Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Histoire Naturelle des Indes

013. MA 3900, Folios 12v–13r
014. MA 3900, Folios 13v–14r
015. MA 3900, Folios 14v–15r
016. MA 3900, Folios 15v–16r
017. MA 3900, Folios 16v–17r
018. MA 3900, Folios 17v–18r
019. MA 3900, Folios 18v–19r
020. MA 3900, Folios 19v–20r
021. MA 3900, Folios 20v–21r
022. MA 3900, Folios 21v–22r
023. MA 3900, Folios 22v–23r
024. MA 3900, Folios 23v–24r

In 1983, The Morgan Library & Museum received, as the bequest of Clara S. Peck, an extraordinary volume whose beautiful paintings and descriptions document the plant, animal, and human life of the Caribbean late in the sixteenth century. Spaniards had already begun to exert influence over the indigenous people of the area when explorers from England and France arrived, among them Sir Francis Drake. The volume, known as the Drake Manuscript and titled Histoire Naturelle des Indes when it was bound in the eighteenth century, gives us a wonderful picture of daily life at the time of Drake's many visits to the region. Although Drake's connection to the manuscript is uncertain, he is mentioned on more than one occasion by the authors. Drake himself is known to have painted, but none of his work survives.

The work presented in this digital facsimile is from the hands of two or more artists, most likely French, and the descriptions are French as well. French Huguenots were known to have traveled with Drake, but whether these artists were with him remains unproven. In Verlyn Klinkenborg's introduction to the facsimile, we are given the background necessary to appreciate this magnificent manuscript to its fullest extent.

Read Verlyn Klinkenborg's introduction »