TO THE CAPITAL OF THE BANNAT. 289 
be considered very valuable in En.zland; be- chap. 
. . , III. 
cause it affords a view of London, detailed with 
the utmost minuteness, as it existed towards 
the termination of the seventeenth century, when 
there were many windmills in the midst of the 
city, and fields which have since been covered 
with squares and streets. There was also a 
View of Windsor, by the same master; and 
beautiful portraits of Charles the First and his 
Queen Henrietta, by Fandyke, in his best man- 
ner; together with other fine pictures, also by 
Vandyke. We noticed a most valuable picture 
by Albert Durer, a portrait of himself; besides 
paintings of the Italian masters. This collection 
was rich in the works of painters unknown to 
us ; as a Holy Family by Liebens, and others by 
Fon Quas and Alpinas and Bourbas. There was 
also a picture by Bocchorst, with the date l()4l ; 
a large Scripture-piece, taken from the history 
of Jacob, by Cornelius Zuftesin ; the Angel and 
Shepherds, by Osenbech ; a beautiful Moonlight 
Scene, by Elsheimer; a Pilate ivashing his hands, hy 
Rembrandt', with a fine picture by Cornelius 
Janssen, and another by Van Balen, the first 
master of Vandyke. Those of the different 
schools of Italy were principally pictures by 
Titian, Tintoret, Guido, Corregio, Andrea del 
Sarto, the Caracci, and Alessandro Allori, other- 
VOL. VIII. L' 
