Click Here. Double your traffic. Get Vendio Gallery – Now FREE!
Le Royaume d’Irlande divisé en ses Quatre Provinces, subdivisé en Shireries ou Comtés.
Description: Stricking and hightly very large detailed copper engraved oversize chart of Ireland. Printed on two joined sheets, as issued. Map includes a lot of topographical details as well as fortified cities, villages, roads, rivers, mountains, lakes, etc. Map is flanked with a large decorative title cartouche embellished with two figures, flags, a lion and a liocorn handing armorial. Alternative french title to the top “Le Royaume d’Irlande divisé en ses Quatre Provinces, qui font la Lagenie, L’Ultonie, Connacia, et Momonie, subdivisée en Shireries ou Comtéz…”. Inset with a chart entitled “Les Cotes Maritimes d’Angleterre, d’Ecosse, d’Irlande, de Hollande, et d’une partie de France”.
Date: 1692 ( un dated )
Source: Alexis Hubert Jaillot Atlas Nouveau Contenant Toutes les Parties du Monde, ou Sont exactement Remarques Les Empires, Monarchies, Royaumes, Estats Amsterdam 1694.
Dimension: Paper size approx.: cm 65,7 x 95,2
Condition: Very strong and dark impression on very strong paper. Paper with chains and wiremarks. Original colors to the outlines. Wide margins. Lateral margin remargined and handwritten. Paper with foxing. Small foxing and browning. Conditions are as you can see in the image.
Cartographer: Alexis Hubert Jaillot (c. 1632- 1712) followed Nicholas Sanson (1600 – 1667) and his descendents in ushering in the great age of French Cartography in the late 17th and 18th century. The publishing center of the cartographic world gradually transitioned from Amsterdam to Paris following the disastrous inferno that destroyed the preeminent Blaeu firm in 1672. Hubert Jaillot’s was born in Franche-Comte and trained as a sculptor. When he married the daughter of the enlumineur de ala Reine, Nicholas Berey, he found himself positioned to inherit a lucrative map and print publishing firm. When Nicholas Sanson, the premier French cartographer of the day, died Jaillot negotiated with his heirs to republish much of Sanson’s work. Though not a cartographer himself, Jaillot’s access to the Sanson plates enabled him to publish numerous maps and atlases with only slight modifications and updates to the originals. As a sculptor and an artist, Jaillot’s maps were particularly admired for their elaborate and meaningful allegorical title cartouches and other decorative elements. Jaillot used his allegorical cartouche work to extol the virtues of the Sun King Louis IV, and his military and political triumphs. These earned him the patronage of the French crown who used his maps in the tutoring of the young Dauphin. In 1686 he was awarded the title of Geographe du Roi< and with it significant prestige and the coveted yearly stipend of 600 Livres. Jaillot was one of the last of a generation of French map makers to acquire this title. Louis XV, after taking the throne, replaced the position with the more prestigious and singular title of Premier Geographe du Roi. Jaillot died in Paris in 1712. His most important work was his 1693 Le Neptune Francois.
Cartographer: Nicholas Sanson (1600 – 1667) and his descendents were important French cartographer’s active through the 17th century. Sanson started his career as a historian where, it is said, he turned to cartography as a way to illustrate his historical studies. In the course of his research some of his fine maps came to the attention of King Louis XIII who, admiring the quality of his work, appointed Sanson “Geographe Ordinaire du Roi”. Sanson’s duties in this coved position included advising the King on matters of Geography and compiling the royal cartographic archive. Sanson’s corpus of some three hundred maps initiated the golden age of French Cartography. He is most admired for his construction of the magnificent atlas Cartes Generales de Toutes les Parties du Monde. Sanson’s maps of , Amerique Septentrionale (1650) and La Canada ou Nouvelle France (1656) are exceptionally notable for their important contributions to the cartographic perceptions of the New World. Both maps utilize the discoveries of important French missionaries to the interior and are among the first published maps to show the Great Lakes in recognizable form. Sanson was also an active proponent of the Insular California theory, wherein it was speculated that California was an island rather than an peninsula. After his death, Sanson’s cartographic work was carried on by his sons, Guillaume (? – 1703) and Adrien Sanson (? – 1708), as well as by A. H. Jaillot and Pierre Duval, with whom the partnered.
View My Feedback
View My Other Items For Sale
Visit my Store
All of the maps we sell are ORIGINALS. We guarantee all of our maps to be authentic. We do our best to describe the condition of our maps as accurately as possible. Due to the age and type of paper, some imperfections are to be expected. Please examine the images provided carefully, and if you have please ask and we will be happy to help.
A Certification of Authenticity ( COA ) can be issued on request
I will send you all your item by Registered and Insured Airmal or by TNT/DHL with covering Insurance
If you buy more than one item you have to pay just one only shipping cost
Any map purchased from us may be returend for any reason for a full refund.
About old times rare antiquarian bookS & maps sellers
Our Firm was founded in 1983 and we are specialized on antiquarian works on paper concerning Antique Rare Maps, Atlases and Travel Books of all the World.
Our Firm adheres to the Codes of Ethics outlined by the Italian Antiquarian Booksellers Association ( ALAI ) and International League of Antiquarian Booksellers ( ILAB ).
All items sold by OLD TIMES are genuine and a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) will be happily supplied on request.
Many Thanks
Cesare Giannelli
OLD TIMES
RARE ANTIQUARIAN BOOKS & MAPS SELLERS
Via Cortonese, 70
06124 – Perugia
Italy
Phone/Fax: 0039 – 075 – 505 20 18
http://www.oldtimesrarebooks.com
On Aug-31-09 at 22:04:14 PDT, seller added the following information:
100.00
0.00