El barco (La serie completa) [16 DVD] Mario Casas, Blanca Suárez.

£96.5
FREE Shipping

El barco (La serie completa) [16 DVD] Mario Casas, Blanca Suárez.

El barco (La serie completa) [16 DVD] Mario Casas, Blanca Suárez.

RRP: £193
Price: £96.5
£96.5 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

slave trading voyage (1799): Captain Moses Joynson acquired a letter of marque on 16 January 1799. [1] Brooks sailed from Liverpool on 8 February. [20] However she soon ran into difficulties. She was driven from her moorings on to the Cheshire shore. She was full of water. [21] Immediacy … Mariana of Austria, Queen of Spain, 1683-93, by Claudio Coello at the Wallace Collection. Photograph: The Bowes Museum slave trading voyage (1800–1801): Captain Joynson sailed from Liverpool on 18 November 1800. Brooks acquired her slaves at Malembo and delivered them to Demerara. She arrived there on 9 June 1801 with 324 slaves. [24] Lloyd's List reported on 3 March 1801 that a schooner, bound for St Domingo from Bordeaux, had come into Dominica. The schooner was a prize to Brooks and William Heathcote, of Liverpool. [25] War with France had broken out and Captain Thomas Hawkins acquired a letter of marque on 20 May 1794. [1] Year In their anguish and ecstasy, these are works that reel you in and implicate you in their dark, ferocious dramas.

Still life with Asparagus, Artichokes, Lemons and Cherries, 1602-14 by Blas de Ledesma. Photograph: The Bowes Museum slave trading voyage (1797–1798): Captain Richards sailed from Liverpool on 24 August 1797, bound for West Africa. Brooks arrived at Kingston on 7 May 1798 with 446 slaves. At Jamaica, Captain John Williams replaced Richards. She sailed for Liverpool on 14 August. [15] In July 2007, students and staff at Durham University in northeast England re-created the image of the Brookes print to draw attention to the atrocities of the Middle Passage, in an exercise that involved lying on the ground in a manner similar to the slaves arranged on the Brookes. [27] [3] Further reading edit Palace Green transformed into a slave ship". Durham First. Durham University. Archived from the original on 2021-12-01 . Retrieved 20 November 2021.

Stowage of the British slave ship "Brookes" under the regulated slave trade act of 1788. [n. p. n. d.]. – Piece 1 of 1". An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera. The Library of Congress . Retrieved 10 March 2016. Much of the seized art flowed into museums; some of it, like the works the Boweses acquired from the widow of a Spanish aristocrat, wound up in private hands. This suppression of the monasteries, as Bray points out, is one of the moments in history when works such as The Immaculate Conception by José Antolínez (1635-1675), a highlight of the Wallace exhibition, stop being objects of religious veneration and start being art – objects of primarily aesthetic, rather than devotional or ritual value. Stowage of the British slave ship "Brookes" under the regulated slave trade act of 1789. [n. p. n. d.]". Hdl.loc.gov . Retrieved 11 March 2016. Brooks did not appear in LR in the 1791 volume; she returned in the 1792 volume. She had undergone repairs in 1791 and thereafter her burthen was given as 319 tons, up from 297–300.

a b "The Brookes – visualising the transatlantic slave trade". 1807 Commemorated: The abolition of the slave trade. Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past. 2007 . Retrieved 11 March 2016. a b c d e f g h i j k l "Letter of Marque, p.54 - accessed 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016 . Retrieved 27 October 2018. The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 3035. 5 October 1798. hdl: 2027/uc1.c3049069 . Retrieved 14 September 2020. The best place to see Spanish art in the UK,” says Xavier Bray, director of the Wallace Collection in London, “is the Bowes Museum.” This remarkable institution in Barnard Castle, County Durham, exists because of the philanthropic instincts of its founders, John and Joséphine Bowes. He was British, the illegitimate son of the third Earl of Strathmore; she was a Frenchwoman who had acted on the Paris stage. Neither lived to see the Bowes open 125 years ago, but they bequeathed some remarkable pictures to the people of north-east England. Cheryl Finley: Committed to memory : the art of the slave ship icon, Princeton ; Oxford : Princeton University Press, 2022, ISBN 978-0-691-24106-7Brooks was rebuilt in 1799 and returned with a burthen of 353 or 359 tons. LR showed her master as J. Slothart, [22] but the slave-trade voyage data reports her master on her 10th voyage as Joynson. The ship arrival and departure data in Lloyd's List confirms that her master was Joynson, not Slothart or Stothart. [b] Brooks returned to Liverpool on 16 September. She had left Liverpool with 45 crew members and she suffered 11 crew deaths on her voyage. [24] A British Member of Parliament, Sir William Dolben, 3rd Baronet, toured and investigated the Brooks. This led to the publishing of her plans and design by Thomas Clarkson, an abolitionist. An engraving first published in Plymouth in 1788 by the Plymouth chapter of the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade depicted the conditions on board Brookes, [3] and has become an iconic image of the inhumanity of the trade in enslaved people. Prime Minister William Pitt supported Dolben's Bill. This was instrumental in getting the bill rapidly passed as the Regulated Slave Trade Act 1788. If this intimate exhibition is an ensemble drama, it has a star: the El Greco. This is not the lofty Peter who sits at the right hand of God, jangling the keys to heaven, but a man who knows he has done something utterly, unspeakably terrible. A moody composition in deep blues and mustards, in which the saint’s tear-swollen eyes cast upwards towards a stormy sky, it is, says Bray, “almost abstract expressionist” in its force and abandonment of realism.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop