Joost Depuydt Appendix 1 BOV1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Joost Depuydt Appendix 1 BOV1 Appendix 1. Letters published by J. H. Hessels (1887) 1.1. Letters to and from Abraham Ortelius Hessels Date From To Autograph letter 6 [1556] 04 08 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 1 7 [1557] 10 25 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren New York (NY), Pierpont Morgan Library, LHMS, Unbound International Ortelius, MA 2633 8 [1559] 07 03 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren Amsterdam, UBA, Hs. Ge 4a 9 [1559] 09 25 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 2 10 1561 06 15 Joannes Terenumus (Vryfpenninck) Abraham Ortelius Sotheby's 1968, lot 391: buyer Nico Israel (Amsterdam) 11 1561 06 16 Scipio Fabius Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 13 1563 09 22 Joannes Sambucus Abraham Ortelius Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University, Houghton Library, MS Lat. 225 14 1564 06 19 Joannes Sambucus Abraham Ortelius Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University, Houghton Library, MS Lat. 225 15 1565 04 14 Scipio Fabius Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 16 1566 05 08 Guido Laurinus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (002), fol. 123 17 1566 08 27 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren Amsterdam, UBA, Hs. Ge 4b 18 1567 02 25 Justus Laureins [= Guido Laurinus?] Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (003), fol. 124 19 1567 04 09 Guillaume Postel Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (005), fol. 174-175 20 1567 04 24 Guillaume Postel Abraham Ortelius Amsterdam, UBA, Hs. Gm 4 21 1567 05 18 Joannes Thorius senior Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (006), fol. 223 22 1567 06 14 Joannes Thorius senior Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (007), fol. 224 23 1567 12 13 Abraham Ortelius Emanuel van Meteren Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 3 24 1568 03 05 Joannes Radermacher senior Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (018), fol. 182-183 25 1568 06 21 Jean de Vendeville Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 26 1568 07 12 Joannes Thorius senior Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (008), fol. 225 27 1568 08 03 Humphrey Lhuyd Abraham Ortelius Aberystwyth, NLW, MS 13187E 28 1570 03 02 Hubertus Goltzius Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (020), fol. 100 29 1570 08 12 Jacobus Navarchus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (023), fol. 163 30 1570 10 30 Johann Crato von Crafftheim Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (024), fol. 60 31 1570 11 02 Robert Owen Abraham Ortelius Aberystwyth, NLW, MS 13187E 32 1570 11 22 Gerardus Mercator Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 33 [1570 00 00] Pietro Bizari Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 34 [1571] 01 02 Hugo Owen Abraham Ortelius Aberystwyth, NLW, MS 13187E 35 1571 03 01 Joannes Neodicus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (029), fol. 164 36 1571 09 30 Hieronymus de Rhoda Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (030), fol. 193-194 37 1572 02 06 Georgius Braun Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (031), fol. 19-22 38 1572 05 09 Gerardus Mercator Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 39 1572 05 15 Cesare Orlandi Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 40 1572 05 24 Gérard du Vivier Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (032), fol. 67 41 [1572] 08 31 William Soone Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (033), fol. 209-210 42 1572 10 20 Daniel Rogers Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 43 [1573 00 00] Nicholas Reynolds Abraham Ortelius London, BL, Add. MS 63650 Q (= fol. 59) 44 1573 09 02 Joannes Sambucus Abraham Ortelius Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 25 45 1574 02 21 Hubertus Goltzius Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (021), fol. 101 46 1574 03 08 Hiob Magdeburg Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 47 [1574 00 00] Victor Giselinus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (034), fol. 98 48 1574 04 20 Victor Giselinus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (035), fol. 99 49 1574 04 26 Cesare Orlandi Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 50 1574 05 31 Abraham Ortelius Jacobus Colius senior Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 4 51 1574 07 31 Joannes Castelius Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (036), fol. 36 52 1574 09 10 Gabriel de Çayas Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (037), fol. 37-38 53 1574 10 10 Melchior Lorichs Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (038), fol. 128 54 1575 02 05 Willem Canter Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (039), fol. 31 55 1575 03 25 Antoine Le Pois Abraham Ortelius Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina, UL 56 1575 04 02 Cornelius Gemma Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (040), fol. 90-91 57 1575 05 25 Abraham Ortelius Jacobus Colius junior (Ortelianus) Brussel, KB, MS III 936, nr. 5 58 1575 06 05 Johann Crato von Crafftheim Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (025), fol. 61 59 1575 10 04 Joannes Isaac Levita Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (041), fol. 119 60 1575 10 21 Jean Matal Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 61 1575 11 14 Arnold Wachtendonck Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (042), fol. 233 62 1576 02 28 Benito Arias Montano Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 63 1576 11 06 Hieronymus Scholiers Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (043), fol. 202-203 65 1577 01 01 Joannes I Moretus Abraham Ortelius Sotheby's 1968, lot 375: buyer Bernard H. Breslauer (London) 67 1577 01 16 John Dee Abraham Ortelius New York (NY), Pierpont Morgan Library, LHMS, Misc English, MA 2637 68 [1577] 02 27 Peter Heyns Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (044), fol. 114 69 1577 06 01 Alexander Grapheus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (045), fol. 105-106 70 [1577] 06 03 Joachim Camerarius junior Abraham Ortelius Not in auction catalogue Sotheby's 1968 71 1577 08 04 William Camden Abraham Ortelius New York (NY), Pierpont Morgan Library, LHMS, Misc English, MA 2635 72 1577 09 24 William Camden Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 73 1578 [00] 25 Herman Hortenberg Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (046), fol. 170 74 1578 03 25 Paulus Melissus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (048), fol. [198?-]199 75 1578 07 15 Dirck Volckertsz. Coornhert Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (050), fol. 50 76 1578 08 19 Daniel Rogers Abraham Ortelius Los Angeles (Cal.), Dean Jean Phillipps 77 1578 10 07 Joannes Antonius Barvicius Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 78 1578 10 24 William Camden Abraham Ortelius New York (NY), Pierpont Morgan Library, LHMS, Misc English, MA 2636 79 1578 10 26 Johann Crato von Crafftheim Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (026), fol. 62 80 1578 12 31 Alexander Grapheus Abraham Ortelius Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University, Houghton Library, MS Typ. 557 [included in Hessels 83!] 81 1579 [00 00] Guillaume Postel Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (051), fol. 176-177 82 1579 02 25 Daniel Printz Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (052), fol. 178-179 83 1579 04 05 Alexander Grapheus Abraham Ortelius Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard University, Houghton Library, MS Typ. 557 84 1579 05 15 Giovanni Federico Madruzzo Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (053), fol. 135-136 85 1579 07 01 Francesco Soranzo Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (054), fol. 214 86 [1579] 07 11 Joannes Gevaerts Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (056), fol. 92-93 87 1579 07 11 Joannes Moflin Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (057), fol. 158-159 88 1579 07 22 Lambertus à Bommeln Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (059), fol. 18 89 1579 10 15 Jacobus Monavius Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 90 1579 10 30 Johann Crato von Crafftheim Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (027), fol. 63-64 91 1579 11 01 Nicolaus Secovius Abraham Ortelius Austin (Texas), UL, HRHRC Collection, HRC 55 92 1580 01 16 Daniel Rogers Abraham Ortelius Los Angeles (Cal.), Dean Jean Phillipps 93 1580 02 02 Daniel Engelhard Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (060), fol. 72-73 94 1580 05 13 Clemens Friccius Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (063), fol. 88-89 95 1580 07 30 Guido Laurinus Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (004), fol. 125 96 1580 08 04 Georgius Braun Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (064), fol. 23-24 97 1580 08 15 Petrus von Edeling Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (065), fol. 69-70 98 1580 11 10 Arnoldus Freitag Abraham Ortelius Den Haag, KB, MS 79 C 4 (067), fol. 85 99 1580 12 12 Gerardus Mercator Abraham Ortelius Washington (D.C.), Library of Congress, Kraus H.P.
Recommended publications
  • Thomas Wilson, Tudor Scholar-Statesman Author(S): Albert J
    Thomas Wilson, Tudor Scholar-Statesman Author(s): Albert J. Schmidt Source: Huntington Library Quarterly , May, 1957, Vol. 20, No. 3 (May, 1957), pp. 205- 218 Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.com/stable/3816414 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms University of Pennsylvania Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Huntington Library Quarterly This content downloaded from 129.2.19.103 on Sun, 26 Jul 2020 17:08:16 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY QUARTERLY NUMBER 3 MAY 1957 COPYRIGHT I957 BY THE HENRY E. HUNTINGTON LIBRARY AND ART GALLERY Thomas Wilson, Tudor Scholar-Statesman By ALBERT J. SCHMIDT JACOB BURCKHARDT in his masterly volume on the Italian Renais- sance observed that "there were two purposes ... for which the humanist was as indispensable to the republics as to princes or popes, namely, the official correspondence of the State, and the making of speeches on public and solemn occasions' He proceeded to show how only the "humanist was credited with the knowledge and ability for the post of secretary!" What Burckhardt had to say of Italian humanists of the Quatrocento most assuredly pertained to the humanist-statesmen of Tudor England.
    [Show full text]
  • The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service
    Quidditas Volume 9 Article 9 1988 The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service F. Jeffrey Platt Northern Arizona University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, History Commons, Philosophy Commons, and the Renaissance Studies Commons Recommended Citation Platt, F. Jeffrey (1988) "The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service," Quidditas: Vol. 9 , Article 9. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra/vol9/iss1/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quidditas by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. JRMMRA 9 (1988) The Elizabethan Diplomatic Service by F. Jeffrey Platt Northern Arizona University The critical early years of Elizabeth's reign witnessed a watershed in European history. The 1559 Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis, which ended the long Hapsburg-Valois conflict, resulted in a sudden shift in the focus of international politics from Italy to the uncomfortable proximity of the Low Countries. The arrival there, 30 miles from England's coast, in 1567, of thousands of seasoned Spanish troops presented a military and commer­ cial threat the English queen could not ignore. Moreover, French control of Calais and their growing interest in supplanting the Spanish presence in the Netherlands represented an even greater menace to England's security. Combined with these ominous developments, the Queen's excommunica­ tion in May 1570 further strengthened the growing anti-English and anti­ Protestant sentiment of Counter-Reformation Europe. These circumstances, plus the significantly greater resources of France and Spain, defined England, at best, as a middleweight in a world dominated by two heavyweights.
    [Show full text]
  • Ambassadors to and from England
    p.1: Prominent Foreigners. p.25: French hostages in England, 1559-1564. p.26: Other Foreigners in England. p.30: Refugees in England. p.33-85: Ambassadors to and from England. Prominent Foreigners. Principal suitors to the Queen: Archduke Charles of Austria: see ‘Emperors, Holy Roman’. France: King Charles IX; Henri, Duke of Anjou; François, Duke of Alençon. Sweden: King Eric XIV. Notable visitors to England: from Bohemia: Baron Waldstein (1600). from Denmark: Duke of Holstein (1560). from France: Duke of Alençon (1579, 1581-1582); Prince of Condé (1580); Duke of Biron (1601); Duke of Nevers (1602). from Germany: Duke Casimir (1579); Count Mompelgart (1592); Duke of Bavaria (1600); Duke of Stettin (1602). from Italy: Giordano Bruno (1583-1585); Orsino, Duke of Bracciano (1601). from Poland: Count Alasco (1583). from Portugal: Don Antonio, former King (1581, Refugee: 1585-1593). from Sweden: John Duke of Finland (1559-1560); Princess Cecilia (1565-1566). Bohemia; Denmark; Emperors, Holy Roman; France; Germans; Italians; Low Countries; Navarre; Papal State; Poland; Portugal; Russia; Savoy; Spain; Sweden; Transylvania; Turkey. Bohemia. Slavata, Baron Michael: 1576 April 26: in England, Philip Sidney’s friend; May 1: to leave. Slavata, Baron William (1572-1652): 1598 Aug 21: arrived in London with Paul Hentzner; Aug 27: at court; Sept 12: left for France. Waldstein, Baron (1581-1623): 1600 June 20: arrived, in London, sightseeing; June 29: met Queen at Greenwich Palace; June 30: his travels; July 16: in London; July 25: left for France. Also quoted: 1599 Aug 16; Beddington. Denmark. King Christian III (1503-1 Jan 1559): 1559 April 6: Queen Dorothy, widow, exchanged condolences with Elizabeth.
    [Show full text]
  • The Elizabethan Court Day by Day--1578
    1578 1578 At HAMPTON COURT, Middlesex. Jan 1, Wed New Year gifts. Among 201 gifts to the Queen: by Sir Gilbert Dethick, Garter King of Arms: ‘A Book of the States in King William Conqueror’s time’; by William Absolon, Master of the Savoy: ‘A Bible covered with cloth of gold garnished with silver and gilt and two plates with the Queen’s Arms’; by Petruccio Ubaldini: ‘Two pictures, the one of Judith and Holofernes, the other of Jula and Sectra’.NYG [Julia and Emperor Severus]. Jan 1: Henry Lyte dedicated to the Queen: ‘A New Herbal or History of Plants, wherein is contained the whole discourse and perfect description of all sorts of Herbs and Plants: their divers and sundry kinds: their strange Figures, Fashions, and Shapes: their Names, Natures, Operations and Virtues: and that not only of those which are here growing in this our Country of England, but of all others also of sovereign Realms, commonly used in Physick. First set forth in the Dutch or Almain tongue by that learned Dr Rembert Dodoens, Physician to the Emperor..Now first translated out of French into English by Henry Lyte Esquire’. ‘To the most High, Noble, and Renowned Princess, our most dread redoubtful Sovereign Lady Elizabeth...Two things have moved me...to offer the same unto your Majesty’s protection. The one was that most clear, amiable and cheerful countenance towards all learning and virtue, which on every side most brightly from your Royal person appearing, hath so inflamed and encouraged, not only me, to the love and admiration thereof, but all such others also, your Grace’s loyal subjects...that we think no travail too great, whereby we are in hope both to profit our Country, and to please so noble and loving a Princess...The other was that earnest and fervent desire that I have, and a long time have had, to show myself (by yielding some fruit of painful diligence) a thankful subject to so virtuous a Sovereign, and a fruitful member of so good a commonwealth’..
    [Show full text]
  • Charlotte.Pdf
    TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I BIRTH AND EDUCATION Tercentenary of Dee’s death — No life of him — Persistent misunderstanding — Birth — Parentage — At Chelmsford Grammar School — St. John’s College, Cambridge — Fellow of Trinity — Theatrical enterprise — In the Low Countries — M.A. of Cambridge — Louvain University — Paris — Readings in Euclid — Correspondents abroad — Return to England. CHAPTER II IMPRISONMENT AND AUTHORSHIP Books dedicated to Edward VI. — Upton Rectory — Long Leadenham — Books dedicated to Duchess of Northumberland — Ferrys informs against his “magic” — In prison — Handed over to Bonner — At Philpot’s trial — Efforts to found a State Library — Astrology — Horoscopes — Choice of a day for Queen Elizabeth’s coronation — Introduced to her by Dudley — Sympathetic magic — Bachelor of Divinity — In Antwerp — Monas Hieroglyphica — Preface to Billingsley’s Euclid — Called a conjurer. CHAPTER III MORTLAKE Proposed benefices — Propædeumata Aphoristica — Alchemical secrets — Settled at Mortlake — Journey to Lorraine — Illness — The Queen’s attentions — Mines and hidden treasure — Wigmore Castle — Marriage — Death of first wife — Literary correspondence — John Stow — Diary commenced — The Hexameron Brytannicum — The British Complement — Slander and falsehood — A petty navy — The sea-power of Albion — Fisheries and foreign policy. CHAPTER IV JANE DEE A comet or blazing star — Second marriage — Jane Fromond — Hurried journey abroad — Berlin and Frankfort — Birth of a son — Christening — Edward Dyer — Duc d’Alencon — Michael Lock — His sons — The Queen’s visit — Sir Humphrey Gilbert at Mortlake — Adrian Gilbert — John Davis — The Queen’s Title Royall — Lord Treasurer Burleigh — Death of Dee’s mother — The Queen’s visit of condolence — Map of America — Visits to the Muscovy House — Frobisher and Hawkins — Birth of a daughter — Accident to Arthur.
    [Show full text]
  • John Donne and the Conway Papers a Biographical and Bibliographical Study of Poetry and Patronage in the Seventeenth Century
    John Donne and the Conway Papers A Biographical and Bibliographical Study of Poetry and Patronage in the Seventeenth Century Daniel Starza Smith University College London Supervised by Prof. H. R. Woudhuysen and Dr. Alison Shell ii John Donne and the Conway Papers A Biographical and Bibliographical Study of Poetry and Patronage in the Seventeenth Century This thesis investigates a seventeenth-century manuscript archive, the Conway Papers, in order to explain the relationship between the archive’s owners and John Donne, the foremost manuscript poet of the century. An evaluation of Donne’s legacy as a writer and thinker requires an understanding of both his medium of publication and the collectors and agents who acquired and circulated his work. The Conway Papers were owned by Edward, first Viscount Conway, Secretary of State to James I and Charles I, and Conway’s son. Both men were also significant collectors of printed books. The archive as it survives, mainly in the British Library and National Archives, includes around 300 literary manuscripts ranging from court entertainments to bawdy ballads. This thesis fully evaluates the collection as a whole for the first time, including its complex history. I ask three principal questions: what the Conway Papers are and how they were amassed; how the archive came to contain poetry and drama by Donne, Ben Jonson, Thomas Middleton and others; and what the significance of this fact is, both in terms of seventeenth-century theories about politics, patronage and society, and modern critical and historical interpretations. These questions cast new light on the early transmission of Donne’s verse, especially his Satires and verse epistles.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    INTRODUCTION The documents edited in this volume were written during or shortly after missions from Elizabethan England and Jacobean Scotland to the Protestant princes of the Holy Roman Empire and Denmark. Through the particular perspectives of their authors, these accounts provide helpful if general descriptions while offering minute but critical details of two countries hitherto relatively unfamiliar to most sixteenth-century Englishmen and Scots.1 Much of the intelligence and many of the observations contained in these materials also remain obscure to modern scholarship. This edition is intended to highlight the importance of such information not only to the formation and execution of government policy but also to the intellectual formation and professional trajectory of the authors themselves. Because these documents are relevant to a number of distinct yet related fields of current scholarship, the following introduction offers an overview of English and Scottish diplomacy with Germany and Denmark before addressing the specific missions and authors, trends in diplomatic history, and the nature and purpose of travel writing during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The introduction closes with a discussion of the documents as sources of intelligence, their significance, their locations, the editorial conventions, and the critical apparatus. Elizabethan and Jacobean Diplomacy with Germany and Denmark The extraordinarily complex nature of politics and religion in the Holy Roman Empire during the second half of the sixteenth century made for often difficult and sometimes impossible diplomatic relations. The variety of perspectives and motives among the territorial princes at any given time, in addition to the shifts from one generation 1The obvious exception here are Marian exiles, who had deep familiarity with various locations in the Empire.
    [Show full text]
  • Proefschrift-Van Den Broecke.Indd 1 6 01 2009 8:13:37 Nederlandse Geografische Studies / Netherlands Geographical Studies
    Ortelius’ Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570-1641) proefschrift-van den Broecke.indd 1 6 01 2009 8:13:37 Nederlandse Geografische Studies / Netherlands Geographical Studies Redactie / Editorial Board Drs. J.G. Borchert (Editor in Chief ) Prof. Dr. J.M.M. van Amersfoort Dr. P.C.J. Druijven Prof. Dr. A.O. Kouwenhoven Prof. Dr. H. Scholten Plaatselijke Redacteuren / Local Editors Dr. R. van Melik, Faculteit Geowetenschappen Universiteit Utrecht Dr. D.H. Drenth, Faculteit der Managementwetenschappen Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen Dr. P.C.J. Druijven, Faculteit der Ruimtelijke Wetenschappen Rijksuniversiteit Groningen Drs. F.J.P.M. Kwaad, Fysich-Geografisch en Bodemkundig Laboratorium Universiteit van Amsterdam Dr. L. van der Laan, Economisch-Geografisch Instituut Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam Dr. J.A. van der Schee, Centrum voor Educatieve Geografie Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Dr. F. Thissen, Afdeling Geografie, Planologie en Internationale Ontwikkelingsstudies Universiteit van Amsterdam Redactie-Adviseurs / Editorial Advisory Board Prof. Dr. G.J. Ashworth, Prof. Dr. P.G.E.F. Augustinus, Prof. Dr. G.J. Borger, Prof. Dr. K. Bouwer, Prof. Dr. J. Buursink, Dr. J. Floor, Prof. Dr. G.A. Hoekveld, Dr. A.C. Imeson, Prof. Dr. J.M.G. Kleinpenning, Dr. W.J. Meester, Prof. Dr. F.J. Ormeling, Prof. Dr. H.F.L. Ottens, Dr. J. Sevink, Dr. W.F. Sleegers, T.Z. Smit, Drs. P.J.M. van Steen, Dr. J.J. Sterkenburg, Drs. H.A.W. van Vianen, Prof. Dr. J. van Weesep ISSN 0169-4839 proefschrift-van den Broecke.indd 2 6 01 2009 8:13:37 Netherlands Geographical Studies 380 Ortelius’ Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570-1641) Characteristics and development of a sample of on verso map texts Marcel Peter René van den Broecke Utrecht 2009 Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap Faculteit Geowetenschappen Universiteit Utrecht proefschrift-van den Broecke.indd 3 6 01 2009 8:13:37 Promotoren: Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • The Elizabethan Court Day by Day--1576
    1576 1576 At HAMPTON COURT, Middlesex. Jan 1,Sun New Year gifts. Works set up ‘tables for the banquet and for her Majesty’s New Year’s gifts’. Among 195 gifts to the Queen: by the Earl of Shrewsbury: ‘In a blue purse in dimy sovereigns, £20’; by the Countess of Shrewsbury: ‘A kirtle and a doublet of yellow satin cut lined with black sarcenet wrought all over with short staves of pearled silver with a like passamain’; by Lady Burghley: ‘A small coffer of mother-of-pearl garnished with woodwork gilt, with eight books in it. With the Queen’; by Lady Sheffield: ‘A scarf of tawny silk wrought all over with silk of sundry colours...to be aired because it was made in a house infected’; by Sir Gilbert Dethick, Garter King of Arms: ‘One Book of Arms containing the history of the Knights of the Garter made in the times of King Edward the Sixth and Queen Mary, covered with crimson velvet and edged with a passamain of gold’; by Sir Henry Lee: ‘A book of gold enamelled, full of leaves of paper and parchment printed with certain devices’; by Levina Teerlinc: ‘The Queen’s picture upon a card. With the Queen’; NYG by Petruccio Ubaldini: ‘A book of Italian written of eight English ladies’. T Also Jan 1: play, by Earl of Warwick’s Men. Jan 1: George Gascoigne dedicated to the Queen: ‘The Tale of Hemetes the Hermit, pronounced before the Queen’s Majesty at Woodstock, 1575’. Frontispiece of Gascoigne kneeling as he presents his book.
    [Show full text]
  • Bruegel and Ortelius Space As Cognitive System by Giorgio Mangani
    Bruegel and Ortelius Space as cognitive system by Giorgio Mangani Paper presented to the International Conference “Pieter Bruegel the Elder and the Theatre of the World” (Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz and Technische Universität Dresden, 3-5 July 2014) It is landscape, not the story, that commands attention. Walter S. Melion, Shaping the Netherlandish Canon. Karel van Mander's Schilder- Boeck (Chicago and London, The University of Chicago Press, 1991) Abstract Returning to Ortelius and Bruegel sixteen years after writing my book about the geographer, I find subsequent studies emphasize similarities between Ortelius, Bruegel and Sebastian Franck's paradoxical moral thinking, perhaps through Dirck V. Coornhert's works. This common familiarity with the complexity of human choice influenced the thinking of both the artist and geographer. But Ortelius permits us to also find more cultural analogies in the idea of space as cognitive and meaningful structure practised by Bruegel in his paintings and in Ortelius’s maps. The paper examines in which ways the notion of Landscape, as setting and distribution of sights in the representational space, was employed in maps and in paintings (such as in botanical atlases) of 16th century Low Countries, upon a more or less open codified system of references, which confirm an intertextual common language and culture in the humanistic circle of Antwerp, to which Ortelius and Bruegel belonged, which has been useful to better understand eventual meanings of Bruegel's works. 1. Back to Antwerp, after sixteen years The invitation to take part in this seminar gives me the opportunity to reread and reconsider certain thoughts that I had proposed in 1998 with my essay on Abramo Ortelius (Il “mondo” di Abramo Ortelio.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction 1
    NOTES Introduction 1. Ascham, The Scholemaster Or plaine and perfite way of teachying children, to vnderstand, write, and speake, the Latin tong, but specially purposed for the priuate brynging vp of youth in Ientlemen and Noble mens houses . (London, 1570; STC 832), B2r. 2. Ibid., H1r. 3. A few essay- length studies have acknowledged Elizabeth’s learned persona as an important strategy of royal image- making. These studies include Lysbeth Benkert, “Translation as Image- Making: Elizabeth I’s Translation of Boethius’s Consolation of Philosophy,” Early Modern Literary Studies 6.3 (January 2001): 2.1–20. http:/ / / extra.shu.ac.uk/emls/ 06-3/ benkboet.htm; Georgia E. Brown, “Translation and the definition of sovereignty: the case of Elizabeth Tudor,” in Travels and Translations in the Sixteenth Century: Selected Papers from the Second International Conference of the Tudor Symposium (2000), ed. Mike Pincombe, 88–103 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004); Jennifer Clement, “The Queen’s Voice: Elizabeth I’s Christian Prayers and Meditations,” Early Modern Literary Studies 13.3 ( January 2008): 1.1–26. http:/ / extra.shu.ac.uk/ emls/ 13-3/ clemquee.htm; Mary Thomas Crane, “ ‘Video et Taceo’: Elizabeth I and the Rhetoric of Counsel,” Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 28.1 (1988): 1–16; Janet M. Green, “Queen Elizabeth I’s Latin Reply to the Polish Ambassador,” Sixteenth Century Journal 31 (Winter 2000): 987– 1008; Constance Jordan, “States of Blindness: Doubt, Justice, and Constancy in Elizabeth I’s ‘Avec l’aveugler si estrange,’ ” in Reading Monarch’s Writing: The Poetry of Henry VIII, Mary Stuart, Elizabeth I, and James VI/ I, ed.
    [Show full text]
  • '“To Attract the Attention of That Snobbish Queen”, Dousa's Latin
    ‘“To Attract the Attention of that Snobbish Queen”, Dousa's Latin Ode to Elizabeth (1573) in its historical context’ C.L. Heesakkers bron C.L. Heesakkers, ‘“To Attract the Attention of that Snobbish Queen”, Dousa's Latin Ode to Elizabeth (1573) in its historical context.’ In: E.M. Knottenbelt, Marijke Rudnik-Smalbraak (eds.), A Fusion of Horizons. In Dialogue with Dominic Baker-Smith. Z.n., Amsterdam 1998, p. 131-136 Zie voor verantwoording: http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/hees002toat01_01/colofon.php © dbnl 2001 / C.L. Heesakkers 131 ‘To Attract the Attention of that Snobbish Queen’ Dousa's Latin Ode to Elizabeth (1573) in its historical context Chris L. Heesakkers Dominico Britanno suo Almam matrem Amstelodamensem relicturo hoc qualecunque munusculum ad commercia Britannico- Theotiscas spectans necnon et amici communis Joannis Adriani manes commemorans l.m. d.d. Christianus Belgico-Batavus In his second collection of Latin poetry, entitled Nova poemata and published in the spring of 1575, the young Dutch humanist Janus Dousa inserted an Alcaic Ode, D. Elisabethae, Britanniarum Reginae, Principi Opt. Max., ‘To the godly Elisabeth, Queen of England, the best and greatest sovereign’. It is followed by a second ode, Ad Gulielmum Cecillum Borlaei Regulum, regioque apud Anglos aerario Praefectum, cum ei Odam praecedentem mitteret, ‘To William Cecil, Lord Burghlei, High Treasurer in England, when he sent him the preceding Ode’ (Nova poemata [=NP], sign. Gi verso /G iij verso and G iiij verso / G vj recto). The contents of the latter poem leave no doubt that the Odes were written in England, in the vicinity of Cecil's house or office.
    [Show full text]