I thought Holland was prosedent.As catholic wracking my brains as which Saint I missed.Sound good fun.
Sorry I hijacked thread
Tpbm
Is in deep thought
Oh yes I am in deep thought now...
Being a non-religious person but being educated on a Christian High school for 2 years, you've done great demands on my religious and historic knowledge...
The Netherlands have no state religion anymore. Catholicism was in the Middle Ages (1555-1579) and Dutch-German Reformism and Dutch Reformism (Protestantism) was later on (1579-1796; 1816-1848.) But since Thorbecke's constitution (1848 ) we have freedom of religion and education, state and church were divided strictly, we don't have a state religion anymore and public schools are existing together with religious schools (especially the freedom of education has been a severe battlle I won't bother you with.) Until the sixties most people were protestant and strictly belonged to certain religious groups. Catholics were a minority and felt severely subordinated. In the late sixties and seventies secularization spread rapidly. Since the eighties more people are non-religious than religious. The Dutch royal family belongs to the Dutch Protestant Church.
In 2014
49% of Dutch people were non-religious
16% protestant (7% Dutch Reformed, 3% Calvinistic Reformed, 6% Dutch Protestant Church)
24% Catholic
5% Muslim
6% Other (other Christian religions, Buddhism, Jewish, Hinduism.)
% religious people in Dutch provinces 2013
Geen = none; Katholiek = Catholic ; Hervormd = Dutch Reformed ; Gereformeerd = Calvinistic Reformed ;
PKN = Dutch Protestant Church ; Islam = Islam ; Joods = Jewish ; Hindoe = Hindu ; Boeddhist = Buddhist ; Anders = Other
As you can see in the statistics, we do have more Catholics nowadays than Protestants. But the majority of Dutch people is non-religious. Two provinces have many catholics, Noord-Brabant and Limburg, that's where they 'seriously' celebrate carnival. I live in Zuid-Holland but I do work in Noord-Brabant.
TPBM couldn't care less...