Book contents
- Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
- Law and Christianity
- Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Law, Christianity, and Secularization in the Low Countries
- 1 Alger of Liège
- 2 Arnoldus Gheyloven
- 3 Boëtius Epo
- 4 Leonardus Lessius
- 5 Franciscus Zypaeus
- 6 Hugo Grotius
- 7 Paulus Voet
- 8 Ulrik Huber
- 9 Zeger-Bernard van Espen
- 10 Dionysius van der Keessel
- 11 Pieter Paulus
- 12 Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer
- 13 Edouard Ducpétiaux
- 14 Charles Périn
- 15 Léon de Lantsheere
- 16 Paul Scholten
- 17 Willem Duynstee
- 18 Jules Storme
- 19 Herman Dooyeweerd
- 20 Josse Mertens de Wilmars
- Index
- References
10 - Dionysius van der Keessel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2021
- Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
- Law and Christianity
- Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction Law, Christianity, and Secularization in the Low Countries
- 1 Alger of Liège
- 2 Arnoldus Gheyloven
- 3 Boëtius Epo
- 4 Leonardus Lessius
- 5 Franciscus Zypaeus
- 6 Hugo Grotius
- 7 Paulus Voet
- 8 Ulrik Huber
- 9 Zeger-Bernard van Espen
- 10 Dionysius van der Keessel
- 11 Pieter Paulus
- 12 Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer
- 13 Edouard Ducpétiaux
- 14 Charles Périn
- 15 Léon de Lantsheere
- 16 Paul Scholten
- 17 Willem Duynstee
- 18 Jules Storme
- 19 Herman Dooyeweerd
- 20 Josse Mertens de Wilmars
- Index
- References
Summary
Dionysius Godefridus van der Keessel was born in Deventer on 22 September 1738 as the youngest son of the Reformed church minister Dionysius van der Keessel (1700–1755), himself the son of a physician in Dordrecht, and Johanna Wilhelmina Cabeljau (c. 1705–1775). To have a minister or physician in the family background was hardly extraordinary for a Dutch law professor in the eighteenth century. Van der Keessel senior had been rather combative in protecting the unity of the Reformed church. Separatists, pietists, quietists, enthusiasts, and mystics were but a few of the groups he attacked in the lengthy titles of his pamphlets. He published several against the Groningen preacher Wilhelmus Schortinghuis between 1744–1755, and had Schortinghuis’s book on ‘Heartfelt Christianity’ banned by the synod of Overijssel, embarrassing the theological faculty at Groningen, which had already given its approbation. The first son was stillborn but the second son, Samuel Rudolphus van der Keessel (1737–1799), followed in his father’s footsteps and became a minister of the Reformed church in Dordrecht. It seems Dionysius considered theology too, but chose law instead. Van der Keessel’s father and grandfather had both studied at Leiden University.
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- Great Christian Jurists in the Low Countries , pp. 177 - 200Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021