Description
Book SynopsisProvides the first complete and accurate English-language translation of an essential first-hand account of the lives and world of Dutch colonists and northeastern Native communities in the seventeenth century.
Trade Review“If you’ve been waiting for centuries for a full translation of Adriaen van der Donck’s 1655 work
A Description of New Netherland, your wait is over. In this work, edited by Charles T. Gehring and William A. Starna, one of the colony’s most astute observers ruminates on flora and fauna (his six-foot-long lobster sounds like the subject of a proverbial fish story), including meditations on “the amazing ways” of beavers and sightings of beached whales near Albany. . . . [Van der Donck] paints a generally positive picture of American Indians. His informative book is surprisingly accessible.”—Sam Roberts,
New York Times.
"With this new edition, translator Diederik Goedhuys and editors Charles Gehring and William Starna look to elevate Van der Donck's
Description to its rightful place in the canon of early American historical texts. . . . This lively translation is a much-needed teachable primary source for studying both New Netherland and its Indian neighbors."—Andrew Lipman,
New York History"This new edition and original translation of a tract by Dutch settler and lawyer van der Donck makes more widely accessible a document crucial for understanding the history of Dutch colonization in North America. . . . This document is an important primary source for students and researchers in colonial Dutch history, the settlement of New York and North America more generally, and the understanding of Indian cultures in the Northeast."—J. Mercantini,
CHOICE"Long underutilized, this edition will place
A Description of New Netherland alongside Thomas Harriot's
A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia, John Smith's
A Description of New England, and William Wood's
New England's Prospect as essential primary-source narratives of the early days of the New World."—Wendy Lewis Castro,
Southwest Journal of Cultures"The sources on this geographical area in the Dutch period are sparse, so that the addition of this superb translation of van der Donck is of high importance to scholars."—Barbara Alice Mann,
AnthroposTable of ContentsForeword
Preface
Publication History of Adriaen van der Donck's A Description of New Netherland
Map of New Netherland
A Description of New Netherland:
The Country
Where New Netherland Is Situated
When and by Whom New Netherland Was First Discovered
Why This Territory Was Named New Netherland
The Dutch, the First Possessors of New Netherland
The Limits of New Netherland and How Far They Extend
Of the Coast, Foreshore, and Seaports
The South River
Of the North River
Of the Fresh River
Of the East River
Of the Various Waters and Their Shapes
Of the Formation and Soil of the Land
Of Wood and Vegetation
Of the Fruit Trees Brought Over from the Netherlands
Of the Vineyards
Of Vegetables Generally
Of the Flowers
Of the Medicinal Herbs and Indigo
Of Agriculture and Field Crops
Of the Minerals and the Kinds of Earth and Stone
Of the Paints and Dyes
Of the Animals in New Netherland
Of the Wild Animals
Of the Avifauna, Aquatic and Terrestrial, and First the Raptors
Of the Terrestrial Birds
Of the Aquatic Birds
Of the Fish
Of the Poisons
Of the Wind
Of the Air
Of the Seasons
Of the Manners and Extraordinary Qualities of the Original Natives of New Netherland
Their Bodily Shape, and Why They Are Called Wilden
Fare and Food of the Indians
Of the Dress and Ornaments of Men and Women
Their Houses, Castles, and Settlements
Ways of Marriage and Childbirth
Of Suckling, and the Relations between Men and Women
Ways of Burial, Lamentation, and Mourning
Their Festivities and Special Gatherings
How Human Beings and Animals First Came to That Country
Of the Different Nations and Languages
Of Money and Their Manufacture of It
The Innate Character and the Pastimes of the Indians
Their Bodily Care and Medicine
The Farming, Planting, and Gardening of the Indians
Special Account of Their Hunting and Fishing
Distinctions of Birth, Rank, and Quality
Of Their Warfare and Weapons
Of Their Administration of Justice and Penalties
Of the Universal Law of Nations
Of Gifts and Offerings
Of the Indians' Government and Public Policy
Their Religion and Whether They Can Be Christianized
Of Their Sentiments regarding Hope of Afterlife
Of the Knowledge of God and the Fear of Devils
Their Thoughts on the Creation and Propagation of Mankind and Animals in the World
Of the Nature, Amazing Ways, and Properties of the Beavers
A Conversation between a Dutch Patriot and a New Netherlander concerning the Condition of New Netherland
Appendix: A List and Suggested Identification of the Latinized Plant Names Recorded by Adriaen van der Donck
Notes
Index