Lot #: 42276
[The town of Pomeiock]. |
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Selling price: $400
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Description
Pomeiock was a village with a strong palisade all round, and a very narrow entrance, which was typical of that region.
Inside were a few houses in which only the chief and his nobles lived, along with a temple marked ‘A’, separate from the other dwellings. The chief’s house, marked ‘B’, was built entirely of posts tied together and covered with matting, which they rolled up during the day for fresh air and sunlight.
In the middle of the village, they held celebrations around a large fire. Should they live far from water, they usually built an artificial pond quite near, marked ‘C’, from which they could obtain fresh water.
Theodore De Bry (1528-1598), was born in Liege in modern day Belgium. Around 1570, when the Spanish invaded the Low Countries he fled to the German city of Strasbourg, where he set up as a goldsmith and engraver.
This experience gave him an anti-Spanish outlook. In 1587, de Bry travelled to London to meet with a Frenchman named Jacques le Moyne. When the first accounts of Dutch, Spanish and British explorers to Asia, South and North America began to be published in the 1580s, De Bry became interested in producing illustrated editions of these early travel reports.
Living in London in the 1580's, he met the geographer Richard Hakluyt. But it was only after settling in Frankfurt, already in his 60's, that de Bry published his first books, Les Grands Voyages, or "The Discovery of America” as well as the similar Petits Voyages, or the "India Orientalis” series.
Theodore De Bry began his compilation of early voyages in 1590, and had published six parts at the time of his death in 1598. His widow, two sons, and another family member continued the work, which comprised a total of fifty-four parts when it was completed in 1630. The publication brought to the European public the first realistic visualization of the exotic world opened up across the Atlantic by the explorers, conquerors and settlers” (Alexander).
More about Theodore De Bry [+]
Inside were a few houses in which only the chief and his nobles lived, along with a temple marked ‘A’, separate from the other dwellings. The chief’s house, marked ‘B’, was built entirely of posts tied together and covered with matting, which they rolled up during the day for fresh air and sunlight.
In the middle of the village, they held celebrations around a large fire. Should they live far from water, they usually built an artificial pond quite near, marked ‘C’, from which they could obtain fresh water.
Theodore De Bry (1528-1598), was born in Liege in modern day Belgium. Around 1570, when the Spanish invaded the Low Countries he fled to the German city of Strasbourg, where he set up as a goldsmith and engraver.
This experience gave him an anti-Spanish outlook. In 1587, de Bry travelled to London to meet with a Frenchman named Jacques le Moyne. When the first accounts of Dutch, Spanish and British explorers to Asia, South and North America began to be published in the 1580s, De Bry became interested in producing illustrated editions of these early travel reports.
Living in London in the 1580's, he met the geographer Richard Hakluyt. But it was only after settling in Frankfurt, already in his 60's, that de Bry published his first books, Les Grands Voyages, or "The Discovery of America” as well as the similar Petits Voyages, or the "India Orientalis” series.
Theodore De Bry began his compilation of early voyages in 1590, and had published six parts at the time of his death in 1598. His widow, two sons, and another family member continued the work, which comprised a total of fifty-four parts when it was completed in 1630. The publication brought to the European public the first realistic visualization of the exotic world opened up across the Atlantic by the explorers, conquerors and settlers” (Alexander).
More about Theodore De Bry [+]
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