5491 - 5697 FINE ARTS - FOREIGN TOPOGRAPHY. MAPS, PLANS and VIEWS
- Fine. = Betz 31; Tooley p.75. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXI.
- Trifle/ sl. yellowed, otherwise fine. = Nice. After the map by Nicolaes Visscher.
- Some foxed spots; trifle browned.
= Betz 60.4, fourth state of 5, without the lower border and with the date "1632"; Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8600:1D.2. Very rare. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXII.
- Fine. = Rare early pocket version after Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.
= Very rare.
= All rare.
- The second print trimmed on the right border line. = Both very rare.
AND 1 other similar from the same work: "Ung Batteau de Iapan dit Champan".
- Overall fine.
= With a sl. later engr. legend "Bedeutung der Farben" on 2 sm. pieces of paper laid down below.
- Fine. = Rare early pocket version after Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.
= A very fine copy of this rare map, which is one of the earliest maps showing the flag of the USA with stars (13x) and stripes (in the cartouche). The title cartouche is dated in contemp. hand in pen and ink "14. Jul.1776" (American Declaration of Independence). The map has some other interesting contemp. annotations in French and Dutch, i.a. (below title cartouche) "903.040.000 acres" from which is detracted "94.040.000 d'eau" leaving "809.000.000 en terre"; the sea in front of Chesapeak Bay has the following in contemp. manuscript: "270 M.L. 17a 18. 6. en 8 a 9 Vad. diep" and to the West of Cape Fear in vague manuscript "C.F.L.C Y[?] D.M."; Lake Huron has an annotation in the middle reading: "1000 M.d.tour" and Lake Ontario has "600 M. de Tour" written the middle of the lake. Finally the place name(?) "Spelt" is written in the triangle formed by the Endless Mountains, the letters "vanie" (of Pensilvanie) and the word "Riviere" (of Delaware Riviere). SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXII.
= Showing the first landing of Vespucci in the Americas, in Venezuela.
= Shows the upper half of the northern hemisphere from the North Pole down to California (as an island), northern Africa, the Caspian Sea and Japan, with i.a. all of Europe, Russia and Canada.
- Two vague oblique folds in upper right corner.
= The first detailed map of Aruba, "gevolgd naar de opmeting in den jare 1820 gedaan, onder directie van den Kapitein ter Zee W.A. van Spengler en in den jare 1825 met verscheidene nieuwe bepalingen verrykt door den Kapitein R.F. van Raders". In 1773 a large map on seventeen sheets was made, which showed only the island's coastline. The present map was made after the Netherlands regained possession of 'Curaçao en Onderhorigheden' in 1816. Up-to-date reports and maps of Curaçao and Bonaire were soon made, but a survey of Aruba had to wait until 1820, when Captain Van Spengler, port warden of Curaçao from 1816 onwards, offered to perform this task. A copy of his manuscript map eventually found its way to the 'Departement van oorlog of Koloniën' in The Hague. In 1824, news arrived in The Hague that gold was found on Aruba. Immediately, Captain R.F. van Raders was sent to the island to investigate. During his three visits to Aruba in 1824 and 1825, Van Raders carried Van Spengler's map or a copy of it, and added new information to it concerning the gold mining. In 1825, this manuscript map was made in print. For extensive information on the mapping of Aruba in this period, see Caert Thresoar 2009-3, p.65-70.
- Doubled w. Japanese, closing tear along lower part of middle fold and sm. acid-tear along border of Japan; remnants of Japanese paper (used for former mounting(?)) on verso, but not visible on recto.
= Decorative map by Witsen, who was mayor of Amsterdam and administrator of the East India Company (VOC), whence came his extensive geographical knowledge of Asia. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXIII.
- Occas. trifle browned; nevertheless fine.
= Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8000:1A. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXIII.
- Trifle browned; sl. foxed; wormholes in centre professionaly retouched.
= Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8000:1C.2. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXIV.
- Waterstain in centre lower margin, ±3,5 cm within the image.
- Fine. = Rare early pocket version after Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.
= A fine copy of this important and rare map, showing the outbound and return voyage of the first Dutch fleet sailing from the Zuiderzee in Holland to Java in 1596-1597 undertaken under the command of Cornelis de Houtman. Despite the fact that this voyage proved to be very costly both in terms of the loss of life of crew members as well in financial terms, Houtman's journey laid the foundation for the rapid growth and eventually dominance of the Dutch trading empire in the 17th century. The map was intended to be published in Willem Lodewijcksz, Historie van Indien (1595), but publication was prohibited by the Dutch authorities, probably as a protective measure. In 1598 Cornelis Claesz. nevertheless published the map as a separate sheet and 1599 the map was included, with some small changes, in the third volume of De Bry's Indiae orientalis (...). Schilder, Monumenta Cartographica Neerlandica vol. VII, p.263f and illustration 11.56. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXIV.
- Some foxing.
= Map extends from Greece to Armenia and shows parts of Cyprus and the Black Sea. With on verso: a large table showing distances between larger towns and Alexandria, flanked by large woodcut columns with putti on top (likely by A. DÜRER).