Subject: World
Period: 1643 (circa)
Publication: Theatre du Monde ou Nouvel Atlas
Color: Hand Color
Size:
21.4 x 16 inches
54.4 x 40.6 cm
A magnificent map featuring a carte-a-figures border with allegorical representations of the sun, the moon, the five known planets, the four elements, and the four seasons. Along the bottom are vignettes showing the seven wonders of the world: the Hanging Gardens of Babylon; the Colossus straddling the harbor at Rhodes; the Pyramids; the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus in Bodrum, Turkey; the Temple of Diana; the Statue of Jupiter; and the lighthouse at Alexandria. Josua van Ende engraved this map, reducing it from Blaeu's 1605 wall map for inclusion in atlases.
Petrus Plancius' world map of 1592 was the main source of geographical information. The map is shown on Mercator's projection with a massive Southern Continent attached to New Guinea, with the coastal names of Beach and Psittacorum regio noted from Marco Polo's travel memoirs. North America has the westward bulge characteristic of the time, with the Strait of Anian noted. Korea is shown as an island, and Japan is in a kite-like shape. The map itself is richly decorated with cartouches, sea battles, monsters, and compass roses. Fifth state with Tierra del Fuego shown as an island and the coastline between Tierra del Fuego and the Southern continent added back. French text on verso, published between 1643-50.
References: Goss (Blaeu) #1; Shirley #255; Van der Krogt (Vol. II) #00001:2A.
Condition: A
A nice impression with a few printer's creases and a tiny hole on the centerfold near the southern continent that has been archivally repaired on verso. Remnants of hinge tape on verso.