyl the best that historians could do was to critically examine their beliefs and urge their readers to do likewise. Geyl felt that history was a progress of "argument without end", but didn't feel that this meant that an "anything goes" interpretation of history was acceptable.
Published Works
- Christofforo Suriano: resident van de Serenissime Republiek van Venetië in Den Haag, 1616-1623, 1913.
- Willem IV en Engeland tot 1748, 1924.
- De Groot-Nederlandsche gedachte, 1925.
- De geschiedenis van de Nederlandsche Stam, 3 volumes, 1930-1959: translated into English as The Revolt of the Netherlands, 1555-1609 and The Netherlands in the Seventeenth Century.
- Revolutiedagen te Amsterdam, Augustus-September 1748, 1936.
- Patriotten en NSBers, 1946.
- The Revolt of the Netherlands, 1555-1609, New York: Barnes & Noble, 1966.
- The Netherlands in the Seventeenth Century, 2 volumes, New York: Barnes & Noble, 1961-1964.
- Oranje en Stuart, 1641-72, 1939: translated by A. Pomerans into English as Orange and Stuart, 1641-72, New York: Scribner, 1970.
- Napoleon: voor en tegen in de Franse geschiedschrijving, 1946: translated by O. Renier into English as Napoleon, For and Against, New Haven, CT; Yale University Press, 1948.
- De Patriottenbeweging, 1780-1787, 1947.
- Can We Know the Pattern of the Past? Discussion between P. Geyl and A. Toynbee concerning Toynbee's Book 'A Study of History', Bossum: F.G. Kroonder, co-written with Arnold Toynbee, 1948.
- The Pattern of the Past: Can we Determine it? cowritten with Arnold Toynbee and P. Sorokin, New York: Greenwood, 1949.
- Use and Abuse of History, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1955.
- Debates with Historians, Cleveland, Ohio: Meridian, 1958.
- Studies en strijdschriften, 1958.
- Encounters in History, Cleveland, Ohio: Meridian, 1961.
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