Planisphere representant toute l'etendue du monde dans l'ordre qu'on a suivi dans ce livre.

World map, in circular format with the North Pole at the center. Title translates to: Planisphere representing the entire expanse of the world in the order we have followed in this book. Shows continents, countries, bodies of water, drainage, coastlines and islands. Includes latitudinal and longitud...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elwe, Jan Barend
Format: Map
Language:unknown
Published: Elwe, Jan Barend 1792
Subjects:
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Summary:World map, in circular format with the North Pole at the center. Title translates to: Planisphere representing the entire expanse of the world in the order we have followed in this book. Shows continents, countries, bodies of water, drainage, coastlines and islands. Includes latitudinal and longitudinal lines. Map sits of the shoulders of Atlas, who appears within his own scenery. Hand-colored engraving. Map is 43 x 27 cm, on sheet 58 x 34 cm. Atlas der wereld, by Jan Barend Elwe; published in Amsterdam, 1792. Title translates to: Atlas of the world. Bound in contemporary half-calf over marbled paper boards. With gilt ornamentation and title on spine. Collation - Folio: 22 pages, 40 leaves of plates. Comprised of letterpress text, an engraved title page, 37 maps, one timeline and one table of distances for Europe. Geographic coverage includes Europe, Russia, the Middle East, the Holy Land, East and Southeast Asia, Africa, North America and South America. Maps show continents, countries, regions, cities, churches, railways, topography, deserts, bodies of water, drainage, coastlines, islands and routes of exploration. With pictorial vignettes of figures, fauna and flora. This historical atlas in which Elwe re-issued maps by De L’Isle, Ottens, Jaillot, and other 17th-century cartographers continued the 17th-century Franco-Dutch mapmaking tradition long after it had been eclipsed by the 18th-century English mapmakers. The work is an intriguing bookend on a cartographic tradition - “the golden age of cartography” - that shaped much of the modern world.