Subject: Western Hemisphere - America
Period: 1663 (circa)
Publication: Le Grand Atlas
Color: Hand Color
Size:
21.7 x 16.1 inches
55.1 x 40.9 cm
This stunning carte-a-figures map is a superb example of the fine art of decorative cartography and a seventeenth-century European view of the New World. The coastal outlines generally follow Ortelius and Wytfliet with nomenclature from a variety of explorers and colonists. Panels at sides, each with five portraits of the native inhabitants, were taken from John White (Virginia), Hans Staden (Brazil) and other early explorer's accounts. Across the top are nine town plans including Havana, St. Domingo, Cartegena, Mexico City, Cusco, Potosi, I. la Mocha in Chile, Rio de Janeiro and Olinda in Brazil. This is one of the few maps of the Americas by this famous Dutch cartographer. The map itself is similar to Blaeu's wall map of 1608 with the additional discoveries by Henry Hudson in North America, and Tierra del Fuego with Le Maire Strait. This is the fifth state of the plate with some of the decorative elements retouched. French text on verso, published between 1634-35.
See also lot 789 for Philip Burden's The Mapping of North America - A List of Printed Maps 1511-1670 that describes this map.
References: Burden #189; Goss (Blaeu) p. 156; Tooley (Amer) p. 297; Van der Krogt (Vol. II) #9000:2.
Condition: B+
A dark impression on a bright sheet with light printer's ink residue, a few spots of foxing along the centerfold and edges of the sheet, and dampstains along the top edge of the sheet.