Publication Date: 1767
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map First Edition
Good. Some reinstated areas of marginal loss, with some ms. replacement of border in upper corners. Else very good. Size 17.5 x 23.25 Inches. This is William Herbert's rare 1767 chart illustrating Madagascar's most important northeast harbors: Ambodifotatra on Île Sainte-Marie, and Antongil Bay. Shortly before this chart was drawn, Île Sainte-Marie, was the site of the most famous and successful pirate utopia, and where Captain James Kidd's legendary galleon, the Adventure was scuttled. Historical Context By the time this chart was produced, the European navies had successfully blunted Indian Ocean piracy. Nonetheless, Madagascar's northeast harbors remained essential to mariners as watering places, resupply depots, and refuges against inclement weather. Although Madagascar was ruled by Merina Dynasty, that kingdom dominated the interior, allowing European powers free reign to maintain a continual if light coastal presence. After the pirates were cleared out in 1719, naval powers kept a keen watch on the area to deny its use to opposing powers, or future pirates. Île Sainte-Marie / Nosy Boraha The left chart depicts the harbor of Île Sainte-Marie, known in Malagasy as Nosy Boraha. Both the French and English made several floundering attempts at settling the island in the 1640s. By the 1690s, Île Sainte-Marie became an infamous pirate utopia, a haven for British, French, and American pirates preying on the Indian Ocean trade and fleeing Caribbean pirate hunters. The Île Sainte-Marie chart is centered on the island of Ilot Madame on the outskirts of Sainte-Marie's main town of Ambodifotatra. That island, at the mouth of the harbor, was home to a boisterous pirate town, here illustrated pictorially. The site is today the home of the Ilot Madame Museum of Pirate History.) The unnamed island in the middle of the bay is the île aux Forbans, haven of the age's greatest pirates: Adam Baldridge, William Kidd, Robert Culliford, Oliver Levasseur, Henry Every, Abraham Samuel, and Thomas Tew, among others. Antongil Bay The right-hand chart focuses on Antongil Bay, the largest inlet along the coast of the main island of Madagascar, north of Île Sainte-Marie. Herbert's source for this chart is not known, but it resembles contemporaneous charts by Bellin and other French chart makers. Antongil Bay's size and access to inland waterways made it an important refuge for both pirates and merchant mariners. The village at the northern tip of the bay is the modern-day town of Maroantsetra. Which Winchelsea ? A key of 'References' marks the town on Ilot Madame, a cattle market, watering place on the southeastern shore, and various navigational features. Some 'References' specifically refer to the Winchelsea . It is uncertain which particular Winchelsea this is. It has been speculated to be HMS Winchelsea , commanded in the 1760s by Captain Thomas Howe (1730 - 1771). Of this claim, we are skeptical. In 1759, HMS Winchelsea transported chartmaker Alexander Dalrymple from India to Malacca, and his 1775 chart (also derived from the 1746 Brohier manuscript) does not include the references to Winchelsea . It is unlikely that such would have been excised, should they have any relevance to his own cartographic work. It is more likely that the map refers to British East Indiaman Winchelsea , which plied the Indian Ocean from 1742 until its 1749 shipwreck near Fort St. David. It is there that the source chart's author, John Brohier, surfaces as a mariner in January 1750. John Brohier The Île Sainte-Marie chart is derived from a 1746 manuscript by John Brohier. Brohier has long been an elusive figure. It is likely he was an engineer or apprentice on the East Indianman Winchelsea , and it is on that ship's visit to Madagascar that he drew the now lost manuscript - source for the present Herbert charts. When the Winchelsea shipwrecked in 1749 near Fort St. David, Brohier survived and sought refuge. He is recorded in East India Company dispatches as see.