A revised and updated version of
Abraham Kuyper: An Annotated Bibliography 1857-2010 by Tjitze Kuipers (2011)

You can buy a printed edition of this book on the site of the publisher.

1909

Parlementaire redevoeringen. Deel II. Ministerieele redevoeringen Tweede Kamer I.
Amsterdam, Holkema & Warendorf [1909]. [4], 684 pp., 26cm.—unbd. ƒ6.25, bd. ƒ7.50.
Run: 1,000.
Published: December 1909.
Vol. 1, 3–4, see: 1908.20; 1910.15; 1912.19.
Complete set also published in 100 installments (ƒ0.25 each).
Binding, see: 1908.20.
In 1914 the remaining copies were acquired by J.H. Kok, Kampen.
RKB 178.
ET: Parliamentary speeches. Volume II. Ministerial speeches Second Chamber I.

The second volume of Parliamentary Speeches starts the series of Kuyper’s ministerial speeches in the Second Chamber of the States General. The series continues in volumes 3 and 4. Included in this volume are the greater part of the sections from 1901.13, 1902.04, 1902.11, 1903.04, and 1903.14. A rough subject index is also included. The two selections included from the Memorie van Antwoord [memorandum in reply] (pp. 16–39, 506–520) go beyond the context of parliamentary speeches because memoranda in reply were not delivered to the members of the Second Chamber as speeches, but as printed documents. These two selections deal with the policy of the cabinet and the printed interim reports summarizing the inquiries and debates of the five departments of the Second Chamber on the first chapter of the proposed national budget for 1904. These selections were included without acknowledgement of their source. For the source of the memorandum in reply, see 1903.18.

According to the prospectus (RKB 178, pp. 336–341), the shorter speeches dealing with “individual articles and amendments” were mostly omitted in order to keep within the size limits of the publication. Instead, “a number of ministerial memoranda written by Dr. Kuyper, which dealt with matters of principle, were added.” For the concept of this four-volume publication of Kuyper’s speeches (September 24, 1901–June 14, 1905) in the First and the Second Chambers of the States General, see 1908.20.