Catalog Archive
Auction 161, Lot 128

One of the Most Informative 18th Century Maps of the French Possessions in North America

"Carte de la Nouvelle France, ou se voit le Cours des Grandes Rivieres de S. Laurens & de Mississipi Aujour d'hui S. Louis, aux Environs des-quelles se Trouvent les Etats, Pais, Nations, Peuples &c...", Chatelain, Henry Abraham

Subject: Colonial Eastern United States & Canada

Period: 1719 (circa)

Publication: Atlas Historique…

Color: Hand Color

Size:
19.3 x 16.6 inches
49 x 42.2 cm
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Derived from Nicholas de Fer's important four-sheet map of 1718, this is the most informative map of the French possessions in North America in the early 18th century. Louisiana and the Mississippi Valley are based on Delisle's manuscript map of 1701, while the geography of New England and eastern Canada originates with Franquelin. Inset at top left is a large-scale map of the Mississippi Delta and Mobile Bay, based on the voyage of Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville. Another inset plan and view of Quebec is enclosed in a very decorative cartouche at bottom right. The map is filled with wildlife, scenes of Indians hunting, Indian villages and notations, and the oceans are embellished with numerous ships, canoes and sea monsters. It was issued to promote the recently established Compagnie Francoise Occident, which was formed to fund the debt of Louis XIV and offered inducements to encourage settlement in Louisiana.

References: Verner and Stuart-Stubbs #11; Kershaw #332; McCorkle #719.4.

Condition: A

A dark impression on a clean bright sheet with some minor printer's ink residue in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico.

Estimate: $3,000 - $3,750

Sold for: $2,200

Closed on 2/8/2017

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