Should anyone wonder what the painting in my header is…
View of Port Royal, Jamaica, by Richard Paton, circa 1758
Description from the National Maritime Museum online collection
“An aerial view of Port Royal, Jamaica in 1758, showing merchantmen and other vessels in the approaches. In the early years of the 18th century Port Royal had been notorious as a den of iniquity for pirates and brigands of all kinds. In 1724 it was the scene of the execution of the famous pirate ‘Calico’ Jack Rackham at Gallows Point. Port Royal had been devastated by an earthquake in 1692, but was subsequently re-occupied and rebuilt as Britain’s principal naval and mercantile port in the Caribbean. As a wealthy sugar island, Jamaica was a valuable colony for Britain and was also heavily involved with the slave trade, making Port Royal a principal centre for this. By the middle of the 18th century a new doctrine of the liberalization of trade was emerging, in an effort to curb the excesses of monopoly trade claims. In peacetime, a system evolved that became known as the Freedom of the Seas. This promoted the belief that every ship should have the right to expect an unhindered passage to her destination, providing she was engaged in honest trade and prepared to obey the customs laws of the country in which she hoped to sell her cargo.
The artist has distorted the perspective to achieve his effect, with a predominance of sky occupying half the picture. Port Royal lies towards the left and the flat coastal plain is encircled by mountains. The port is visible inside the harbour. Morant Bay Fort, built in 1758, is to the left of centre, at the mouth of the harbour. Small islands are depicted scattered in the foreground amongst the ships. Three British war ships are shown under way off the harbour. The one on the left shows her stern and red ensign. Those on the right of centre, broadside, and on the far right, with the bow in view, fly Union Jacks at the bow and red ensigns. Other shipping is visible at anchor on the left in the distance.
The artist started his painting career as an assistant to a ship’s painter on Sir Charles Knowles’s ship, and he rose to become one of the principal painters of naval actions of the 18th century. “
ETA: it seems I’ve figured a way to use my LJ icons *G*
It is a lovely picture with all those tasteful colours, but I have to admit that it’s difficult to work out where everything is! Thanks for the explanation! I’m sure some of that will be working its way into ‘Secrets’ the next time I get to a Port Royal bit.
Also, yay for finding a use for the icons! And this way you get to use an unlimited amount! Hm, though where are you storing them?
See you’ve only been on this site a day and you already know more about it than me!
Yes, there are lots of details but they’re very tiny and much is left to imagination. However, the painting was just the right dimension for the header and it saved me lots of time *G*
Happy to know it would be of some use for your Secrets !
I’m storing my icons in the WordPress space they offer you to upload pictures to put in posts if you do not want to link an external source like Photobuckett through the usual [img src="http"] command. 50MB are more than enough to save my LJ icons, including old and new, which all together do not amount to 6 MB. In a way, it’s as good if not better than GJ, because icons are very small and you can upload an almost illimitate number of them. On the other hand, there is not way to put icons in comments. But, funny as it is, this is not an essential feature for communicating. And I suppose we can live without that !
Warning: Attempting to use my Summer Day icon, I just discovered the trick does not work for animated gif files. The file is regularly uploaded but only the first image appears.
That’s a shame. Though you could store your .gifs on photobucket and just put in the html code for the picture. That’s what I did with my animated banner, which works OK.
Good idea. It worked fine. Thank you !
Ooh, how did you do that quote thingy in your last comment? I can’t figure that one out at all!