"War, Capital, and the Dutch State (1588-1795) has the potential to become a highly influential book." - Dr. Gijs Rommelse, International Journal of Maritime History, 28(3):606-607."For the moment, ... Brandon's work probably provides the last word on these issues, and the decision to publish it in English will hopefully secure for it the wide circulation that it undoubtedly deserves." - Dr. Aaron Graham, The Economic History Review, 69, 4 (2016):1389-1390. "How could the Dutch Republic that was so unlike the ideal of a powerful, centralized state play a crucial role for so long in the war-torn state-system of early-modern Europe? For Pepijn Brandon the explanation resides in the fact that it was a ‘federal-brokerage state’. Dutch state-makers continued to devolve power downwards towards local and provincial institutions rather than to create national administrative bodies and to favour brokerage over bureaucracy. They mediated between merchants oriented toward the world market and more local interest groups and could thus draw on the impressive resources of the Dutch economy. It was only late in the eighteenth century that internal limits of this parcellized state structure became patent. To show its major strengths and its finally emerging weaknesses the author provides a very lucid in-depth analysis of three areas of interaction between the state and capitalists in the organization of warfare.This groundbreaking book provides a fascinating and knowledgeable case-study of the actual interplay of three of the main driving forces in the history of the early modern era: capitalism, state-formation and war and has major implications for many general claims that have been made with regard to their history and the history of the Dutch Republic."- Prof. dr. Peer Vries, University of Vienna"This research clearly makes an important contribution to our thinking about warfare and state formation." — Christiaan van Bochove, in: Continuity and Change, 32/2 (2017): 289-291“… the publisher should be commended for making this study available to a large English-speaking audience, which it certainly deserves. Brandon’s contribution is a type of economic history that has unfortunately fallen out of favor in recent decades, replaced by reams of cultural history, so one can only hope that this notable study will inspire similar social science research into the complex symbiosis of states and capital accumulation elsewhere. Every university’s history department should acquire a copy for its own library collection.” – Eric Mielants, in: Science & Society (2018)"Brandon’s study is not only well researched, it is highly convincing and will undoubtedly lead to a reconsideration of the forces at play in the development of the early modern state." - Donald J. Harreld, in: Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. LXX:3 (2017)