Subject: Western Hemisphere - America
Period: 1641 (dated)
Publication: Novus Atlas
Color: Hand Color
Size:
19.7 x 14.8 inches
50 x 37.6 cm
This beautiful and popular map of the Americas was emulated by numerous cartographers and went through various editions. Originally issued by Jodocus Hondius II in 1618 with carte-a-figures borders, it was derived from two earlier maps by Blaeu. North America retains the peninsular California, and the East Coast is beginning to take shape, although it still lacks detail in the mid-Atlantic region. In the Southwest, the famous seven cities of Cibola appear on the banks of a large lake. In South America, there is a large inland sea on the equator and two engraved scenes, one detailing a cannibalistic feast. Two stylized insets of the polar regions are enclosed in strapwork cartouches; the North Pole depicts Frobisher's theory of the Northwest Passage, and the South Pole shows the long-held notion of the mythical southern continent. The map is richly ornamented with a strapwork title cartouche, fleets of ships, and sea monsters.
Shortly after Jodocus Hondius' death in 1629 the plate passed into the hands of his brother, Henricus. The borders were removed to facilitate the smaller atlas. This is the fourth state with the imprint of Ioannes Ianssonius below the cartouche. German text on verso, published between 1644-58.
References: Burden #192; Goss #27; cf. Tooley (America) plt. 172; Van der Krogt (Vol. I) #9000:1D.3.
Condition: B
A crisp impression on a toned sheet with light foxing, an archivally repaired centerfold separation that enters 1" into image at bottom, and dampstains confined to the blank margins. There are remnants of non-archival tape along the top edge of the sheet on verso, well away from the image.