Title page of the Pamphlet of Romeyn de Hooghe: Postcar praetjen between a Hagenaer, Amsterdammer Beneficiant, Schipper and French Koopman, 1690. Title page of the Pamphlet of Romeyn de Hooghe: Postcar-praetjen between a Hagenaer, Amsterdammer Beneficiant, skipper and French merchant, 1690. Cartoon at disagreement between Willem III and the city of Amsterdam in 1690 due to alleged French-mindedness of the city. Allegory with a falling carriage lined by a blindfolded rider whose cloak is decorated with French lilies and drawn by the two caved horses drunkenness and ambition. The horses trample


Title page of the Pamphlet of Romeyn de Hooghe: Postcar praetjen between a Hagenaer, Amsterdammer Beneficiant, Schipper and French Koopman, 1690. Title page of the Pamphlet of Romeyn de Hooghe: Postcar-praetjen between a Hagenaer, Amsterdammer Beneficiant, skipper and French merchant, 1690. Cartoon at disagreement between Willem III and the city of Amsterdam in 1690 due to alleged French-mindedness of the city. Allegory with a falling carriage lined by a blindfolded rider whose cloak is decorated with French lilies and drawn by the two caved horses drunkenness and ambition. The horses trample religion, ornaments, necessary defense, homeland and the Union; The Rentenier, Burger, Merchant and Schipper fall from the car. In the caption a verse of two lines.


Size: 2002px × 3000px
Photo credit: © BTEU/RKMLGE / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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