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[Map and views illustrating Sir Francis Drake's West Indian voyage, 1585-6].

[Map and views illustrating Sir Francis Drake's West Indian voyage, 1585-6].

description

Summary

The first engraving is a map of Drake's voyage [showing Europe, western Africa, northern South America, and eastern North America]; the four other engravings consist of bird's-eye battle plan views of the cities of Santiago, Santo Domingo, Cartagena, and St. Augustine, Florida.
4 bird's-eye views and 1 map.
Relief shown pictorially on bird's-eye views.
Voyage map in English; city maps in Latin.
Title supplied by cataloger.
Map and views created to illustrate Bigges' and Croftes' Summarie and true discourse of Sir Frances Drake's West Indian voyage, 1589.
Provenance: Gift of Jay I. Kislak Foundation.
Orientation varies.
Kraus, H.P. Sir Francis Drake, p. 121-7
Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as a raster image.
Includes hand col. ill.
Select features alphabetically indexed on bird's-eye views, views not accompanied by index key.
"The verso of each sheet is numbered in ink in an identical early hand "1 [through] 5" in the following sequence: 1. 'Voyadge', 2. S. Domingo, 3. Cartagena, 4. S. Augustine, 5. Santiago."--Auction catalog.
All sheets vertically fold-lined at center.
Kislak accession no. 1991.322.01.0003
Kislak accession no. 1991.322.02.0003
Kislak accession no. 1991.322.03.0003
Kislak accession no. 1991.322.04.0003
Kislak accession no. 1991.322.05.0003

Pre - 1600s maps, atlases and manuscripts

Ancient Maps from the Library of Congress. 13th -18th Century Maps.

The geography discoveries and the new printing techniques resulted in maps that can be cheaply produced. Since a globe remains the only accurate way of representing the spherical earth, and any flat representation resulted in distorted projection. In 1569, Mercator published a map of the world specifically intended as an aid to navigation. It used a projection now known by Mercator's name, though it has been used by few others before him, based on a system of latitude and longitude that dated back to Hipparchus. Mercator's projection greatly enlarged territories as they recede from the equator. The distortion of Mercator's projection is a benefit to navigators since Mercator achieves a matching scale for longitude and latitude in every section of the map. A compass course can be plotted at the same angle on any part of Mercator's map. As a result marine charts still use this projection. By the time of his death in 1595, Mercator has either published or prepared large engraved maps, designed for binding into volume form, of France, Germany, Italy, the Balkans, and the British Isles. Mercator's son issues the entire series under the title "Atlas": "Atlas sive Cosmographicae Meditationes." The name becomes the word for a volume of maps.

date_range

Date

01/01/1589
person

Contributors

Boazio, Baptista.
Bigges, Walter, -1586.
Croftes, Lieutenant.
Jay I. Kislak Collection (Library of Congress)
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

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