[Holland by Thomas Colley Grattan]@TWC D-Link book
Holland

CHAPTER IV
10/26

Thus the spirit of liberty burst forth in all their proceedings, and they were justified in calling themselves _Vri-Vriesen_, Free-Frisons.
No nation is more interested than England in the examination of all that concerns this remote corner of Europe, so resolute in its opposition to both civil and religious tyranny; for it was there that those Saxon institutions and principles were first developed without constraint, while the time of their establishment in England was still distant.

Restrained by our narrow limits, we can merely indicate this curious state of things; nor may we enter on many mysteries of social government which the most learned find a difficulty in solving.

What were the rights of the nobles in their connection with these freemen?
What ties of reciprocal interest bound the different cantons to each other?
What were the privileges of the towns ?--These are the minute but important points of detail which are overshadowed by the grand and imposing figure of the national independence.

But in fact the emperors themselves, in these distant times, had little knowledge of this province, and spoke of it vaguely, and as it were at random, in their diplomas, the chief monuments of the history of the Middle Ages.

The counts of Holland and the apostolic nuncios addressed their acts and rescripts indiscriminately to the nobles, clergy, magistrates, judges, consuls, or commons of Friesland.


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