Home / Albums / Tag Country:Holland 21

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On the third day, June 3rd, the Royal Prince, bearing the flag of Sir George Ayscue, the largest and heaviest ship in the English fleet, ran on the Galloper shoal, and being threatened by fire-ships, surrended. The ship was burnt, and the crew, including the admiral, were made prisoners.
169 visits
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St. Laurens, near Middelburg, Zeeland
59 visits
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Dordrecht (dated 1702)
86 visits
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Dordrecht, South Holland
60 visits
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Boxmeer, North Brabant
56 visits
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Breda, North Brabant
58 visits
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Middelburg, Zeeland
59 visits
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Nijmegen, Gelderland (dated 1544)
80 visits
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Spaarwoude, North Holland
57 visits
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Veere, Zeeland
54 visits
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Haarlem, North Holland
59 visits
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Leiden, Rhijnland (dated 1612)
72 visits
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Franeker, Friesland
52 visits
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Gorinchem (Gorcum), South Holland
57 visits
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Groningen (1509)
78 visits
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Haarlem, North Holland
63 visits
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Dordrecht, South Holland
58 visits
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Image 7848
222 visits
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The fishing towns of Holland are interesting. Every traveller wants to see Vollendam and Scheveningen and the hamlets on the Island of Marken. The men and women in these towns are kind-hearted, simple people, who are proud of their own village and think their own dress finer than that of other towns. Each of these fishing villages has its characteristic costume. The men of the Island of Marken wear a close-fitting jacket which ends at the waist and great, baggy, knee pants. Marken women wear round, white caps, fitting the head closely, with an open-work border, and a bright waist, with striped sleeves, over the front of which is a square of handsomely embroidered cloth. Little girls all through Holland dress exactly like women. But for her child face you would take the little girl from Scheveningen to be a grown person. She wears a dainty white cap pinned on with two great round-headed pins. Her ample dress quite reaches the ground; her white apron is neatly tied, and her purple shawl, tightly wrapped about her shoulders, is demurely crossed, and the ends are tucked under her apron strings. She wears the common wooden shoes of the country
559 visits
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A crowd of boys running in such shoes [wooden] over the hard paved roads makes a great clattering. On Sunday the wooden shoes of men and boys are usually fresh whitened; if their owners enter a house, they leave the shoes outside the door. I am sure you cannot guess what little Dutch boys do with old wooden shoes. They make capital little fishing boats out of them, which they sail on the canal. The real big fishing boats are really shaped very much like shoes too.
487 visits
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One example at least of these fittings still exists, in the library attached to the church of S. Wallberg, at Zutphen in Holland. This library was built in its present position in 1555, but I suspect that some of the fittings, those namely which are more richly ornamented, were removed from an earlier library. Each of these desks is 9 feet long by 5 feet 6 inches high; and, as you will see directly, a man can sit and read at them very conveniently.
803 visits