“the great prose epic of the Elizabethan period” with both the Wright-Molyneux world map and the rare suppressed ‘Voyage to Cadiz’ from the library of the Earls of Macclesfield.

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The Principall Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation,

Made by Sea or Over-Land, to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth...

HAKLUYT, Richard, and WRIGHT, Edward.
Imprinted at London,
by George Bishop; Ralph Newberie and Robert Barker,
Anno 1599–1600.
Three volumes bound in two, folio, second edition, second issue, including the original printing of the suppressed 'Voyage to Cadiz' (1598, state II), [24], 619pp.; [16], 312pp. 204pp.; [16], 868pp.; [12], 807pp., world map by Edward Wright in the second state of two, with the additional cartouche mentioning Francis Drake's voyage, the map re-mounted on old paper guards, and with a small area of restoration at one fold, finely bound in eighteenth century English calf, spines in six compartments separated by raised bands, richly gilt, red and green morocco lettering pieces, gilt, lettering piece to the second volume missing and skilfully reinstated in facsimile, split at joints, repaired.
Map dimensions: 630 by 430mm. (24.75 by 17 inches).
1314

To scale:

notes:

notes:

The Wright-Molyneux Map is the first English map on Mercator's projection, it is the first map to name Lake Ontario, and one of the first maps to use the name "Virginia". Richard Hakluyt's 'Principall Navigations' is first collection of English voyages, published at the height of Elizabethan maritime prestige and "the great prose epic of the Elizabethan period".

The Wright-Molyneux Map
Gerard Mercator (1512-1594) revolutionized cartography with his developme...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Borba De Moraes, pp. 391–92; Church 322; Grolier English 100, 14; Hill 743; JCB (3) I:360–61; LOC European Americana 598/42; Penrose, Boies, 'Travel and Discovery in the Renaissance 1420–1620', p. 318; Pforzheimer 443; Printing and the Mind of Man 105; Quinn, p. 490; Sabin 29596, 29597, 29598, 29599; STC 12626; cf. Shirley 221.

Known examples of the Wright-Molyneux map

British Library, London (3 copies); Bodleian Library, Oxford; Chatsworth House, Derbyshire; Eton College Library, Windsor; Huntington, San Marino (2 copies); Newberry Library, Chicago; Lilly Library Bloomington; Clements Library, Ann Arbor; Princeton (2 copies); New York Public Library, New York; Philadelphia Public Library, Philadelphia; Naval War College, Newport; JCB Library, Providence; University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Mitchell Library, Sydney.

provenance:

provenance:

Nineteenth-century North Library bookplate of the Earls of Macclesfield, Shirburn Castle, Oxfordshire, on the front paste-down.