Crown witnesses: strategies for legal and judicial reform amidst protestant uprisings

dc.contributor.authorPrado Rubio, Erika
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-05T06:59:04Z
dc.date.available2025-06-05T06:59:04Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.descriptionThis article has been prepared within the framework of the project “Global challenges and serious games: training for Peace, Security and Defense in a global context” presented to the Convocatoria de Ayudas para Promover la Cultura de Defensa 2024
dc.description.abstractThe text explores the concept of transitional justice, traditionally associated with shifts from authoritarian to democratic regimes, but here understood more broadly as changes in political-administrative systems that impact institutions and laws. Using this wider perspective, the case of the Netherlands under Philip II is examined—specifically the period following the Iconoclastic Fury, a wave of unrest in West Flanders. This led to a shift in the Crown’s approach, marked by the resignation of Margaret of Parma and the arrival of the Duke of Alba. Amid widespread public disorder and a loss of trust in local authorities, efforts were made to reconstruct the region’s legal and institutional systems. In this context, friar Lorenzo de Villavicencio, a Spanish agent familiar with the Flemish situation, wrote a series of recommendations—referred to as "warnings"—on how the Duke should rebuild the administration and courts. Although many of his suggestions were implemented, they ultimately failed to prevent further deterioration.
dc.identifier.citationPrado Rubio, Erika, "CROWN WITNESSES: STRATEGIES FOR LEGAL AND JUDICIAL REFORM AMIDST PROTESTANT UPRISINGS", en Prado Rubio, Erika y Fernández Rodríguez, Manuela, El derecho como instrumento geopolítico, Madrid, Dykinson, 2024, pp. 37-58.
dc.identifier.doiDOI: https://doi.org/10.14679/3572
dc.identifier.isbn979-13-7006-010-7
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10115/88077
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherDykinson
dc.rights.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.subjectNetherlands
dc.subjectDuke of Alba
dc.subjectIconoclast fury
dc.subjectHeresy
dc.subjectCrime of rebellion
dc.titleCrown witnesses: strategies for legal and judicial reform amidst protestant uprisings
dc.typeBook chapter

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CROWN WITNESSES: STRATEGIES FOR LEGAL AND JUDICIAL REFORM AMIDST PROTESTANT UPRISINGS
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The text explores the concept of transitional justice, traditionally associated with shifts from authoritarian to democratic regimes, but here understood more broadly as changes in political-administrative systems that impact institutions and laws. Using this wider perspective, the case of the Netherlands under Philip II is examined—specifically the period following the Iconoclastic Fury, a wave of unrest in West Flanders. This led to a shift in the Crown’s approach, marked by the resignation of Margaret of Parma and the arrival of the Duke of Alba. Amid widespread public disorder and a loss of trust in local authorities, efforts were made to reconstruct the region’s legal and institutional systems. In this context, friar Lorenzo de Villavicencio, a Spanish agent familiar with the Flemish situation, wrote a series of recommendations—referred to as "warnings"—on how the Duke should rebuild the administration and courts. Although many of his suggestions were implemented, they ultimately failed to prevent further deterioration.