Renaissance · Europe · Politics

1579

Union of Utrecht

January 23, 1579

Seven northern provinces of the Netherlands signed a defensive pact at Utrecht, pledging to fight the Spanish together. It was the founding document of what would become the Dutch Republic. The southern provinces, increasingly Catholic and increasingly Spanish, drifted away toward the Union of Arras. Its guarantee of religious freedom, though limited, made the Dutch Republic one of early modern Europe's most tolerant states.