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The Dido Story in Accounts of Early Modern European Imperialism—An Anthology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2017

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Abstract

This anthology of excerpts from histories and travel accounts composed during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries features representations of indigenous oral traditions about the founding of European colonies in Sri Lanka, Melaka, Gujarat, Cambodia, Manila, Jakarta, Taiwan, New York, and the Cape of Good Hope. According to these accounts, the colonists first requested as much land as the hide of an ox could cover, and then cut that hide into strips and claimed all the land they could encircle. The “oxhide measure” is a widely-attested folkloric motif. The introduction, however, questions assumptions about the unreliability of oral traditions and looks to history instead of folklore for an explanation for the colonial parallels. It proposes that Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch colonists performed the “hide trick” in emulation of the classical story of the Phoenician Queen Dido’s founding of Carthage.

Information

Type
From the Archives
Copyright
© 2017 Research Institute for History, Leiden University 
Figure 0

Figure 1 Dido Cutting the Oxhide, woodcut by Tobias Stimmer, in Titus Livius and Lucius Florus, Von Ankunfft unnd Ursprung des Romischen Reichs… Straszburg, 1575, fol. 220. Courtesy of Houghton Library, Harvard University. [OLC.L765.En575]

Figure 1

Figure 2 Mynheer Tenbroeck. Illustration by Felix O. C. Darley in Washington Irving’s A History of New York (New York: George P. Putnam, 1850). Courtesy of The American Antiquarian Society.