The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Academics uncover 17th Century admen’s tactics

Pair find Dutch methods still in use today

- CLAIRE WARRENDER cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

Modern-day newspaper adverts have been traced back to Holland’s 17th Century Mad Men.

Pioneering businessme­n embraced commercial advertisin­g and used nowcommon marketing ploys as long as 400 years ago, decades before the practice was picked up elsewhere.

Six years of research by St Andrews University historians has discovered newspaper ads were used with “great enthusiasm” – and that some of the concepts developed as far back as 1620 are still in use today.

Authors Professor Andrew Pettegree and Dr Arthur der Weduwen said their investigat­ions had provided unrivalled insights into the consumer society of the time, as people publicised new inventions or appealed for help.

The pair have published two new books to mark the 400th anniversar­y of the birth of modern advertisin­g.

They focused on the first 6,000 ads placed in Dutch newspapers between 1620 and 1675.

The story of Abraham Verhoeven, a prolific writer and the first man to publish newspaper adverts, is told in The Dutch Republic And The Birth Of Modern Advertisin­g.

One of the first to publish an illustrate­d newspaper, he had a unique marketing ploy which involved inserting notices at the end of every issue announcing he would soon be publishing other items of interest, such as maps or pamphlets.

His rivals in the Dutch Republic, the modern Netherland­s, embraced commercial adverts soon after.

Professor Pettegree said: “The Dutch Republic was the birthplace of a competitiv­e news market.

“And it is here that we see the true origins of modern newspaper advertisin­g decades before publishers in other countries such as England, France and Germany began to use advertisem­ents.”

The second book, News Business And Public Informatio­n: Advertisem­ents And Announceme­nts In Dutch And Flemish Newspapers, includes full translatio­ns of all 6,000 advertisem­ents from Dutch to English.

Prof Pettegree said: “This year marks a milestone in the history of advertisin­g with the 400th anniversar­y of the first newspaper advert being published.

“Some of the concepts developed in newspaper advertisin­g we found during our research are still very much in use today.”

Dr der Weduwen said: “Thanks to these advertisem­ents, we gain unrivalled insights into the burgeoning consumer society of 17th Century Europe.

“We have offered both a unique window into past lives and societies and the beginnings of marketing strategies that would characteri­se the advertisin­g world over the following centuries.”

 ??  ?? Dr Arthur der Weduwen, left, and Professor Andrew Pettegree and a placard advertisin­g the services of a Dutch doctor in around 1700.
Dr Arthur der Weduwen, left, and Professor Andrew Pettegree and a placard advertisin­g the services of a Dutch doctor in around 1700.
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