Lot #: 84156
[DEN BRIEL/BRILLE]Brilium, Holandiae opp. ob Intestinum Batavicum Bellum . . |
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This item has been sold.
Selling price: $160 Sold in 2020 Join News Letter to get informed when a similar item comes available. |
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Description
An old, antique map, and a bird's-eye view of Den Briel by Braun and Hogenberg, with a key to locations. TRANSLATION OF CARTOUCHE TEXT: Brielle, a town in Holland, well known because of the civil war in Batavia, which began here at the beginning of April 1572.
COMMENTARY BY BRAUN: "Most of the inhabitants of Brielle earn their living by fishing, which they carry on from their youth in the North Sea, where they catch chiefly plaice and cod, which are then processed in Brielle and the surrounding towns."
This bird's-eye view shows the topographical situation of the Island of Voorne at the mouth of the River Meuse. The economic importance of fishing here is underlined by the fishermen in the lower left-hand corner of the plate.
The sea-battle (bottom right) is a reference to Brielle's role in the Dutch Revolt: on 1 April 1572 Brielle - formerly anglicised as Brill - was the first town to be taken by the rebels, the Watergeuzen. The first day of April is still celebrated today as Liberation Day.
However, in August 1585 Brielle was given to Queen Elizabeth I of England as a security in the Treaty of Nonsuch, in exchange for 5,000 English soldiers to help fight the Spanish troops. The pledged areas were not returned to the Netherlands until 1616.
Reference: Van der Krogt 4, 643, state 1; Taschen, Braun and Hogenberg, p. 162.
COMMENTARY BY BRAUN: "Most of the inhabitants of Brielle earn their living by fishing, which they carry on from their youth in the North Sea, where they catch chiefly plaice and cod, which are then processed in Brielle and the surrounding towns."
This bird's-eye view shows the topographical situation of the Island of Voorne at the mouth of the River Meuse. The economic importance of fishing here is underlined by the fishermen in the lower left-hand corner of the plate.
The sea-battle (bottom right) is a reference to Brielle's role in the Dutch Revolt: on 1 April 1572 Brielle - formerly anglicised as Brill - was the first town to be taken by the rebels, the Watergeuzen. The first day of April is still celebrated today as Liberation Day.
However, in August 1585 Brielle was given to Queen Elizabeth I of England as a security in the Treaty of Nonsuch, in exchange for 5,000 English soldiers to help fight the Spanish troops. The pledged areas were not returned to the Netherlands until 1616.
Reference: Van der Krogt 4, 643, state 1; Taschen, Braun and Hogenberg, p. 162.
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