Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 5, 1913.djvu/256

 240 CASPAR NETSCHER SECT. 298*:. Mary Stuart, wife of William III., and Queen of England. Without hands. Oval, 2 1 inches by i| inches. Sale. G. Hoet, The Hague, August 25, 1760 (Terw. 231), No. 139 (5 florins 5, Van Brakel). 298^. Mary Stuart, wife of William III., and Queen of England. Panel, 9 inches by 7^ inches. Sale. (Supplementary) Amsterdam, February 12, 1850, No. 255. 298*. Mary Stuart, wife of William III., and Queen of England. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 4805, II. Sale. London, March 5, 1855. 298/1 Mary Stuart, wife of William III., and Queen of England. 41 inches by 33 inches. Sale. Sir H. Bedingfield, Bart., and others, London, May 31, 1902, No. 93. 298^. Mary Stuart, wife of William III., and Queen of England. In a red and blue dress. 28 inches by 22 inches. Sale. Sir George Elliot and others, London, July 8, 1905, No. 81. 299. Willem Frederik, Count von Nassau-Dietz (1613-1664), Stadtholder of Friesland. The attribution is uncertain. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 9100, 6. In the collection of H. J. S. M. van Wageningen, Arnhem. 300. Albertina Agnes of Orange-Nassau (1634-1697), wife of Willem Frederik, Count von Nassau-Dietz. Full length ; a small seated figure. In the collection of Hendrik Casimir II. of Nassau, Stadtholder of Fries- land, and of his wife Henriette Amalia von Anhalt-Dessau ; mentioned in the inventories of 1688 and 1694, No. 16. 301. Lambert Witsen (1638-1697), Colonel of the Town Militia at Amsterdam. In armour. A burning house at the back. Signed in full, and dated 1679 ; canvas. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 9166. Exhibited at Amsterdam, 1858, No. 1794, and at the Marine Exhibition, The Hague, 1900, No. 1576 under the wrong title of " Portrait of Gillis (sic) de Wildt." In the collection of F. de Wildt, Amsterdam. In the Backer-De Wildt collection, Amsterdam. In the collection of A. J. Blaauw, Spanderswoud ; an old family heirloom. 302. Sara NuytS (1645-1723), wife of Lambert Witsen. In a low dress, with a pearl necklace. The lady is identified through her speaking likeness to Sara Nuyts, as portrayed by J. de Baen in a group of the guardians of the Amsterdam Workhouse [dated 1684] in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.