Subject: Colonial Southeast United States
Period: 1628 (circa)
Publication:
Color: Hand Color
Size:
19.2 x 13.6 inches
48.8 x 34.5 cm
This stunning map was compiled from two of the most important source maps of the early colonial period: John White's Virginia and Jacques le Moyne's Florida. Hondius' map became the prototype map of the region for the first half of the 17th century and continued to influence the cartography of the region until the middle of the 18th century. Largely due to the enormous success of Hondius' Atlas, Le Moyne's erroneous depiction of a large inland lake (Lacus aquae dulcis) from which the R. de May (St. John's River) flows in a southeasterly direction was popularized. Chesapeake Bay, here called Chesepioock Sinus, and the area south towards C.S. Romano Hispanis are shown in their White delineations. The Indian villages of Paquiwok, Croatoan, and Wococon are named in the Outer Banks and several others along the Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds. The map is extensively decorated with depictions of Indian villages incorporated in the title cartouche, a Floridian king and queen, and Virginian natives in a canoe taken from De Bry, wildlife including a wild turkey, ships, sea monsters, and a superb compass rose. French text on verso, either published in Gerardi Mercatoris - Atlas sive Cosmographicae (1628) or Gerardi Mercatoris et. I. Hondii Atlas ou Representation du Monde Universel (1633).
References: Burden #151; Cumming (SE) #26; Williams & Johnson #3; Van der Krogt (Vol. I) #9400:1A.
Condition: B
A crisp impression with original color, scattered foxing, light toning and offsetting, and a printer's crease adjacent to the centerfold. There are imperfections in the blank margins that are well away from the image.