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The Beauty of the Earthenware Vessels in Which They Cook Food.
Direct scan of object

The Beauty of the Earthenware Vessels in Which They Cook Food.

Date1590-1600
Made under direction of Theodor De Bry (1528 - 1598)
Engraver Gysbert Van Veen
After work by John White (fl. 1585 - 1593)
Primary Author Thomas Hariot (1560-1621)
MediumLine engraving on laid paper with letterpress
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1983-286,15
DescriptionUpper margin reads: "XIIII. / Form und abcontrafeytung der irrdenen / Gefässe / darinn sie die Speise zu kochen pflgen."
Label TextThis plate, which was engraved by Flemish engraver and publisher Theodor De Bry, depicts a Europeanized vision of Carolina Algonquians based on the watercolors by John White and using the written descriptions by Thomas Hariot. In 1590, De Bry published Hariot's text with engravings based on White's watercolors in a book entitled 'A briefe and true report of the new found land of Virginia' which was published in English, French, German, and Latin.1 The book provides the first printed English record of Sir Walter Ralegh’s attempts to plant a colony in the New World. Although described in the title as Virginia, it delineates the region between the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay and Cape Lookout, North Carolina.2

The text accompanying this page is the German translation which Hariot describes the way the American Indians he witnessed in North Carolina cooked their food and the appearance and use of their earthenware vessels. The Latin and English translations of the plate describe this figure as: "Their women know how to make earthenware vessels with the greatest skill, and these were exceedingly capacious and delicate; so much so that a potter with a wheel could indeed do no better."3

In 1584, Queen Elizabeth I granted Sir Walter Ralegh a charter enabling him to settle an English colony in America. Ralegh promptly dispatched two ships under the leadership of Captains Arthur Barlowe and Philip Amadas, who were directed to reconnoiter the area above Spanish Florida. On a second trip to America led by Sir Richard Granville the following year, the colonists established their headquarters on Roanoke Island on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, naming the region Virginia. John White and Thomas Hariot were important members of the group.4 Although little is known of his background as an artist, White was sent to draw and record the geography, natives, and natural history of the area.5 Hariot's experience as a surveyor and writer complemented White's artistic renderings. Educated at Oxford University, Hariot was perhaps the most renowned English mathematician of his time. During the year the two spent at Roanoke Island fort, they gathered a substantial amount of information about the inhabitants, the flora and fauna, and the terrain.

1. Only the Latin and German editions went onto second and third editions, while the English and French translations were only published in 1590; see Peter Stallybrass, "Admiranda narratio: A European Best Seller," in A brief and true report of the new found land of Virginia, Thomas Hariot, The Theodore de Bry Latin Edition, Facsimile edition accompanied by the modernized English text (Published for the Library at the Mariner's Museum by the University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville and London, 2007), 9-30.
2. Margaret Beck Pritchard, and Henry G. Taliaferro, "Degrees of Latitude: Mapping Colonial America" (New York: Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 2002), no. 2.
3. A brief and true report of the new found land of Virginia, thomas Hariot, The Theodore de Bry Latin Edition, Facsimile edition accompanied by the modernized English text (Published for the Library at the Mariner's Museum by the University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville and London, 2007), 67-68.
4. White appears to have made five voyages to the New World.
5. Hariot was to study the Algonquian language and Native American customs in addition to the geography and natural resources of the area. Cumming, Mapping the North Carolina Coast, (Raleigh, N. C., 1988), p. 51.