This template uses {{FreedImg}}, but limits the initial width. Similar to the width in layout 2 in {{Default layout}}, it limits the image width portrait-oriented to 400px, but can shrink as in FreedImg when the screen width of the book is smaller than 400px. 100% gives a width of 400px, 50% gives a width of 200px and so on.
file: The file name (without the "File:" prefix) (mandatory parameter)
alt: Image alt-text, ie. for mouse-over text box or for use with a screenreader for the visually impaired (optional)
Currently no possibility for inline link re-assignment using the |link= parameter.
when ( type=user ) is present & set
Images generated by certain wikicode extensions (e.g. the default <math> User preference, <score>, etc.) may be entered in the named file parameter instead.
Primary DIV container
orientation: Default orientation is portrait, at 400px. Setting the parameter to landscape will default the width to 540px.
width: The width of the primary container, by percentage (present, variable, default 400px)
cclass: The class for the primary container, (present, variable, default floatnone [a null undefined classname just for placeholder purposes])
float: The alignment of the primary container (not present; must be added, options are "left" or "right"; otherwise remains centered).
clear: The margin(s) of the primary container to be cleared (not present; must be added, options are "left", "right" or "both").
margin-left,margin-right : Any special margins to be applied to the primary container (defaults appropriate for centered result).
Image Caption
caption: The image caption (not present; must be added).
tstyle,talign: Any special text style or alignment to apply to caption block (if present).
mleft,indent: Any special text-flow (e.g. hanging indent etc.) control to apply to caption (if present).
Others
anchor, uses this {{anchor}} template, for linking to an image.
{{FI/400
| file = History of Hudson County and of the Old Village of Bergen largeband.png
}}
{{FI/400
| file = History of Hudson County and of the Old Village of Bergen W.png
| width = 25%
| float = left
}}
The Old Village of Bergen
A History of the First Settlement in New Jersey
hen the first representatives of the Amsterdam Licensed Trading West India Company built four houses on Manhattan Island in 1610—1612, one could hardly consider the territory crowded. Those ancestors of New York and New Jersey, however, had more spacious ideas than are held by their apartment-dwelling descendants. The charter of the Dutch East India Company, which had granted the trading monopoly to its West India Company, designated New Netherland as comprising "the unoccupied region between Virginia and Canada"—a little tract that must forever inspire pained admiration in modern real estate dealers. It was bounded approximately on the south by the South River, as the Dutch called the stream that the English afterward re-christened the Delaware. And because the Delaware was South River, the river explored by Henry Hudson in 1609, which first was called Mauritius River in honor of Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange, came to be referred to as North River, which explains why we today call it Hudson River or North River, just as the words happen.
Henry, we may suspect, always had remained a little disappointed, if not indignant, about that river. He had no