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A. Willemsen Collection : Studies in European Urban History (1100-1800) SEUH 15
After about 1300, most schools in the Netherlands came under secular
rule. It managed to create good and accessible schools, causing a
hey-day for education in the 14th, 15th and 16th century. As a result,
more than half of the children participated in basic instruction and
literacy rate went relatively high. A contemporary Italian visitor noted
with awe that ‘in the Low Countries everybody could read and write, even
the peasants’. In the 16th century, the curriculum changed because of
the Reformation and the availability of printed texts. In this book, the
favourable situation in the Netherlands is compared with the rest of
Western Europe.
Dr. Annemarieke Willemsen (1969) is art historian and archaeologist and
works as curator of the medieval department of the National Museum of
Antiquities at Leiden. Earlier she published books on Roman and medieval
children’s toys.
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