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165244394Amsterdam: Jodocus Janssonius 1652. Very good edges reinforced on verso light soiling mostly to margins minor foxing dampstained along bottom edge image clean. 1 sheet. Copper engraved map. 11.75 x 13.5 inches. Double-page copper engraved plate from "Fredrick Hendrick Van Nassauw Prince Van Orangien Zyn Leven En Bedryf." page 128. Labeled "Fig. 10 Fol. 100" in top left corner. The two views depict the 1630 attack on the Portuguese city of Olinda in Brazil by the Dutch.<br /> <br /> When Spanish Crown and the Kingdom of Portugal formed a dynastic union 1580-1640 uniting the entire Iberian peninsula as well as their colonies the Dutch saw their opportunity to take advangage of Portuguese weakness by attacking their colonies occupying large sections of Brazil including the whole Brazilian northeast and in 1630 capturing Recife and Olinda in the captaincy of Pernambuco the largest and richest sugar-producing area in the world. [Jodocus Janssonius] unknown
165244393Amsterdam: Jodocus Janssonius 1652. About very good margins cut to neat line edges lightly browned and soiled few small chips along edges two small tears repaired on th verso some staining on reverse image sharp. 1 sheet. Hand-colored copper-engraved map. 11 x 14.5 inches. Double-page copper engraved plate from "Fredrick Hendrick Van Nassauw Prince Van Orangien Zyn Leven En Bedryf." page 31. Labeled "Fol. 23" along bottom edge. Image Depicts the Dutch fleet under Piet Heyn capturing the fort at the entrance to the Baia de Todos os Santos.<br /> <br /> When Spanish Crown and the Kingdom of Portugal formed a dynastic union 1580-1640 uniting the entire Iberian peninsula as well as their colonies the Dutch saw their opportunity to take advangage of Portuguese weakness by attacking their colonies occupying large sections of Brazil including the whole Brazilian northeast and in 1630 capturing Recife and Olinda in the captaincy of Pernambuco the largest and richest sugar-producing area in the world. [Jodocus Janssonius] unknown
1650ABC_46896Middelburg 1650. Small 4to 19.5 x 15 cm. Jan de Laet 20th-century half vellum dark grey laid-paper sides paper spine-label with the letterpress title reading up the spine light grey laid endpapers. 34 pp. An anonymous political tract in the form of a conversation between four fictional gentlemen Van Blyenberg Van Sorgdal Van Vraegwel Van Weetburgh whose names suggest happiness concern questioning and knowing respectively. It begins with a reference to the onverwachte en haestige unexpected and sudden death of the Prince of Orange meaning Willem II Prince of Orange and Count of Nassau stadtholder of the Dutch Republic from 1647 to his death from the plague on 6 November 1650 at the age of twenty-four. In 1649 Admiral Witte de With commander of the Dutch West India Companys WICs fleet fighting the Portuguese in Brazil came into dispute with the WIC and returned to the Netherlands against orders arriving in April 1650. Stadtholder Willem II and the States General supported the WIC against De With and sentenced him to death. Although events in Brazil greatly influenced the politics debated in the present pamphlet and the former governor of Brazil is a central figure in it only Alden & Landis appear to have recognised it as Brasiliana or Americana. This is the first known publication of the Middelberg bookseller Jan de Laet who published two more pamphlets in 1655. Slightly browned and with a 2 mm hole in 1 leaf nearly removing the letter e in eygen but otherwise in very good condition and only slightly trimmed with some deckles preserved on the fore-edge. Binding also very good. A fascinating discussion of the future of the Netherlands after the unexpected death of stadtholder Willem II proposing the former governor of Brazil as successor a respected ruler who never attained that position.l Alden & Landis 650/62; Knuttel 6899 & 6899a; STCN 830027661; USTC 1026235; not in Borba de Moraes; Bosch; Rodrigues. hardcover