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Dutch Conquest of New Sweden
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== Aftermath and Dutch Rule == The Dutch renamed the conquered territory New Amstel and incorporated it into the broader structure of New Netherland. The former Swedish settlements along the Delaware became part of a colonial network that stretched from the Delaware Bay to the Connecticut River, all under the administration of the Dutch West India Company from New Amsterdam. The transition was largely peaceful, with Swedish colonists adapting to Dutch authority while continuing their daily lives of farming, trading, and community building. Dutch administrators made no systematic effort to transform Swedish culture or institutions, accepting the existing population as a permanent element of their enlarged colony.<ref name="hoffecker">{{cite book |last=Hoffecker |first=Carol E. |title=Delaware: The First State |year=2007 |publisher=University of Delaware Press |location=Newark, DE}}</ref> The Swedish colonists maintained their Lutheran faith under Dutch rule, continuing to worship in the tradition established during New Sweden's existence. The Church of Sweden sent ministers to serve the colonial congregations, maintaining a spiritual connection to the homeland even after political ties had been severed. Swedish remained the language of worship and community life for generations, and Swedish customs persisted in the former colony's settlements. The Dutch period proved to be transitional rather than transformative, a brief interval between Swedish and English rule during which the fundamental character of the Swedish settlements remained largely unchanged.<ref name="acrelius">{{cite book |last=Acrelius |first=Israel |title=A History of New Sweden; or, The Settlements on the River Delaware |year=1874 |publisher=Historical Society of Pennsylvania |location=Philadelphia |orig-year=1759}}</ref>
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