"Undoubtedly one of the most important European histories of any part of the New World of the seventeenth century, and this rendering into English will make a valuable text far more accessible. The translation is of excellent quality and the introduction is both clear and helpful."--Jonathan Israel, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University
"The historian specialized in the history of colonial Brazil will find this painstaking edition a safe 'haven.' It not only illuminates the political and cultural splendor of John Maurice of Nassau, but it also makes a remarkable contribution to the knowledge of 'Dutch Brazil' and the Portuguese-Dutch rivalry in the seventeenth-century South Atlantic world."--Jorge Flores, Brown University At its height in the first half of the seventeenth century, the Dutch West India Company controlled a scattered but sizeable portion of the western hemisphere, from present-day Albany, New York, to northeast Brazil. In 1647, the Dutch historian, theologian, and philosopher Caspar van Baerle created a landmark historical narrative, which he published in Latin.