BY THE SAME AUTHOR The Limit Borderlands For Ffion C ONTENTS M U P N AP OF THE NITED ROVINCES OF THE ETHERLANDS A N P OTE ON RICES 1 A Mania for Tulips 2 The Valleys of Tien Shan 3 Within the Abode of Bliss 4 Stranger from the East 5 Clusius 6 Leiden 7 An Adornment to the Cleavage 8 The Tulip in the Mirror 9 Florists 10 Boom 11 At the Sign of The Golden Grape 12 The Orphans of Wouter Winkel 13 Bust 14 Goddess of Whores 15 At the Court of the Tulip King 16 Late Flowering N OTES B IBLIOGRAPHY A CKNOWLEDGMENTS A N P OTE ON RICES It is impossible to make accurate comparisons between prices in the Golden Age of the Dutch Republic and those today. Figures can certainly be calculated, based on the comparative prices of gold or essential foodstuffs, but they do not take into account vital differences such as what constitutes a minimal standard of living (in many respects, people who today would be called poor live more comfortably than the richest Dutch in the seventeenth century) and certainly not what luxuries such as tulip bulbs were worth in the Golden Age. The best comparisons probably come from looking at different salaries and earnings. The table that follows sets out some typical examples from the Dutch Republic in the first half of the seventeenth century. * The basic unit of currency in the republic was the guilder. One guilder was made up of 20 stuivers. 20 stuivers = 1 guilder ½ stuiver Cost of a tankard of beer 6½ stuivers Cost of a 12-pound loaf, 1620 Daily wage of an experienced Haarlem bleacher, 1601 8 stuivers (= about 110 guilders a year) Daily wage of an Amsterdam cloth-shearer, 1633 (= 18 stuivers about 250 guilders a year) Exchange price of one Dutch ton of herring, 1636 60 13 guilders guilders Exchange price of 40 gallons of French brandy, 1636 250 guilders Annual earnings of a carpenter, 1630s 750 guilders Clusius’s salary at the University of Leiden, 1592 1,500 guilders Typical earnings of a middle-ranking merchant, 1630s Rembrandt’s fee for his greatest masterpiece, The Night 1,600 guilders Watch, 1642 3,000 guilders Typical earnings of a well-off merchant, 1630s Highest reliably attested price paid for a tulip bulb, 5,200 guilders 1637 *Sources: Deursen, Plain Lives; Hunger, Charles d’Ecluse; Posthumus, Inquiry; Zumthor, Daily Life in Rembrandt’s Holland. They were possessed with such a Rage or, to give it its proper Name, such an Itching for their Flowers, as to give often three thousand Crowns for a Tulip that pleased their Fancies; a Disease that ruined several rich Families. MONSIEUR DE BLAINVILLE, TRAVELS THROUGH HOLLAND (LONDON, 1743), vol. 1, p. 28