State Papers Foreign, Holland

Item

Country

GB

Name of institution (official language of the state)

Language of name of institution

eng

Contact information: postal address

Kew, Richmond TW9 4DU London

Contact information: phone number

0044 (0) 2088763444

Contact information: web address

Contact information: email

Reference number

SP 84

Type of reference number

Archival reference number

Title (official language of the state)

State Papers Foreign, Holland

Language of title

eng

Creator / accumulator

Secretaries of State

Date note

circa 1560/1780

Language(s)

dut
fra
eng

Extent

590 volumes

Type of material

Textual Material

Scope and content

This series of the State Papers collection comprises correspondence and papers of the Secretary of State concerning the northern part of the Low Countries, the Netherlands, essentially from 1585 (though a few documents are dated earlier). It mainly includes in-letters from the English (later British) ambassadors, envoys, ministers or other representatives at The Hague. The series also contains many draft replies and some letters from outside Holland (for instance, Paris, Brussels, Brest, Toulon and Madrid) but sent via The Hague or Rotterdam.
Considering the close connections between the Sephardic communities in Holland and England and the role played by some Sephardim in commercial and diplomatic relationships between both kingdoms, this series includes valuable information regarding the Western Sephardic Diaspora. Particularly interesting is the memorial by Manuel Martinez Dormido and other letters from David Nassy, Jacob del Monte and Jacob Bueno de Mesquita regarding the Jewish resettlement in England (SP 84/160/24, SP 84/161/19). See also an affidavit of Jerónimo Nunes da Costa (alias Moses Curiel) dated June 19, 1654 (SP 84/159/99).

Archival history

The State Paper Office evolved informally and gradually from the collections of papers kept by the secretaries of state during the 16th century in the royal palace at Whitehall. The increasing complexity of administration during Elizabeth's reign suggested the need for a private library of confidential papers concerning domestic and foreign affairs to which the public did not have access, and in the 1580s such records were placed in the custody of Dr Thomas Wilson (c.1560-1629).
The office of Keeper of the State Papers first appeared in 1610, when Levinus Monk and Thomas Wilson, nephew of the above, were jointly appointed "keeper and registers". Wilson did all he could to increase the importance of his office. He resumed a considerable number of papers removed by earlier secretaries of state, and sorted and arranged the collection under domestic and foreign divisions.
By the early 18th century, the State Paper Office was suffering from a marked lack of organisation. As an attempt to remedy this, an official known as the collector and transmitter of the state papers was appointed from 1725 onwards; this post was held in conjunction with the keepership from the 1740s. In 1764, a royal commission appointed a group of methodisers of the state papers who made further attempts to regulate the State Paper Office. These efforts were hindered by the division of the papers between rooms in the palace of Whitehall, the Holbein gate (from 1618 until 1759) and unsuitable houses in the vicinity. This problem was not solved until 1834 with the completion of Soane's purpose-built State Paper Office in Duke Street.
The Public Record Office Act 1838 brought existing and accumulating records of the central courts under the aegis of the Master of the Rolls, and the state papers and other departmental records were subsequently added to his custody. The state papers were transferred by an order in council of March 5, 1852, and in 1854 the Master of the Rolls instructed by warrant the deputy keeper of the public records to take the state papers into his charge. The State Paper Office now became a branch office of the Public Record Office until the records were removed to the Chancery Lane building in 1861. Soane's State Paper Office was then demolished.
Although attempts were made to calendar the state papers in the later 18th century, nothing concrete was achieved until in 1825 a commission was entrusted with printing and publishing the documents in the State Paper Office. Under its auspices, selections of the most important letters of the reign of Henry VIII were printed between 1830 and 1852. It was not, however, until the state papers were placed under the charge and superintendence of the Master of the Rolls by the operation of the Public Record Office Act 1838 and the order in council of March 5, 1852, that any regular system of calendars was adopted. Since that date, over 200 volumes of calendars of the Domestic, Foreign and Colonial papers, ranging from the early 16th to the later 18th century, have been published.

Administrative / Biographical history

In the Middle Ages, the affairs of the state in England as directed by the King's Council were put in execution through the Chancery, the Chancellor exercising all the functions which can pertain to a modern secretary of state. The acts of Chancery had to be authenticated by the great seal, of which the Chancellor was the keeper, and were recorded on the rolls of that department.
In time the business of the state began to be exercised in a less formal manner, and to be diverted into other channels. The King's Secretary (who was at first styled the King's Clerk, then Secretary, afterwards Principal Secretary, and who was probably first called Secretary of State in the time of Elizabeth I) was increasingly employed to execute much of the business formerly pertaining to the Chancellor. In the reign of Henry VIII, the king's Principal Secretary had become a person of such great importance that his rank and precedence were determined by statute, and the business and correspondence of his office so much increased as to require in the same reign a Second Principal Secretary.
Both domestic and foreign affairs were the joint responsibility of the principal secretaries. In 1640, the king made a rough geographical division of foreign affairs between them, and out of this division, the secretaries' office was separated into the Southern and Northern Departments. From 1709 to 1726 and from 1742 to 1746 there was a Third Secretary with responsibility for Scottish affairs. Although the allocation of countries between the Northern and Southern Departments varied slightly from time to time to take account of particular circumstances, the general rule in the 18th century was that the Southern Department embraced France, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Switzerland, Turkey and the Barbary States, as well as Home and Irish affairs; also the Colonies, until 1768 when a Third Secretary was added to take charge of colonial business. The Northern Department was concerned with the remaining overseas countries with which diplomatic relations were maintained.
In 1782, the Colonial Department was abolished and a clear division was made in the business of the two principal secretaries of state, all domestic and colonial business passing to the Southern Department, which became the Home Office, while all foreign business was allocated to the Northern Department, which became the Foreign Office.

Access points: locations

Access points: persons, families

Access points: subject terms

Access points: document types

System of arrangement

The records are arranged generally in chronological order, except for a supplementary series, and some volumes containing undated material.

Links to finding aids

Author of the description

Carla Vieira, 2022

Bibliography

Item sets