French manuscript chart of Java – the heart of the Dutch empire

£32,500

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Partie De L'Isle De Java - Suite De L'Isle De Iava.

[ANONYMOUS]
[Probably Paris,
Dépôt des cartes et plans de la Marine,
c1733-1739].
Manuscript chart, pen and black ink and colour wash, on two separate sheets of paper watermarked with Strasburg Lily within a shield, initials "VDL" beneath and countermark "IV" (closest to Churchill 405, dated to 1733, from the mill of Pieter van der Ley, son of Gerrit Pieters van der Ley who worked De Wever - the Weaver - and De Bonsem - the Polecat - mills at Koog aan de Zaan, Holland, from 1674 onwards).
530 by 1500mm. (20.75 by 59 inches), overall
17524

To scale:

notes:

notes:

The conquest of Jakarta by the Dutch, who immediately renamed the port Batavia, in 1619, gave the VOC its Asian headquarters, from which it commanded a vast trading empire, eventually extending from southern Africa to Japan, that lasted for nearly two hundred years. By the end of the 1730s, the British and French had begun to flex their seafaring muscles in the area, and were publishing their own maps. This large-scale and detailed French chart of Java is clear evidence of ...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Simpson, 'Java Emerging Unfolding Cartographic Views', The National Library Magazine, December 2010.

provenance:

provenance: