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      Dampier was an English sailor and adventurer whose greater success was earned in writing about his voyages, especially his account of A New Voyage Round the World (1697–1703). It was widely read at the time, and helped stimulate public interest in the Pacific. Dampier’s writings had an influence both on the formation of the South Sea Company (of the famous ‘bubble’) and on Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. The philosopher John Locke read them with interest. In the present short extract, Dampier describes a first encounter with native Australian people. He strikes a note which continues right through the subsequent literature, emphasizing the seemingly extreme primitiveness of the people and their apparent lack of all the attributes of civilization, such as houses, tools and clothing. He completely fails to perceive the delicate and sophisticated interaction of the people with their extremely hostile environment, an impression that contributed to the doctrine of terra nullius, which underwrote subsequent colonization. It has to be confessed that Dampier was not alone in this; few whites ever did begin to grasp the relationship of the people to their land until well into the twentieth century (cf. VIB9). Our extracts from A New Voyage Round the World are taken from the text printed in Exploration and Exchange: A South Seas Anthology 1680–1900, edited by Jonathan Lamb, Vanessa Smith and Nicholas Thomas, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000, pp. 10 and 12–14.

      New‐Holland is a very large Tract of Land. It is not yet determined whether it is an Island or a main Continent; but I am certain that it joins neither to Asia, Africa, nor America. […]

      The Inhabitants of this Country are the miserablest People in the World. The Hodmadods of Monomatapa, though a nasty People, yet for Wealth are Gentlemen to these; who have no Houses, and skin Garments, Sheep, Poultry, and Fruits of the Earth, Ostrich Eggs, &c. as the Hodmadods have: And setting aside their Humane Shape, they differ but little from Brutes. They are tall, strait‐bodied, and thin, with small long Limbs. They have great Heads, round Foreheads, and great Brows….

      They have great Bottle‐Noses, pretty full Lips, and wide Mouths. The two Fore‐teeth of their Upper‐jaw are wanting in all of them, Men and Women, old and young; whether they draw them out, I know not: Neither have they any Beards. They are long‐visaged, and of a very unpleasing Aspect, having no one graceful Feature in their Faces. Their Hair is black, short and curl’d, like that of the Negroes; and not long and lank like the common Indians. The Colour of their Skins, both of their Faces and the rest of their Body, is Coal‐black, like that of the Negroes of Guinea.

      They have no sort of Cloaths, but a piece of the Rind of a Tree tied like a Girdle about their Waists, and a handful of long Grass, or three or four small green Boughs full of Leaves, thrust under their Girdle, to cover their Nakedness.

      I did not perceive that they did worship any thing. These poor Creatures have a sort of Weapon to defend their Ware, or fight with their Enemies, if they have any that will interfere with their poor Fishery. They did at first endeavour with their Weapons to frighten us, who lying ashore deterr’d them from one of their Fishing‐places. Some of them had wooden Swords, others had a sort of Lances. The Sword is a piece of Wood shaped somewhat like a Cutlass. The Lance is a long strait Pole sharp at one end, and hardened afterwards by heat. I saw no Iron, nor any other sort of Metal; therefore it is probable they use Stone‐Hatchets, as some Indians in America do….

      How they get their Fire I know not; but probably as Indians do, out of Wood. I have seen the Indians of Bon‐Airy do it, and have my self tried the Experiment: They take a flat piece of Wood that is pretty soft, and make a small dent in one side of it, then they take another hard round Stick, about the bigness of one’s little Finger, and sharpening it at one end like a Pencil, they put that sharp end in the hole or dent of the flat soft piece, and then rubbing or twirling the hard piece between the Palms of their Hands, they drill the soft piece till it smoaks, and at last takes Fire.

      IC1 Anon. from the Inventory of the Palazzo Medici

      Lorenzo de’ Medici (1449–92) was head of the Medici family from the age of twenty, and in that role was one of the leading intellectual and political figures of the Florentine Renaissance. On his death, as was common practice (cf. IA7), his heirs had an inventory made of the family’s possessions. The inventory is well known and famous largely for showing how things which are very highly valued today, such as works of ‘fine art’, were then seen as less valuable than other objects which have since been relegated to the status of the crafts or ‘applied arts’ – including tapestries, furniture, jewellery and antiques. That is not the main purpose of the present selection, although we have included some paintings and carvings for comparison, including Brunelleschi’s important perspective rendering of the Palazzo de’ Signori and the surrounding piazza. The inventory is a long document, running to over 130 pages in a modern book, so our extracts are relatively fragmentary. What we have focussed on here is the number of exotic items included in the Medici palace. It is important to remember that this is not a dedicated ‘cabinet of curiosities’ as such but the record of a working household. It includes barrels of wine, saucepans and bolts of fabric for future use, as well as objects from distant lands including pieces of textile, diplomatic gifts and Byzantine mosaics, in addition to Lorenzo’s own collection of antiquities and exotica. The result is a picture of an interconnected world, at least for patricians, wherein porcelain from China sits beside Moorish textiles, ‘damascene’ metalwork, Turkish weaponry and natural things such as coral and ivory. Our source is Richard Stapleford, Lorenzo de’ Medici at Home: The Inventory of the Palazzo Medici in 1492, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2013; the selections are from pp. 67–8, 71, 74, 76, 79, 81, 83, 88–9, 93–4, 96–8, 103–4, 107, 109–10, 112–16, 120–2, 124 and 189–90. The valuations are in Florentine florins.

      In the Sale Grande suite of the ground floor loggia

In the first cassone [chest]
A tapestry wall hanging … depicting a hunt by the Duke of Burgundy f.100
In the other cassone
A silk carpet‐weave table cover in the Moorish style patterned with squares … f.10
Another carpet‐weave table cover of silk in the Moorish style, patterned with squares … f.15

      The chamber of Lorenzo in the Sala Grande suite of the ground floor

Six

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