Transcription of N at i o N a l G a l l e r y o f a r t | D i v i s i o N o ...
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Painting in the Dutch Golden Age A Profile of the Seventeenth CenturynAt i o nAl G Al l e r y o f Ar t , wA Sh i nGt o nN a t i oNa l G a l l e r y o f ar t | D i v i s i oN o f e Du c a t i oND e p a r t m eNt o f e Du c a t i oN pu b l i c a t i oNsPainting in the Dutch Golden Agea profile of the seventeenth centuryN a t i oNa l G a l l e r y o f ar tW a s h iN Gt oNPainting in the Dutch Golden AgeA Resource for TeachersPainting in the Dutch Golden AgeA Profile of the Seventeenth CenturyNational Gallery of Art, WashingtonAcknowledgmentsThis teaching packet is a project of the National Gallery of Art, department of education publica-tions. Writers Carla Brenner, Jennifer Riddell, and Barbara Moore extend sincere thanks to colleagues at the Gallery: curator of northern baroque paint-ings Arthur Wheelock, exhibition research assistants Jephta Dullaart and Ginny Treanor, and curatorial assistant Molli Kuenstner, who generously shared books and expertise; head of the education divi-sion Lynn Pearson Russell; editor Ulrike Mills and designer Chris Vogel; and fellow s
Lek River Rijn (Rhine) River ... Shallow seas were drained to reclaim land, creating new arable areas called polders, a process begun in the 1200s to accommodate a growing population. Between 1590 and 1650, the area of northern Holland increased by one-third, and land reclamation projects
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