Subject: Prints - Horsemanship
Period: 1743 (published)
Publication: A General System of Horsemanship
Color: Black & White
Size:
19.7 x 14.9 inches
50 x 37.8 cm
A superb copper engraving of Charles II mounted on a magnificent stallion on a hill overlooking London.  A soldier in the foreground is slaying a multi-headed dragon.  Above the king is a group of putti and angles each holding a crown, while a cherub behind him carries his knight's helmet.  William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle (1592-1676), established his famous riding-school in Antwerp while living there in exile.  This classic work is not only one of the most beautiful books on horses ever published, but also was a landmark in the development of equestrian technique.  William Cavendish's emphasis on systematic and humane training was revolutionary for its era, and his teaching has exerted a lasting and far-reaching influence on the art of riding.  A General System of Horsemanship was first published in a French edition in 1658 - this engraving by Chaucercken after Van Diepenbeeck is from the first English edition.
References: 
Condition: B+
A nice impression on a lightly toned sheet with faint foxing, marginal soiling, and archival repairs to a short centerfold separation at bottom and a short tear in the right margin.