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Age of Exploration and Dutch New York

Collection Info
Age of Exploration and Dutch New York

Many of the New-York Historical Society's founders and nineteenth-century members had deep roots in New York, a significant number of them descended from families who immigrated in the seventeenth century. These early members were also deeply committed to exploration, and, as such, they collected and donated to the Society many artifacts that help tell the story of the Age of Exploration, and its trajectory, which led to the Dutch founding and settling of New York.

Most of the objects illustrated here are rarely-seen, early treasures from the Society's collections, including its 1542 Ulpius globe, which documents Verrazano's North American discoveries, an exceptional early-eighteenth century hand-painted Indian wall hanging, seventeenth-century maps and renderings of New Amsterdam and New York, and the only known portrait of Peter Stuyvesant painted during his lifetime.

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Seal matrix
Unidentified maker
ca. 1646
1909.34
Wafer iron
Unidentified maker
1717
1937.1181
Kast
Unidentified maker
1675-1690
1941.914
Seal matrix
Unidentified maker
ca. 1620
1944.258
Charger
Unidentified maker
1689-1705
1951.597
Ring
Unidentified maker
1600-1712
1952.331a
Jar
Unidentified maker
1650-1750
1954.22a
Jar
Unidentified maker
1650-1750
1954.22b
Saltcellar
Unidentified maker
ca. 1673
1974.12
Spider skillet with lid
Unidentified maker
1700-1800
2477
Jug
Unidentified maker
ca. 1600-1750
INV.6509
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