ABSTRACT
In 1748, the last year of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748), the army of the United Provinces had a strength on paper of 126,000 men, the actual strength being approximately 90,000. 1 This was an impressive number and by and large the equivalent of the complement during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714). 2 Over the peacetime years after 1748 numbers declined to just over 40,000. This still constituted a considerable force. As a rule of a thumb eighteenth-century political-military leadership considered an army equivalent to 1 or 1.5 per cent of the population acceptable to secure the safety of the state in time of peace. Given a population of 1.9 million inhabitants around 1750 the United Provinces mobilized an army of 2.1 per cent of the population. However, the actual strength of the army of the Batavian Republic (1795-1806) and the Kingdom of Holland (1806-1810) sank to numbers ranging from only 22,000 men to 37,000. This is remarkable taking into account that the second half of the eighteenth century saw a slow growth of the population, reaching a total of just over 2 million inhabitants in 1795 and considering that during those years Holland was fully engaged in the war effort of revolutionary and Napoleonic France. 3 These decreasing numbers reflect the persisting financial exhaustion of the United Provinces after the War of the Austrian Succession. From 1810 onwards things were hardly any better. During the period of the annexation of Holland to the French Empire (1810-1813) in all an estimated 35,000 Dutch military served under Bonaparte’s colours. 4
