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Stock# 103160
Description

A well-rounded French composite atlas of the world, including primarily maps by Guillaume Delisle, as issued by his protégé and son-in-law Philippe Buache in the middle of the 18th century. The maps bear dates from 1700 to 1764 (Carte de France... Et augmentée en 1764. par Phil. Buache...), and cover the world, Europe, Asia (four maps), Africa (four maps), and the Americas (six maps, including North America, Canada, and Mexico), finishing with a suite of 12 maps of the ancient world.

Some of the maps have been updated with the addition of Buache's imprint in the lower right corner, which he frequently added in 1745.

The map of North America (L'Amerique Septentrionale...) is in its 6th (of 7) state, before Delisle's title is changed to '... Prem.r Geographe du Roy ...'. The map of Canada (Carte du Canada...) is in its 5th (of 10) state, before Delsile's title is changed in the aforementioned manner, but after Renard's imprint has been crudely erased. These states date the printing of these maps to the 1710s, which is interesting given what we know about the date of compilation of the atlas.

Provenance

Engraved bookplate, printed in sepia, of Frédéric Grand d'Hauteville (1873-1944), who was a French doctor of note during the beginning of the 20th century, including during the First World War. He was Vice-President of the Bern Committee for Assistance to Prisoners of War (1915-1918), Médecin de la Reconnaissance Française, and Doctor of King Albert I of Belgium.

List of Maps

  1. Mappemonde a l'usage du Roy
  2. Hemisphere Septentrionale pour voir plus distnictement Les Terres Arctiques
  3. Hemisphere Meridional pour voir plus distntinctement Les Terres Australes
  4.  L'Europe
  5. Les Isles Britanniques
  6. Carte des Courones du Nord dediee au Tres Puissantet Tres Invincible Prince Charles XII (in two parts)
  7. (Part II)
  8. Carte Royaume de Danemarc
  9. Carte de Moscovie (in two parts)
  10. (Part II)
  11. Carte de France
  12. Carte de la Prevoste et Vicomte de Paris
  13. Carte Topographique du Diocese de Senlis
  14. Carte du Diocese de Beauvais
  15. Partie Meridionale de Picardie
  16. Carte de la Champagne et des Pays Voisins ou l'on voit la Generalite de Chalons partie de celle de Soissons &c.
  17. Partie Meridionale de Champagne
  18. Partie Septentrionale du Duche de Bourgogne
  19. Partie Meridionale du Duche de Bourgogne
  20. Carte Bourdelois du Perigord
  21. Carte de Normandie
  22. Carte de Provence et des Terres Adjacentes
  23. Le Dauphine divise en ses Pricinpales Parties
  24. Gouvernement General du Languedoc 
  25. Carte du Bearn de la Bigorre de L'Armagnac et des Pays Voisins
  26. Carte du Diocese de Narbonne
  27. Carte du Diocese de Beziers
  28. Carte des Pays Bas Catholiques
  29. Carte d'Artios et des Environs
  30. Carte du Comte de Flandre
  31. Carte des Comtez, de Hainaut, de Namur, et de Cambresis
  32. Carte du Brabant
  33. Carte des Provinces Unies des Pays Bas
  34. L'Allemagne
  35. Carte de Suisse
  36. Carte de Lac de Geneve
  37. Carte de L'Isle et Royaume de Sicile
  38. Le Cours du Rhin au dessus de Strasbourg et les Pais adjacens
  39. Le Cours du Rhin depuis Strasbourg jusqua'a Worms et les Pais adjacens
  40. Le Cours du Rhin depuis Worms jusqua Bonne et les Pays adjacens
  41. Partie Septentrionale de la Souabe
  42. Partie Meridionale de la Souabe
  43. La Pologne
  44. L'Espagne
  45. L'Italie
  46. Carte du Piemont et du Monferrat
  47. Partie Meridionale du Piemont et du Monferrat
  48. Le Duche de Milan
  49. Carte de la Hongrie
  50. Carte de la Grece
  51. Carte de la Turquie, de L'Arabie, et de la Perse
  52. Carte des Indes et de la Chine
  53. Carte D'Asie
  54. Carte de Tartarie
  55. L'Afrique
  56. Carte de la Barbarie de la Nigritie et de la Guinee
  57. Carte de L'Egypte de la Nubie de L'Abissinie
  58. Carte du Congo et du Pays des Cafres
  59. L'Amerique Septentrionale
  60. Carte du Canada ou de la Nouvelle France
  61. Carte du Mexique et de la Floride
  62. L'Amerique Meridionale
  63. Carte de la Terre Ferme du Perou, du Bresil, et du Pays des Amazones
  64. Carte du Paraguay, du Chile, du Detriot de Magellan &c.
  65. Orbis Veteribus Noti Tabula Nova
  66. Theatrum historicum ad annum Christi quadringentesimu in quo tum Imperii Romani tu Barbarorum circum incolentium status ob oculos ponitur pars occidentalis
  67. Theatrum historicum ad annum Christi quadringentesimu in quo tum Imperii Romani tu Barbarorum circum incolentium status ob oculos ponitur pars orientalis
  68. In Notitaim Eccesiasticam Africae Tabula Geographica
  69. Graeciae pars Septentrionalis
  70. Graeciae pars Meridionalis
  71. Regionum Italiae Mediarum Tabula Geographica
  72. Sicilae Antiquae quae et Sicania et Triacria dicta Tabula Geographica
  73. Civitas Leucorum sive Pagus Tullensis aujourdhui le Diocese de Toul
  74. Tabula Delphinatus et Vicinarum Regionum
  75. Imperii Orientalis et Circumjacentium Regionum sub Constantino Porphyrogenito
  76. Orbis Romani Descriptio seu Divisio per Themata sub Imperitoribus Constantinopolitanis post Heraclii tempora facta
Condition Description
Folio. Full 18th-century French cat's paw calf; spine in seven compartments separated by raised bands (with floral gilt roll tool), red morocco title piece in the second lettered "CARTES DE DELSILE", the rest with floral, star, and sprig gilt tools. 74 engraved maps on 76 sheets (as called for in the manuscript table of contents), all of which with original hand-color in outline. (A few small stains, such as to the map of the Low Countries, Spain, North America, etc.)
Guillaume De L'Isle Biography

Guillaume De L'Isle (1675-1726) is probably the greatest figure in French cartography. Having learned geography from his father Claude, by the age of eight or nine he could draw maps to demonstrate ancient history.  He studied mathematics and astronomy under Cassini, from whom he received a superb grounding in scientific cartography—the hallmark of his work. His first atlas was published in ca. 1700. In 1702 he was elected a member of the Academie Royale des Sciences and in 1718 he became Premier Geographe du Roi

De L'Isle's work was important as marking a transition from the maps of the Dutch school, which were highly decorative and artistically-orientated, to a more scientific approach. He reduced the importance given to the decorative elements in maps, and emphasized the scientific base on which they were constructed. His maps of the newly explored parts of the world reflect the most up-to-date information available and did not contain fanciful detail in the absence of solid information. It can be fairly said that he was truly the father of the modern school of cartography at the commercial level. 

De L’Isle also played a prominent part in the recalculation of latitude and longitude, based on the most recent celestial observations. His major contribution was in collating and incorporating this latitudinal and longitudinal information in his maps, setting a new standard of accuracy, quickly followed by many of his contemporaries. Guillaume De L’Isle’s work was widely copied by other mapmakers of the period, including Chatelain, Covens & Mortier, and Albrizzi.

Philippe Buache Biography

Philippe Buache (1700-1773) was one of the most famous French geographers of the eighteenth century. Buache was married to the daughter of the eminent Guillaume Delisle and worked with his father-in-law, carrying on the business after Guillaume died. Buache gained the title geographe du roi in 1729 and was elected to the Academie des Sciences in the same year. Buache was a pioneering theoretical geographer, especially as regards contour lines and watersheds. He is best known for his works such as Considérations géographiques et physiques sur les découvertes nouvelles dans la grande mer (Paris, 1754).