A sumptuously presented ‘Zee-fackel’ from the library of F.C. Koch
De Nieuwe Groote Lichtende Zee-Fackel,
Behelsende 't Eerste, 't Tweede, 't Darde, 't Vierde, Vijfde of 't Laetste Deel … beschruvinge, van alle bekende Haavens … door J. van Loon, en C.J. Vooght.
t'Amsterdam,
Gedruckt by Johannes van Keulen, Boeck en Zee-Kaart-Verkooper, aen de Oost-zyde van de Nieuwe-Brugh, in de Gekroonde Lootsman,
[1682]–1689.
Folio (555 by 340mm), five parts in one volume, Dutch text, printed general title, dated 1689, engraved allegorical titles (after Johannes van Luyken) in Parts I, II, and V, second allegorical title tipped-in to size at foot, dedication and address to reader, and 137 double-page engraved mapsheets in fine contemporary hand-colour, several heightened with gold, numerous woodcut coastal profiles and smaller detail charts in the text also hand-coloured, small hole in one chart, occasional offsetting or slight browning, original publisher's vellum, panelled in gilt with foliate roll-tooled border, corner pieces, central gilt foliate device incorporating armillary sphere, gilt edges.
1023
notes:
Johannes van Keulen established himself in Amsterdam in 1678 and, in 1680, he obtained a privilege from the States General of Holland and West Friesl and allowing him to print and publish maritime atlases and shipping guides. This privilege, which protected against the illegal copying of printed material, was especially important for the cartographer's atlases, produced with extensive initial costs. Van Keulen named his firm "In de Gekroonde Lootsman" ("In the Crowned Pilot...
bibliography:
Koeman, Keu 34B, 58B, 87C, 109C, 123C; Papenfuse, Edward C. and Joseph M. Coale III, The Maryland State Archives Atlas of Historical Maps of Maryland 1608–1908, Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003, p. 25.
provenance:
Bookplate of F.C. Koch, a famous Dutch book collector and historian whose library was sold at auction by Hauswedell and Nolte in Hamburg in 1974.