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  1.  5
    Discourses of Decline: Essays on Republicanism in Honor of Wyger R.E. Velema.Joris Oddens, Mart Rutjes & Arthur Weststeijn (eds.) - 2021 - Brill.
    This volume explores the relevance of decline within the republican tradition. The essays in this volume focus on the Dutch Republic during the revolutionary era, as well as early modern Spain and Venice, the German Enlightenment, and the Weimar Republic.
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    Ancient models in the early modern republican imagination.Wyger Velema & Arthur Weststeijn (eds.) - 2017 - Boston: Brill.
    Ancient Models in the Early Modern Republican Imagination, edited by Wyger Velema and Arthur Weststeijn, approaches the early modern republican political imagination from a fresh perspective. While most scholars agree on the importance of the classical world to early modern republican theorists, its role is all too often described in rather abstract and general terms such as "classical republicanism" or the "neo-roman theory of free states". The contributions to this volume propose a different approach and all focus on the specific (...)
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  3. Imperial republics : Roman imagery in Italian and Duth Town Halls, c. 1300-1700.Arthur Weststeijn - 2018 - In Wouter Bracke, Jan Nelis & Jan De Maeyer (eds.), Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: from the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism. Bruxelles: Academia Belgica.
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  4.  17
    ""The Power of" Pliant Stuff": Fables and Frankness in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republicanism.Arthur Weststeijn - 2011 - Journal of the History of Ideas 72 (1):1-27.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Power of “Pliant Stuff”: Fables and Frankness in Seventeenth-Century Dutch RepublicanismArthur WeststeijnIn the preface to his 1609 collection of classical fables entitled De sapientia veterum (On the Wisdom of the Ancients), Francis Bacon vindicated his choice for such a playful genre. Although the writing of fables might seem just an “exercise of pleasure for my own or my reader’s recreation,” Bacon stressed that that was not the case. (...)
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