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・ Johannes Stert
・ Johannes Steuchius
・ Johannes Sticheler
・ Johannes Stikkelman
・ Johannes Streich
・ Johannes Stricker
・ Johannes Stroux
・ Johannes Stubberud
・ Johannes Sturm
・ Johannes Stöffler
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・ Johannes Susay
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・ Johannes Symonis Hasprois
・ Johannes Sæbøe
Johannes Tak van Poortvliet
・ Johannes Tapissier
・ Johannes Tauler
・ Johannes Tautz
・ Johannes Terwogt
・ Johannes Teutonicus
・ Johannes Teutonicus Zemeke
・ Johannes Teyssen
・ Johannes Thedens
・ Johannes Theobald
・ Johannes Theodor Baargeld
・ Johannes Theodor Reinhardt
・ Johannes Theodor Schmalhausen
・ Johannes Theodor Suhr
・ Johannes Thesselius


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Johannes Tak van Poortvliet : ウィキペディア英語版
Johannes Tak van Poortvliet

Johannes Pieter Roetert Tak van Poortvliet (born J.P.R. Tak) (21 June 1839, Engelen – 26 January 1904, The Hague), ''lord of the manor of Poortvliet and Cleverskerke'', was a Dutch politician.
==Biography==
He was born in Engelen, North Brabant where his father, Adriaan Tak, was a Dutch Reformed minister. His father was a wealthy man, being the largest landowner in Zeeland. Johannes Tak studied law in Leiden (1857–1862), but he didn't practise law. He entered the public service and was one of the secretaries ''(commies-griffier)'' of de House of Representatives, the lower house of the Dutch parliament. In 1868 he became the secretary of the State Commissioner for water management in Zeeland and he showed himself a skillful man.
Johannes Tak van Poortvliet was attracted to liberalism. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1870 and was a strong supporter of Jan Kappeyne van de Coppello, the leader of the progressive liberals. In 1877 he entered the Kappeyne van de Coppello cabinet as Minister of Water Management and Trade. In 1878 his "Canal Act," intended to improve the Dutch waterways, mainly by adding some major canals, was rejected by the House of Representatives. Tak and the other ministers of the cabinet resigned.
Tak van Poortvliet returned to the House of Representatives in 1880 and became leader of the progressive liberals ''(Kappeynianen)''. From 1884 to 1888 he was a member of the Senate (upper house of parliament), but he returned in the House of Representatives in 1888. He was an ardent supporter of suffrage extension, an issue which strongly divided the Liberals. After the liberals won the parliamentary election in 1891, he was asked to become Minister of the Interior in the Van Tienhoven cabinet. However, he only wanted to join the cabinet if the question of suffrage extension would become the main priority. As Minister of the Interior, he proposed a bill which would extend the right to vote to the whole adult male population. However, the right, including the "old liberals", were opposed and his bill was rejected by a majority of the House of Representatives in 1894. He dissolved the House, and hoped that new elections would result in a progressive majority. However, the ''Takkianen'' (his followers) lost the elections. Although he returned in the House of Representatives, he had lost most of his influence. From 1901 to 1904 he was again a member of the Senate.
Johannes Tak van Poortvliet was also a ''Dijkgraaf'' of the water board of Delfland (1887–1891).
He died on 26 January 1904 in The Hague. At the time of his death he was a very rich man.

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