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Modern Dutch |
Modern Dutch extends from 1550 to the present day. The most important event in the history of the language during this period was the publication from 1619 to 1637 of the Statenbijbel, the authorized version of the Scriptures, which did much to spread this form of Dutch in the Low Countries. The effect of this translation was similar to that of the High German version of the Bible by Martin Luther in establishing a standard of language and orthography that was generally recognized as authoritative. This standard language spread first in the Dutch Republic of the 17th century. In the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, which was under successive Spanish, Austrian, and French domination between 1516 and 1814, the language lost its position as a vehicle of culture until its restoration by the Flemish national movement in the 19th century. In 1898 the Belgian government granted the Dutch language official status alongside French, although it did not become the sole official language of present-day Flanders until 1938. After World War II (1939-1945), measures sponsored by the governments of Belgium and the Netherlands were taken to reform Dutch orthography and to effect uniformity of usage in the two countries. See also Dutch Literature; Flemish Literature; Frisian Language.
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