Great Privilege

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The Great Privilege was an instrument signed by Mary of Burgundy on February 11, 1477 which reconfirmed a number of privileges to the States-General of the Netherlands. Under this agreement, the provinces and towns of Flanders, Brabant, Hainaut, and Holland recovered all the local and communal rights which had been abolished by the decrees of the preceding dukes of Burgundy Charles the Bold and Philip the Good in their efforts to create a centralized state on the French model out of their separate holdings in the Low Countries.

Previous History

As Charles the Bold died unexpectedly on January 5, 1477 during a battle of Nancy, his daughter Mary of Burgundy became at age nineteen Duchess of Burgundy. At that time, her marriage to Maximilian I is not yet closed, and so she stood alone for the heavy task to defend the succession states against the various rulers of neighbouring countries. Louis XI had taken Burgundy and Franche Comté and had also been invaded Artois and Picardy. The fact that among her own citizens great discontent prevailed, made it not get any easier. The Duchy of Guelders and the principality of Liège had already declared independence. On February 3, 1477 an urgent meeting of the States-General was therefore convened. It appeared that the States were prepared to recognize and support Mary of Burgundy as their queen with financial resources, but at a certain price.

The Great Privilege granted by Mary met a large part of demands and complaints of the States. These came down to the dissatisfaction with the centralized administration of the Burgundian Netherlands. The power of the central government had to be curtailed by a series of provisions while the power of the individual provinces had to be increased. After the enactment of the Grand Privilege the authority of Mary seemed restored. It appeared that during her trip through all the States of the Netherlands that each principality itself still had considerable needs. These individual needs were also met by Mary and became known as the land privileges.

The main provisions were:

  • The Parliament of Mechelen and the General Accounting Office were abolished
  • A Great Council of 24 members was established to help Mary in the administration
  • The particular customs of each of the regions were secured, so that the identity of the private law remained guaranteed.
  • The duchess was not allowed to marry, to declare war or levy taxes without consent of the States
  • Only residents of the own province may hold offices in the region, not outsiders
  • Suspects may only in their own province come to court, no foreign judges
  • The States may, at their own will be in session, anywhere and any time
  • In the Dutch speaking provinces government letters had to be written in Dutch and not in French
  • Restoration of the Accounting Office in The Hague

End

Most of the demands soon stopped being executed. After the death of Mary in 1482, her husband Maximilian I, acting as guardian of her son Philip the Handsome, abolished the treaty. The Flemish cities revolted to maintain their autonomy, but ultimately failed.

References

  • W. Blockmans, L'histoire parlementaire dans les Pays-Bas, XIIe-XVIIe siècles, in J. Valdeón Baruque (ed.), Las Cortes de Castilla y León 1188-1988, II, Valladolid, 1990, pp. 171-192.
  • W. Blockmans, 1477 Het algemene en de gewestelijke privilegien van Maria van Bourgondie voor de Nederlanden (Standen en Landen, LXXX), Kortrijk - Heule, 1985. ISBN 9789067681179
  • H. Pirenne, The formation and constitution of the Burgundian State (fifteenth and sixteenth centuries), in American historical review 14 (1909), pp. 477-502.
  • H. Blom, The great Privilege (1477) as “Code of Dutch Freedom”: the political role of privileges in the Dutch Revolt and after, in B. Dölemeyer - H. Mohnhaupt (edd.), Das Privileg im europäischen Vergleich, Frankfurt am-Mainz, 1997, pp. 233–247.