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  • 1660 / 1702 van Meurs / Vander Aa Map of the World

    Publication Date: 1702

    Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ESA ILAB

    Seller rating 4 out of 5 stars 4-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    Map

    US$ 1,960.00

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    Excellent. Visible folds, else fine. Size 10 x 13.75 Inches. This elegant double-hemisphere map of the world, engraved in 1660 by Jacob van Meurs, encapsulates the European understanding of the world during the second part of the 17th century. It is notable as well for its stately decorative imagery. A Closer Look The geographical details reflect the knowledge of the mid-17th century. In North America, California is presented as an island, and the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River do not appear. Gaps in the coastlines of Hudson Bay and beyond in the Canadian Arctic offer tantalizing possibilities of a Northwest Passage. The phantom island of Frisland appears in the North Atlantic. North of Europe and Asia, Spitzbergen and a partial Nova Zembla appear, and little seems to impede a Northeast Passage. Korea appears as a peninsula; Japan is incompletely presented, with no defined northern coastline and no Ieso/Hokkaido present. These details are all consistent with Meurs' predominant source for this map, Arnold Colom's 1655 Nova Delineatio Totius Orbis Terrarum . The southern hemisphere does not derive from Colom's map, being updated to reflect the discoveries of Abel Tasman (c. 1603 - 1661), including western Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. Tasman's discoveries, as evident here, were not improved upon until Captain James Cook's 1768-71 voyage. Meurs also appears to be benefiting from the work of Frederick De Wit: either from De Wit's edit of the Colom (as described by Rodney Shirley with respect to the 1655 map, #395 in The Mapping of the World ) or De Wit's own 1660 Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Tabula . Both maps include Tasman's geography, and his treatment of the New Zealand coastline is distinctive enough to rule out other possible sources. The Decorative Engraving The very distinctive figures appearing around the hemispheres are derived from the 1655 Colom map. They are atypically simple: six statuesque figures, each alone in its realm. The corner figures represent the elements of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. The two central figures at the top and bottom are Apollo and Diana, representing Day and Night, respectively. Publication History and Census This map was engraved by Jacob van Meurs in 1660 for inclusion in Johann Gottfried's Historische Chronyck . When the book was republished in 1698 by Vander Aa as Historische Kronyck , it was altered to replace Meurs' imprint with Vander Aa's; the cartouche was also changed to read Niewe Werelt Caart . That second state was changed once again for the 1702 printing of Historische Kronyck , this third state's (present example) cartouche reading Nouveau Carte du Monde . The separate map appears only a handful of times in OCLC, but comes to market from time to time. Historische Kronyck is well represented in institutional collections. References: OCLC 994031331. Shirley, R. The Mapping of the World #417.