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Libraries > Digital Exhibits > Illustrations from The Story of Mankind > Events
| Events |
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It
was not uncommon for illustrations in history books to depict
famous events from the past. Van Loon similarly depicted historical
events, but what is striking in these drawings are the “historical
moments” he chooses to draw. Van Loon would draw the
“moment before” an important event, for example,
the moment before William the Silent is actually murdered,
Columbus’ galleon before landing at the New World, or
the Pilgrims huddled in the cabin of the Mayflower before
their arrival at Plymouth Rock. The most interesting of these
drawings is that of Peter the Great, represented by van Loon
not as an imposing autocrat but during his trip to Western
Europe, where the Czar labored in a Dutch shipyard. |
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| "Hannibal
Crosses the Alps," p. 99 |
"Magellan,"
p. 237 |
"A
New World," facing p. 238 |
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| "Buddha
Goes into the Mountains," facing p. 246 |
"The
Murder of William the Silent," p. 270 |
"The
Armada is Coming!", p. 271 |
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| "Peter
the Great in the Dutch Shipyard," p. 308 |
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"In
the Cabin of the Mayflower," p. 327 |
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