Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00028 Print Map Item-ID: i11401369 BIB-ID: 1172479 Show moreMain Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00028 Print Map Item-ID: i11401369 BIB-ID: 1172479 Show less
Relief shown pictorially. Covers old port city of al-Mukā on the Red Sea, and a major city under the Ottoman Empire in the 18th century. Shows... Show moreRelief shown pictorially. Covers old port city of al-Mukā on the Red Sea, and a major city under the Ottoman Empire in the 18th century. Shows coastlines, seaport, forts, merchants quarters, markets, and settlements. Includes list of major civic buildings. "Tome III, No. 20." LC copy annotated in pencil suggests source "S. Bellin. Le Petit Atlas Maritime, 1764." Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.01184 Print Map Item-ID: i11404395 BIB-ID: 1172782 Show less
Captions in French on verso: Natolie, ov Petite Asie ; Egypte ; Le port de Carthage, ov Thvnis. Relief shown pictorially. North oriented to left. Main... Show moreCaptions in French on verso: Natolie, ov Petite Asie ; Egypte ; Le port de Carthage, ov Thvnis. Relief shown pictorially. North oriented to left. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00933 Print Map Item-ID: i11402465 BIB-ID: 1172589 Show less
Relief shown pictorially Covers: 51°-62°. 21°-33°N. Pictorial presentation of the towns and mountains. Note the shape of pyramids as they were... Show moreRelief shown pictorially Covers: 51°-62°. 21°-33°N. Pictorial presentation of the towns and mountains. Note the shape of pyramids as they were concieved at that time. Scale: Milliaria Germanica [low r. h. supported by 3 cherubs]. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00899 Print Map Item-ID: i11402313 BIB-ID: 1172574 Show less
Relief shown pictorially. From his "Cosmographia." Shows the Nile River delta and northwestern portion of the Sinai Peninsula. Printed from woodcut. Pi... Show moreRelief shown pictorially. From his "Cosmographia." Shows the Nile River delta and northwestern portion of the Sinai Peninsula. Printed from woodcut. Pictorial presentation of the river Nile in Egypt. Sinai is shown with massive mountain ranges. Towns depicted with castles. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00884 Print Map Item-ID: i11402246 BIB-ID: 1172567 From the collection of Louis Karpinski. Show less
خريطة انجليزية مهمة للجزيرة العربية،وهي النسخة الانجليزية المحدثة للخريطة التي رسمها جيكوب فان دير سنة 1740م،مع اضافة بعض التعديلات،ارخت هذة... Show moreخريطة انجليزية مهمة للجزيرة العربية،وهي النسخة الانجليزية المحدثة للخريطة التي رسمها جيكوب فان دير سنة 1740م،مع اضافة بعض التعديلات،ارخت هذة الخريطة ونشرت سنة 1745م،بواسطة جون جرين(John Green )ونوقشت بواسطة جورج تشايلد (George Child)بلندن،وتوجد مجموعة من الملاحظات في اسفل يمين الخريطة للميزات الطبيعية على الخريطة وتشير الخطوط تحت اسماء الاماكن لخطوط العرض والطول والخطوط الملاحية لبعض الملاحين الماهرين،ويذكر فيها اسم البحر الاحمر والخليج،وتتميز الخريطة بانها اكثر تفصيلاً من الخريطة الاساسية،وتقسم المنطقة العربية لعدة مناطق لكل منطقة لون يميزها.ابعاد الخريطة26x21. G. Child, sculpt. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00896 Print Map Item-ID: i11402295 BIB-ID: 1525395 Show less
خريطة للجزيرة العربية وخليج فارس قام برسمها ونشرها رسام الخرايط جاك نيكولاس ونشرت بطلب من فردريك فيليبو وزير خارجية الملك لويس الخامس عشر، وتركز... Show moreخريطة للجزيرة العربية وخليج فارس قام برسمها ونشرها رسام الخرايط جاك نيكولاس ونشرت بطلب من فردريك فيليبو وزير خارجية الملك لويس الخامس عشر، وتركز الخريطة على السواحل البحرية ولا توفر معلومات عن داخل شبه الجزيرة العربية، كما تظهر شواطيء اللولو بالقرب من البحرين، وتشير الخريطة لقطر باسم "كاتارا"، والخريطة غير مرسومة بدقة، وتتناول الخريطة منطقة البحر الاحمر من خلال بعض التفاصيل، والخريطة قليلة التفاصيل وملونه بالالوان القديمة. tirée de la Carte Françoise de l'Océan Oriental ; publiée par Ordre de MGR. le Comte De Maurepas en 1740. Shows major seaports and town on the Red sea, Horn of Africa, Arabian Sea, and Persian Gulf. Prime meridian: Ferro. From Histoire générale des voyages, par M. De La Harpe ; Tome 1 in 4", No. 13 ; Tome 1 in 8", Page 144. "Tome I. in 40, no. 13 ; Tome 1er in 80, Page 144"--In lower margin. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00890 Print Map Item-ID: i23187591 BIB-ID: 1729903 Show less
This fine woodcut map of Sumatra is the first separate map of an Indonesian island to be based on actual empirical data. It is based on the Ramusio... Show moreThis fine woodcut map of Sumatra is the first separate map of an Indonesian island to be based on actual empirical data. It is based on the Ramusio's 'Raccolta di Navigationi et Viaggi'. In the book was an account of the voyage of the Parmentier Brothers, Frenchmen who ran the Portuguese blockade of the East Indies and landed on the west Sumatran coast. Both brothers died of fever and their crew did not acquire a great deal of wealth, which dissuaded the French from sending further expeditions. Prior to Ramusio's map, Sumatra had been confused with Sri Lanka and maps of the island contained conjectural geography based primarily on Marco Polo. The map is oriented with south at the top and the shape of the island and many of its features are quite accurately portrayed. However, there is no attempt to show any part of the Malay Peninsula or Java, although several of the surrounding small islands, such as Bancha (Banca) are shown. Charming scenes in the interior show vegetation, animals, and native figures at work and play, and there are numerous ships and creatures in the sea. First published in Giovani Battista Ramusio's Delle navigatione et viaggi. Relief shown pictorially. Oriented with north to the bottom. Page numbers on top margin of sheet: 433, 434. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00231 Print Map Item-ID: i11400493 BIB-ID: 1843418 Show less
This hand-colored engraved map was first published in "Atlas Manuale A New Set of Maps of All Parts of the Earth" during the early part of the... Show moreThis hand-colored engraved map was first published in "Atlas Manuale A New Set of Maps of All Parts of the Earth" during the early part of the 18th century. Herman Moll was one of the foremost map publishers in England at this time. This highly detailed yet small map covers Arabian Peninsula eastward to the Persian Gulf and northward to Iraq and Desert of Syria, and the Red Sea region including part of Africa. It is a clear and attractive cartographic document that shows physical features, settlements, caravan trails, and tribal affiliation. by H. Moll, geographer. Relief shown pictorially. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00083 Print Map Item-ID: i11401473 BIB-ID: 1822137 Herman Moll was born in 1654 of German descent. He first came to London to work as an engraver for several publishers, and in the late 1670s set up his own business publishing atlases as well as maps of all parts of the world. His earliest known cartographic work is a series of small maps for the geography book of Sir Jonas Moore, published in 1683. Over the next fifty years he produced numerous works on classical, British and foreign geography, illustrated with maps of varying scales and detail yet in clear, distinctive style. Though his later work lacks the flamboyance of earlier productions, it is nevertheless still very pleasing to the eye. Molls best known works are the maps he produced for his folio atlas "The World Described", first published circa 1715. Perhaps Molls most famous map is the "New and Exact Map of the Dominions of the King of Great Britain on Ye Continent of North America", depicting the English colonies along the east coast. The map is more popularly called the Beaver Map after its attractive vignette scene of beavers building dams. His other works include the "Atlas Manuale" (1709), the "New and Complete Atlas" (1719), the "Atlas Minor" (1729) and "Atlas Geographus" (1711-17) in five volumes. Names of the places in English, and some are in Latin language. Show less
This is a one of the earliest printed maps of the city and beautiful example of a cornerstone map in attractive coloring. Translation of cartouche... Show moreThis is a one of the earliest printed maps of the city and beautiful example of a cornerstone map in attractive coloring. Translation of cartouche text, view of Algiers, the most powerful town of the Saracens, built in the Numidian province of Africa and situated on the edge of the Balearic Current in the Mediterranean Sea, across from Spain. The plate of Algiers depicts the formidably fortified town in a low bird's-eye view, with a figure bottom left dressed in a turban and kaftan, the coloring of which matches that of the surrounding countryside. The fortress-like layout of the town, conveniently located on a harbor, features a well-laid out Old Town with five mosques, including, in the foreground, the Great Mosque (Q) from the 11th century. While Algiers belonged to the Kingdom of Aragon after the Reconquista in 1492, in the early 16th century many Moors, Moriscos and Corsairs made Algiers and Tunis their base. Among others Ferdinand, the Catholic, campaigned against their piracy; on the other side the Turks helped the North Africans and, with the exception of Morocco, the land became part of the Ottoman Empire in 1518-1519. Bird's eye view, with key to streets, buildings, gates, and other features. Key is in Italian, but title and other text is in Latin. From Braun and Hogenberg's Civitates orbis terrarum, part 2 (Coloniae: Apud auctores, et ... apud Philippum Gallaeum, 1575-1612), leaf S9 verso. Main Heritage Compact General HC.MAP.00253 Print Map Item-ID: i11400602 BIB-ID: 1845452 Georg Braun (1541-1622) was a canon of Cologne Cathedral and was responsible for the descriptions for each of the plates in the series as well as the introductions for each volume. Braun conceived the idea of the publication and sought the advice of many artists and printers of the time in Europe. Amongst the contributors were Flemish painter and draftsman, Joris Hoefnagel and his son Jakob Hendrik van Schoel, the surveyor Jacob van Deventer of the Netherlands, the English cartographer William Smith as well as Heinrich Rantzau, to mention a few of the ones involved with the project. Special emphasis should be noted with Joris Hoefnagel [1542-1600] who was one of the most significant contributors to the Civitates. Show less