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Private Property in the Dutch-Spanish Peace Treaty of Münster (30 January 1648)

44 Pages Posted: 23 Jul 2007

See all articles by Randall Lesaffer

Randall Lesaffer

Tilburg Law School; KU Leuven - Faculty of Law

Erik-Jan Broers

Tilburg University - Department of Jurisprudence and Legal History

Date Written: July 23, 2007

Abstract

The rise of the dynastic State with its growing control over warfare led to a changing conception of war. Under the just war tradition of the Late Middle Ages, war was conceived of in terms of the vindication of justice and was, at least conceptually, limited in scope. It was perceived as a set of separate acts of war, not disrupting all relations between the belligerents and their subjects. While the just war tradition proved resilient during the Early-Modern Age, a second concept, that of legal war, emerged. A legal war disrupted normal peaceful relations almost wholly; it was thought of as a state of war. The laws of peace ruled the state of peace; the laws - and practices - of war and neutrality ruled the state of war. As war became a more encompassing state of affairs, peace treaties became more elaborate. Apart from setting the conditions for ending hostilities, they also had to regulate the return from the state of war to the state of peace.

By the 17th century, it had become customary for belligerents to seize and confiscate enemy property that came within their power. By consequence, many peace treaties included extensive stipulations on seized goods. The Dutch-Spanish Peace of Münster (1648), which ended the Eighty Years War (1567-1648), is an extremely interesting example thereof. As most early-modern peace treaties, the Münster Peace provided for the general restitution of all seized property, with the exception for movables and lapsed incomes from reinstated property.

The analysis of the relevant clauses in the Peace Treaty and their confrontation with contemporary doctrine indicates that the practice of seizure and restitution shared in the same ambiguity which scholars such as Grotius had caught in distinguishing just and legal war. Seizures were part and parcel of the discourse of just war. Seized goods served as a security for the indemnification the other side, the supposedly unjust belligerent, would have to pay. The restitution clauses, however, were dictated by the logic of legal war. They partook in the desire of the signatories to forget the past and not to attribute or concede any guilt for the war. This was given substance in the amnesty clauses that became standard in peace treaties.

Keywords: history, international law, peace treaty, Westphalia, private property, confiscation, restitution, peacemaking

JEL Classification: K10, K11, K13, K33

Suggested Citation

Lesaffer, Randall C. H. and Broers, Erik-Jan, Private Property in the Dutch-Spanish Peace Treaty of Münster (30 January 1648) (July 23, 2007). Tilburg University Legal Studies Working Paper No. 002/2007, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1002389 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1002389

Randall C. H. Lesaffer (Contact Author)

Tilburg Law School ( email )

PO Box 90153
Tilburg, 5000 LE
Netherlands
0031 13 4662294 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://rechten.uvt.nl/lesaffer

KU Leuven - Faculty of Law

Tiensestraat 41
Leuven, B-3000
Belgium

Erik-Jan Broers

Tilburg University - Department of Jurisprudence and Legal History ( email )

Netherlands

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