Catalog Archive
Auction 139, Lot 143

A Map of Extreme Importance in the Cartographic Evolution of North America

"Nova Anglia, Novum Belgium et Virginia", Gerritsz/De Laet

Subject: Colonial United States

Period: 1630 (circa)

Publication: Nieuwe Wereldt ofte Beschrijvinghe van West-Indien…

Color: Black & White

Size:
14 x 11 inches
35.6 x 27.9 cm
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This scarce map places the Dutch settlements in their geographic context just five years after the founding of New Amsterdam; being the first printed map to use the names Manbattes (Manhattan), N. Amsterdam (New York), and Massachusets (Massachusetts). It is also the earliest acquirable map with an insular Manhattan, and to show any of the Great Lakes (Grand Lac). The depiction of the coastal area between Chesapeake Bay and Cape Cod is by far the most accurate of the period. The map also includes an early and well-detailed inset of Bermuda. Decorated with a strapwork title cartouche and two compass roses.

The map is the work of Hessel Gerritsz, one of the truly important Dutch cartographers of the 17th century. Gerritsz was cartographer to the Dutch East India Company and Johannes de Laet was the director of the Dutch West India Company. De Laet was a principal player in the founding of New Netherland and owned a large tract of land in the area of Albany. Both had access to surveys, documentation and information from Dutch colonists, which provided the basis for this fine early map.

References: Augustyn & Cohen pp. 26-7; Burden #231; McCorkle #630.1; Schwartz/Ehrenberg, pl. 57, p. 103.

Condition: B+

Watermarked paper with light toning, faint offsetting, and a few faint spots.

Estimate: $5,000 - $7,000

Sold for: $3,750

Closed on 2/15/2012

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