Auction details
12:00 PM PT - Nov 6th, 2008
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Title: Tabula nouarum insularum, quas diuersis respectibus Occidentales & Indianas uocant
Author: Münster, Sebastian Description: Woodcut map. 25.2x33.8 cm. (10x13¼").One of the most influential early maps of the Americas, first issued as part of a series of modern, up to date maps in Münster's 1540 edition of Ptolemy's Geography, and included by him in his Cosmographia Universalis, first published in 1544. Although it was not the first map to use "America" as a designation for the New World, it was the appearance of the name in the Cosmographia, an immensely popular work which went into some forty editions over the next one hundred years, that cemented the usage for all time. Burden calls this continental map of America (as opposed to just portions) "the earliest of any note." Burden goes on to describe its various features in some detail: "The Portuguese flag is shown flying over the South Atlantic and the Spanish one over her possessions in the Caribbean. The Straits of Magellan are named again, and Mare pacificum appears for the first time on a printed map. Magellan's ship Victoria, the only survivor of five vessels, appears in the middle of this ocean. Marco Polo's influence can be seen with Zipangri (Japan) appearing three years before the earliest known contact with Europeans, and also his Archipelagus 7448 insularu. The Yucatan is still shown as an island and the lake at Temistitan is depicted emptying into the Gulf of Mexico. North America is not shown as accurately as the southern half of the continent, it had to a large extent been neglected so far by explorers. When Giovanni de Verrazzano, in the service of Francis I of France, passed by the Outer Banks of the Carolinas in 1524 he mistook Pamlico and Albemarle Sounds for the `Oriental Sea' that led to Cathay and the rich Spice Islands. Here Münster perpetuates this error and through the success of this book provided a huge impetus to the exploration of the region. The only placenames appearing here are C. Britonum, marking England's early explorations, Corterati, probably Newfoundland after the Corte Reals, and Terra forida. Francisca is named in honor of Francis I." The present copy of the map is Burden's state 5, from the 1550 Latin edition of Cosmographia, "Die Nüw/ Welt" moved lower down, replaced by "Nouus orbis," with the phrase "Insula Atlantica quam uo-/ cant Brasilii & Americam" in South America, Temistitan named in Mexico, "ORBIS. QUI INSULAS HABET" the second line on the verso. An important and captivating map. Burden 12. Heading: zzgPlace Published: Basel, Switzerland Publisher: Date Published: 1540-[1550] Condition reportNeat verso repair along centerfold, a few additional repairs in lower margin, upper margin trimmed affecting the tops of the letters in the title, small dark spot off the coast of Africa; very good.
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