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Hendrik Frans VAN LINT (1684-1763) (attrib.) "the rescue of the Moses boy by the daughters of Pharaoh" painting - oil on canvas (doubled), 51 cm x 40 cm

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Hendrik Frans VAN LINT (1684-1763) (attrib.) "the rescue of the Moses boy by the daughters of Pharaoh" painting - oil on canvas (doubled), 51 cm x 40 cm

Estimate 3 000 - 5 000 EUR
Starting price 2 000 EUR

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For sale on Sunday 28 Jul : 11:00 (CEST)
berlin, Germany
Auktionshaus Kloss
+493091423120
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Collection of 3 18th century works on the persecution of Protestants under the absolute monarchy: 1. [COURT DE GÉBELIN (Antoine)]: Les Toulousaines ou lettres historiques et apologétiques en faveur de la religion réformée, & de divers protestans condamnés dans ces derniers tems par le Parlement de Toulouse, ou dans le Haut Languedoc. Edinburgh [Lausanne], 1763. One volume. 9.5 by 15.5 cm. (8)-444 pages. Contemporary red boards, handwritten title label on upper spine. Minor rubbing, handwritten inscriptions on lower board. Fair condition inside. 2nd edition, published the same year as the original. Réro 3129234: "Seconde édition, avec suppression et modification de quelques passages." Son of Antoine Court, renovator of the Reformed Churches of France, Court de Gébelin was born in Geneva in February 1719. "These letters, numbering 30, contain many details on the trials of Calas and Rochette, collected during a trip Court made to the south of France, before settling in Paris." (Haag). 2. GILBERT DE VOISINS (Pierre): Mémoires sur les moyens de donner aux protestans un état civil en France. Composed by order of King Louis XV. S.l., 1787. One volume. 12.5 by 19.5 cm. (4)-143 pages. Contemporary full calf, ornate smooth spine, garnet-red title page. Upper headband frayed, small, non-severe epidermis on 2nd board, otherwise very good condition (foxing on last 3 leaves). An autograph letter of thanks (wishes) from the grandson, editor of the memoir, is enclosed. First edition. Conlon 87: 1934; J. Poujol, Aux sources de l'Edit de 1787, une étude bibliographique. Société d'histoire du protestantisme; I.N.E.D. n° 2030. Very important memoir commissioned by Louis XV, proposing to give Protestants civil status, twenty years before the Edict of Toleration. Pierre Gilbert de Voisins (1684-1769), avocat général at the Parlement de Paris and Conseiller d'Etat, was an exemplary practitioner and a magistrate loyal to the King. "To find a middle way which, while maintaining the public ban on the Reformed religion, would grant Protestants both freedom of conscience and the means to benefit from civil status. This project concerns the private and domestic acts of their religion, the baptism and education of their children, and their marriage." (I.N.E.D.). 3. Les Voeux d'un Patriote. Amsterdam, 1788. One volume. 12 by 19.5 cm. 16-282 pages. Modern bradel boards. False title missing. Very good condition. 9th edition (E.O.: 1689). Kappler, Biblio. de Jurieu p. 427; Bourgeois et André, S.H.F. 3084. Work falsely attributed to Jurieu. Probably by Michel Le Vassor. "Famous pamphlet attributed to Jurieu or, better, to the historian Michel Levassor. It consists of fifteen memoirs, composed between August 10, 1689 and September 15, 1690. The first three deal with the oppression and tyranny under which all the orders of France groan, and the misery to which they are reduced by despotism. The next two outline how the French court has established its absolute power and abuses. Then, in memoirs 6-8, the author argues that the crown was elective and the Salic law worthless, that the Estates General are the repositories of power and superior to the king, and that the Parlement was created to represent these Estates and put a brake on the court. Memoirs 9 and 10 speak of the grand council, the mayors of the palace, the constable, the peers, dukes, counts, etc., who were once independent and are now slaves. The author shows (no. 11) that France initially had neither regulated troops nor taxes, and finally examines at length (nos. 12 to 15) how the monarchy could be restored to its former state. All in all, this is an indictment of absolutism, to which the writer contrasts the rights of the people. Published in 1788....

BLAEU, Willem (1571-1638); TODESCHI, Pietro (17th cent.). I quattro continenti: Nova Acurata Totius Americae Tabula [WITH:] Nova et Acurata Totius Asiae Tabula [AND WITH:] Nova et Acurata Totius Europae [AND:] Nova et Acurata Totius Africae Tabula [Bologna: Giuseppe Longhi, c.1673]. Scarce complete set, enhanced by historiated borders, of the famous series of the four continents first published by Blaeu in 1608 in Amsterdam, considered the masterpiece of Dutch cartography of the Gouden Eeuw . From 1594 to 1596 Blaeu was a pupil of the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, who had also taught Kepler; upon his return to Amsterdam, Blaeu founded the Officina Blaviana, specializing in the production and sale of maps, globes, and scientific instruments. He was assisted in the enterprise by the cartographer Hessel Gerritsz (1580-1632) and the engraver Joshua van de Ende. After the first edition in 1608, the four continents were subsequently published in 1612, and in 1624 they were reissued by Hendrik Hondius and in 1655 by Nicholas Visscher. In Italy, a version was published in 1646 by Stefano Mozzi Scolari (1598-1650), from whom Pietro Todeschi later derived this version. Between the two versions, the differences are minimal, but in this version the ' Mare del Nort' of Scolari's version becomes 'Mare del Noi'. The American continent is already well delineated here, although South America is undersized due to inaccuracies in the determination of longitude. The Canadian Atlantic coast follows the measurements of the voyages of Samuel de Champlain and Pierre Dugua de Mons in 1604; Cape Horn is depicted following the discovery of the passage by Jacob Le Maire in 1616. South-eastern Australia and New Zealand appear in the Pacific, reached by Abel Tasman in his voyages of 1642-1644. The cartouches on either side show the coasts of the South Pole ('Terra Australis Incognita') and the undefined borders north of Canada. The map of Asia reflects the high interest the area held for Dutch trade and the Dutch East India Company (VOC), of which Willem Blaeu was official hydrographer. Java and Bali are drawn according to the travel accounts of Willem Lodewijksz (1560-1620), while Ceylon and the Maldives are derived from the descriptions of Jan Huygen van Linschoten (1563-1611). The map of Japan is mainly based on Ortelius's map of 1595, and that of New Guinea is particularly advanced, thanks to information from the travels of Abel Tasman. The map goes so far as to represent the Red Sea to the west and even the Aegean Sea and the southern coast of Italy, while the Aral Sea is absent and the Caspian Sea undefined. The map of Europe is particularly geographically precise. The large cartouche in the Atlantic Ocean space presents a brilliantly executed double-hemisphere map by Hessel Gerritsz (1580-1632), surmounted by the arms of the city of Amsterdam, a reference to Blaeu's official privileges. On the north-western borders a part of North America is visible with the 'Terra de Labrador'. The map of Africa depicts European knowledge of the continent at the beginning of the 17th century, with the outline of the coastline well defined and rich in detail, while the interior is virtually unexplored. The sources of the great rivers, the Nile and the Zambezi, are still based on Ptolemy's descriptions and appear as lakes beyond the mythical Mountains of the Moon. Abyssinia is still the land of the mythical 'Prester John' of medieval chronicles. The primary geographical sources for the depiction of the coastline include Giacomo Gastaldi's 1564 map, Abraham Ortelius's 1595 maps, Duarte Lopes's Congo voyage reports (1591), and Luis de Texeira's up-to-date depiction of the Gold Coast. Each map is accompanied by historiated cartouches depicting the clothing and customs of the peoples of each continent, while at the base are views of the main cities, mainly taken from Braun and Hogenberg. The series, which is very scarce, exists in only two complete copies in this version on the Italian peninsula, likewise depicting the four continents between two cartouches: one at the Società Geografica Italiana in Rome and one at the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. Other copies are at the Library of Congress (2 copies); Harry Ransom Center, UT, Austin; RGS, London; Lüneburg Museum, Germany; Koninklijke Hollandsche Lloyd, Amsterdam. 4 engraved maps, (1350 x 950 mm) printed on 4 sheets accompanied by side cartouches, all with contemporary mounting, framed (leaves browned, abrasions and chipping mainly affecting the map of Africa with some minor early repairs). Please contact the department for a detailed condition report (4)