VTG DELFT MINIATURE PAINTING TILE SQUARE WINDMILL HOLLAND DUTCH DANISH PORCELAIN


 

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MINUTE DELFT WINDMILL

TILE PAINTING

PORCELAIN POTTERY

2CM X 2CM

MINIATURE / MINI

AO / ARTIST ORIGINAL

ONE OF A KIND / OOAK

BLUE ON WHITE

SIGNED ON BACK

NO BIGGER THAN A GULDEN

CIRCA 1940 

 

 

 

 

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FYI

 


 

DELFTWARE: A pottery made first in Delft, Holland, early in the 17th century of a soft reddish clay, containing an unusual quantity of lime, after a method of the Italian majolicists of the 15th and 16th centuries. In the biscuit form delft was coated with an opaque white tin-enamel slip, and then while the enamel was still wet the colors were applied and the enamel was liquefied and the colors fixed at one firing. Blue was the earliest color used in imitation of the more costly porcelain which had been brought from the Far East, followed by the polychrome colors. A great variety of ware was made including tiles. Later delft is glazed with lead.

Delft is a city and municipality in the province of South Holland (Zuid-Holland), the Netherlands. It is located between Rotterdam and The Hague. Delft is primarily known for its typically Dutch town centre (with canals); also for the painter Vermeer, Delft Blue pottery (Delftware), the Delft University of Technology, and its association with the Dutch royal family, the House of Orange-Nassau.

From a rural village in the early Middle Ages Delft developed to a city, that in the 13th century (1246) received its charter.

The town's association with the House of Orange started when William of Orange (Willem van Oranje), nicknamed William the Silent (Willem de Zwijger), took up residence in 1572 At the time he was the leader of growing national Dutch resistance against Spanish occupation of the country, which struggle is known as the Eighty Years' War. By then Delft was one of the leading cities of Holland and it was equipped with the necessary city walls to serve as a headquarters.

After the Act of Abjuration was proclaimed in 1581 Delft became the de facto capital of the newly independent Netherlands, as the seat of the Prince of Orange.

When William was shot dead in 1584, by Balthazar Gerards in the hall of the Prinsenhof, the family's traditional burial place in Breda was still in the hands of the Spanish. Therefore, he was buried in the Delft Nieuwe Kerk (New Church), starting a tradition for the House of Orange that has continued to the present day.

The Delft Explosion, also known in history as the Delft Thunderclap, occurred on 12 October 1654 when a gunpowder store exploded, destroying much of the city. Over a hundred people were killed and thousands wounded.

About 30 tonnes (66,138 pounds) of gunpowder were stored in barrels in a magazine in a former Clarissen convent in the Doelenkwartier district. Cornelis Soetens, the keeper of the magazine, opened the store to check a sample of the powder and a huge explosion followed. Luckily, many citizens were away, visiting a market in Schiedam or a fair in The Hague. Artist Carel Fabritius was wounded in the explosion and died of his injuries. Later on, Egbert van der Poel painted several pictures of Delft showing the devastation. The Delft Explosion is the principal reason why Delft University of Technology maintains explosion science as a key topic within its research portfolio and graduate skill-set.

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A windmill is a machine which converts the energy of wind to rotational motion by means of adjustable vanes called sails. The main use is for a grinding mill powered by the wind, reducing a solid or coarse substance into pulp or minute grains, by crushing, grinding, or pressing. Windmills have also provided energy to sawmills, paper mills, hammermills, and windpumps for obtaining fresh water from underground or for drainage (especially of land below sea level).

The windwheel of the Greek engineer Heron of Alexandria in the 1st century marks one of the first known instances of wind powering a machine in history. Another early example of a wind-driven wheel was the prayer wheel, which was used in ancient Tibet and China since the 4th century.

The majority of windmills had four sails. An increase in the number of sails meant that an increase in power could be obtained, at the expense of an increase in the weight of the sail assembly. The earliest record of a multi-sailed mill in the United Kingdom was the five sail Flint Mill, Leeds, mentioned in a report by John Smeaton in 1774. Multi-sailed windmills were said to run smoother than four sail windmills. In Lincolnshire, more multi-sailed windmills were found than anywhere else in the United Kingdom. There were five, six and eight sail windmills.

If a four sail windmill suffers a damaged sail, the one opposite can be removed and the mill will work with two sails, generating about 60% of the power that it would with all four sails. A six sail mill can run with two, three, four or six sails. An eight sail mill can run with two, four, six or eight sails, thus allowing a number of options if an accident occurs. A five sail mill can only run with all five sails. If one is damaged then the mill is stopped until it is replaced. Apart from the UK, multi-sail mills were built in Germany, Malta and the USA.

    




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