A Brief and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia

by Thomas Harriot

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For more than 400 years, scholars from an array of disciplines have recognized Theodor de Bry's 1590 edition of Thomas Hariot's A briefe and true report of the new found land of Virginia as a book whose influence shaped contemporary European perceptions of North America, as well as subsequent research on that period for centuries to come. The book, upon which the present volume is based, is from the collections of the Library at the Mariners' Museum. It is extremely rare, containing show more hand-colored illustrations from the period, and is one of only three recorded copies with colored plates. This complete facsimile edition presents de Bry's exceptional engravings, based on John White's sixteenth-century watercolors, in their original hand-colored form. The book is available in paperback and as a limited cloth edition of two hundred numbered copies. Both editions are printed by the award-winning Stinehour Press. As the first volume in de Bry's celebrated Grand Voyages, a series of publications chronicling many of the earliest expeditions to the Americas, this book, which incorporates a 1588 text by Thomas Hariot, was illustrated and published in four languages. It became for many Europeans their first glimpse of the American continent. Accompanying the Latin facsimile is an English text. The first section is modernized from earlier versions of the English, and the second part, which accompanies the plates, is newly translated from the original Latin. In addition to a valuable introduction, the book includes two illuminating essays. The first, by Karen Ordahl Kupperman, examines the early American settlement and tells how a collaboration between the writer and mathematician Thomas Hariot and the artist John White (later governor of the Roanoke Colony) evolved into a rich study not only of English colonial life but of the Indian culture and the natural resources of the region. The second essay, by Peter Stallybrass, uncovers new information in the much studied plates and presents an intriguing theory about the creation and importance of the engravings. This facsimile edition will appeal to students and scholars in several fields of study, from American history and ethnography to fine arts and the history of the book, and will provide the reader with the best illustration of the New World as it was first presented to the Old. Published for the Library at the Mariner's Museum show less

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Thomas Hariot's A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia is one of the earliest and most important accounts of Indian life along the coast of what is now North Carolina and Virginia, as well as an interesting compilation of 'commodities' and natural resources of the region.

The University of Virginia Press has just issued a beautiful facsimile of the 1590 Theodor de Bry Latin edition, which includes a modernized English text. The copy used for the facsimile, that of the Mariners' Museum, is one of two known in which the engravings (from John White's famous drawings) were hand-colored at the time of publication. The high-quality facsimile, photographed and printed by the Stinehour Press, is remarkably clean and bright; show more not only the colors but also the shades of the paper come through sharply (even the small amount of off-setting is replicated).

Alone, the Hariot/de Bry facsimile would be a great book; combined as it is with excellent complementary essays, this is a work which is certain to hold a wide appeal. Karen Ordahl Kupperman's contextual introduction summarizes the expeditions during which Hariot and White did their work, while Peter Stallybrass examines the history of Hariot's manuscript, White's drawings, and de Bry's combination thereof into the 1590 folio editions (English, French and German editions were also printed). He comments on the rationale behind the printing of such an expensive volume (to appeal to the natural history-obsessed European elite), and also analyzes the interesting differences between the White drawings and the de Bry engravings (as well as the Hariot captions).

Of the huge crop of books appearing this spring related to the Jamestown anniversary, this is certainly the best designed and most lavishly illustrated. Kupperman's and Stallybrass' essays complement the facsimile nicely, and Hariot's text manages to remain interesting across the centuries. Highly recommended.

http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2007/04/book-review-briefe-and-true-report.html
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[A Briefe and true report of the new found land of Virginia] - Thomas Harriot.
This gives a tantalising glimpse of the life of the British settlers who attempted to establish a colony on the island of Roanoake which is now part of North Carolina. Thomas Harriot was a member of the Grenville expedition of 1585/6, which under the patronage of Sir Walter Raleigh took out over a hundred settlers to establish a colony in the New Found lands. They were aiming for Chesapeake bay, but weather conditions forced them to land at Roanoake. Thomas Harriot was an astronomer, mathematician, ethnographer and translator and his primary function was to make accurate maps of the area. When he returned to England he published a quarto edition of the new show more found land of Virginia in 1588. In 1590 a folio edition was published by Theodore de Bruys which contains Harriots original quarto along with engravings made by John White (one time governor of the colony) featuring the indigenous Indian population. Roanoake was never successfully colonised by the British, because the settlers were not able to support themselves and had further difficulties when they took up arms against the Indians.

Harriot's original quarto was published in an attempt to make the colony attractive to would be settlers and investors, however by the time that it was published the colony was already in trouble. It relied too much on supplies from England, and the Spanish Armada and weather conditions put paid to any meaningful support. In 1590 no trace of the colonists were found and it has remained a mystery as to their fate. Harriot's original quarto is a list with a short paragraph on each of the commodities that could be found on the island. It starts with silk worms with a comment that good profits could be made in the harvesting, there are otters for fur and plentiful deposits of iron. From then on it gets more sketchy with Harriot saying that some copper implements were seen, but no evidence of any mining. In fact the Indian population were largely metal free. Maize and tobacco were the main crops with Harriots comment that tobacco was particularly good for the health as the smoking of the powder opened up the pores of the skin. Deer, rabbits and Bears were in evidence and Harriot noted that of the 108 original settlers (all men) only 4 had died during the first year. The colony had relied on trade with the Indians for survival.

The attraction today of the 1590 edition is the engravings by John White of the Indian population; they are quite stunning. Harriot comments on their willingness to learn and ability to imitate the ways of the civilised settlers and that they would be open to conversion to christianity is in keeping with the aims of his original quarto. The descriptions of their clothing and celebrations and the glimpse of their characteristics makes this a worthwhile read today - I read the Dover edition with an introduction by Paul Hulton which contains John Whites engravings. - 4 stars.
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A briefe and true report of the new found land of Virginia. By Thomas Hariot. The 1590 Theodor de Bry Latin Edition. Facsimile edition accompanied by the modernized English text. (Charlottesville and London: Published by the University of Virginia Press for the Library at the Mariners’ Museum, 2007. Pp. Xviii, 189. Paper, $35.00, ISBN 978-0-8139-2605-6; cloth, $200, ISBN 978-0-8139-2604-9.)

The new facsimile edition of the Latin version of Thomas Hariot’s A briefe and true report of the new found land of Virginia, accompanied by Theodor de Bry’s hand-tinted copper engravings of White’s watercolors, is a perfect complement to the new catalogue. The facsimile, made from a copy held at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, show more Virginia, gives readers insight into how Europeans were introduced to coastal Carolina’s Algonkian people. Though the facsimile is of a Latin edition, it is accompanied by a skillfully modernized English text prepared by Jay E. Moore and Janet C. Robertson. The real stars of the volume, though, are the magnificently rendered copper engravings, reproduced in all their hand-painted splendor, testifying to the richness of European visions of the New World.

Acompanying the facsimile and its English version are two essays, one by Karen O. Kupperman providing a brief history and context of the Roanoke venture, and another by Peter Stallybrass on A brief and true report, which he dubs “a European bestseller.” Stallybrass describes how Thomas Hariot’s work—previously known in England only by a cheap folio edition of 1588—came to be printed in four languages in an expensive edition by a Huguenot exile living in Germany. But more importantly, Stallybrass argues that the significance of de Bry’s edition was its botanical context—a novel approach to a set of engravings whose main import historians have seen as being visual representations of southern coastal Algonkians. Stallybrass expertly situates the engravings in the story of sixteenth-century European botanical literature: “[i]n Frankfurt in 1590, a handbook on colonization was transformed into a catalog not only of the people of America but also of the American plants that were materially reshaping Europe and the rest of the world.” (30)

While this volume will probably not replace the inexpensive Dover edition of A briefe and true report in survey classes, scholars of sixteenth-century Europe and North America will appreciate access to the facsimile of the hand-colored de Bry engravings and to the Latin edition (which was undoubtedly more widely read than the English, French, and German editions also published that same year).

-Rebecca A. Goetz, reviewed in the Journal of Southern History, vol. 74, no. 3 (August 2008), 707-709.
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De Bry, Theodore (Illustrator)

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Canonical title
A Brief and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia
Original publication date
1588

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Travel, General Nonfiction, History, Science & Nature
DDC/MDS
917.55History & geographyGeography & travelGeography of and travel in North AmericaSoutheastern U.S.Virginia
LCC
F229 .H27Local History of the United States, Canada and Latin AmericaUnited States local historyVirginia
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211
Popularity
155,287
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.60)
Languages
English, German, Latin
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
UPCs
1
ASINs
8