“The navigator’s vade mecum for the Eastern seas” – one of the most influential English travel books of the sixteenth century

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John Huighen van Linschoten his Discours of Voyages unto ye Easte & West Indies. Devided into Foure Bookes.

LINSCHOTEN, Jan Huygen van.
London,
John Wolfe,
1598.
Four parts in one volume. Folio (285 by 180mm). Mostly black letter, double column. [6] leaves, blank, engraved general title-page by William Rogers (Johnson, p.2, Rogers no.3), dedication, 'To the Reader', pages numbered 1-197 'The First Booke', [1] leaf sectional vignette title-page with engraved map of the Congo, pages numbered [197]- 259 (ie 295) 'The Second Booke', [1] leaf sectional vignette title-page with engraved double- hemisphere map of the world, Shirley 182, pages numbered 307- 447 'The Thirde Booke', [1] leaf sectional vignette title- page with engraved map of Spain, pages numbered [451]-462 'The Fourth Booke'; double-page engraved folding map of the world 'Typus Orbis Terrarum' (Shirley 169), 8 large double-page folding maps, and 3 folding views of St. Helena and Ascension, 4 woodcut maps in text, woodcut initials, factotums and head-piece ornaments; full contemporary English calf, each cover ruled in blind with central gilt arabesque, the spine in seven compartments, citron morocco lettering-piece in one, the others decorated with a gilt ingot and pincer tool, upper hinge just starting at the head of the spine, endpapers renewed at early date.

Collation: blank, Engraved title, A(4), B-I(6), K-Q(6), R(8), *s(2), S-U(6), X-Z(6), Aa(6), Bb-Cc(4), Dd-(4), Ii(6), Kk-Pp(6), Qq(7).
285 by 180mm. (11.25 by 7 inches).
23384

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notes:

notes:

The very rare English edition of Linschoten's 'Itinerario', first published in Dutch in 1595-1596, and translated from the Dutch by William Phillip.

Linschoten's was the first printed work to include precise sailing instructions for the East Indies. Its exposition of a route to the south of Sumatra through the Sunda Strait allowed Dutch and, later, English merchants to circumvent the Portuguese stranglehold on passage, and, therefore, trade, to the East through t...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Alden and Landis, 598:57; Borba de Moraes, I:417; Church, 321; ESTC, S111823; Hill, 182; Howgego, L131, G40; Luborsky and Ingram, 509; Parker, 159-161; Sabin, 41374; Schilder, 195-228; Shirley [World], nos. 167 and 216; Shirley [Atlases], G.Lin 2a; Streeter Sale, 1:31; Worms, 1705; Worms and Baynton-Williams.

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance: 1. Large seventeenth century engraved armorial bookplate with motto in Latin and English: "Ostendo non ostento" - "In things transitory resteth no glory", the Isham family, of Lamport Hall, probably Sir John Isham (1582-1651), 1st Baronet of Lamport, advanced by Charles I on the 30th May 1627. A scion of the family, Captain Henry Isham (c1628-1675) emigrated to America in 1656, where he settled in Henrico County, Virginia, and became the ancestor of, amongst others, President Thomas Jefferson; 2. With Bernard Quaritch, 1924.