JF Ptak Science Books Post 1704
This may be the earliest image of "New York" as it was--that is "New York" instead of "New Amsterdam". From what looks like an extraordinarily bad trade (sitting here in its future with 350-years of hindsight), the Dutch and the English came to terms at the end of the second Dutch-English War (1665-1667) with at least one result that traded the small island of Run in the Banda Islands for another small (but not nearly so small as Run) island in North America: Manhattan.
Manhattan didn't have one thing that Run and the Bandas had, though, and that one thing was enormously valuable--nutmeg trees. From the nutmeg tree came nutmeg and mace; nutmeg was a spice and a supposed medicinal, and traded for more than the price of gold, allowing its producers a phenomenal return on their investment.
The Bandas were in a remote place removed from remote places in Indonesia. In the island group--which rose from great depths of the ocean--the total land mass was about 180 km2. Not much, except if they were the only places on Earth producing a commodity in sensational demand. The Dutch kept control of the islands for a long time, and kept their trade in the spices an abject money-maker. They secured their uncontested control of the island group at the end of that second Anglo-Duch War with the Treaty of Breda, one section of which had the Brits returning Run to the Dutch in exchange for Manhattan, which was at the time still occupied by the Duke of York, who was the brother of Charles II and who would become James II. And thus the island became "New York".
Due to various reasons--not the least of which was the Dutch murder and export of the un-murdered indigenous population of the Bandas, who were the people who actually best knew how to care and administer the nutmeg trees--the great trade in the spices continued with diminishing effect in the Napoleonic Wars, an unpretty story of much bloodshed and enslavement.
{Image: "Fort Hollandois de l'Ile de Banda. - Hollands Fort op t' Eiland Banda."Original engraving by J.V. Schley and printed aorund 1750 (39.5x25 cm) for Antoine Prévost's Histoire générale des Voyages published in Paris between 1746 and 1770. The name of the structure was actually Fort Nassau. Good copy. $100
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