Allegory of civilian armament, 1785, Abraham Jacobsz. Hulk, After Leendert Brasser, After P. Coijon, After François Joseph Pfeiffer (I), 1785 print Allegory of citizen corps that promotes freedom in the Netherlands. Together with the Dutch Lion at a memorial column with the weapons of the seven provinces, a free corps drives the self -tan, status, list and hypocrisy. On the left, soldiers are set up a statue of freedom. On the left of the sky rays that shift the dark clouds on the right. At the bottom of two thirteen -law verses in Dutch. Dedicated to complete freedom and homelanding societies


Allegory of civilian armament, 1785, Abraham Jacobsz. Hulk, After Leendert Brasser, After P. Coijon, After François Joseph Pfeiffer (I), 1785 print Allegory of citizen corps that promotes freedom in the Netherlands. Together with the Dutch Lion at a memorial column with the weapons of the seven provinces, a free corps drives the self -tan, status, list and hypocrisy. On the left, soldiers are set up a statue of freedom. On the left of the sky rays that shift the dark clouds on the right. At the bottom of two thirteen -law verses in Dutch. Dedicated to complete freedom and homelanding societies of arms trade in the United Netherlands. Northern Netherlands paper etching / engraving warfare; military affairs (+ citizen soldiery, civil guard, citizen militia)


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Photo credit: © piemags/rmn / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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