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Description

A Landmark Map of Colombia

Spectacular large format map of Colombia and Venezuela, credited to Don Felipe Bauza, son of Felipe Bauza y Canas, who served as the Hydrographer on Alessandro Malaspina's expedition to the Pacific (1788-1794), and would go on to become the head of the Spanish Hydrographical Office (1815-1823) and one of the most respected mapmakers of his generation.

Bauza the elder was the main cartographer of the Malaspina Expedition to the Americas, Oceania and Australasia between 1789 and 1794. At the end of that expedition he travelled across South America by land and created a map of the Andes.  In 1797 he started working at the Hydrography Office in Madrid, of which he became director in 1815. He was honored with the Russian Cross of St Vladimir in 1816 and was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London in 1819.

In 1823, due to the renewed persecution of liberals by King Ferdinand VII of Spain, Bauzá was sentenced to death and had to flee to London with his son, while his wife and daughter remained in Madrid. He took with him his large collection of geographical documents and maps of the Americas and Spain.   As noted in correspondence with the British Government in 1823, Bauza brought his collection to London with the object of publishing the maps to support his family, which he likely undertook with a relative, Jose Maria Cardano, who had also fled Spain to London in the same time period.

Following his death, the ritish Library acquired a large quantity of his maps, which it continues to hold as the Bauzá Collection, considered to be the most important collection of maps of Latin America outside of the collections of the Spanish national Government.

While the political intrigue clearly delayed publication of the map until 1841, the content of Bauza's map of the Territory of Colombia remained relevant and of the highest import.  As noted in the official report of the Venezuela-British Guiana boundary arbitration

The . . . map . . . of 1841 (is) by the Spanish engineer, Dem Felipe Bauza, comprising various provinces and parts of others, among these Guiana. It is founded upon the work of Churucca, and Fidalgo, as well as that Ferrer, and very particularly upon that of Baron de Humboldt, and on the unpublished charts and private plans of Solano, and on those of the campaign of General Murillo, and many documents of the officers of the Royal Armarda, Doz and Guerrero, and of the engineers Cramer and Primo de Rivera, of Don Jose de Inciarte and of the pilot of the Spanish trade to the Indies, Don Joaquin Morreno. It is duly certified in Madrid on May 4, 1898, by the archivist of the Archives of the Hydrographic Office, Senor Joaquin de Ariza, for James H. Reddan, Commissioner of the Government of Her Britannic Majesty. It shows all of the towns, villages, places, existing and ruined, missions, ranches, farms, sugar mills, cattle farms, castles, towers, Indian villages, silver mines, trails, roads and royal highways.
It gives as the boundaries of British Guiana a line which starts from a point on Moruka Creek and runs in a southwesterly direction to the Rinocote Mountains, and from thence runs to the southeast and terminates at the source of the Pomeroon River, apparently in conformity with that of Humboldt, which is elsewhere analyzed.

Rarity

OCLC locates 1 copy (Library of Congress).  We have offered the map for sale once in the past 25 years.

Condition Description
Restrike printed from the original copperplates on 20th-century paper.
Reference
Peter Barber, RICHES FOR THE GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICA AND SPAIN': FELIPE BAUZÁ AND HIS TOPOGRAPHICAL COLLECTIONS (1789-1848); British Library Journal Vol. 12, No. 1 (Spring 1986), pages 28-57.
Felipe Bauza Biography

Felipe Bauza (1764-1834) was a Spanish naval hydrographer who served in important roles on the Malaspina expedition and in the Spanish hydrographic administration. Born in Palma, Majorca, Bauza joined the Spanish navy at fifteen. A promising young officer, Tofiño y Varela employed him on surveying for the maritime atlas of Spain.

This work got him appointed as a hydrographer on the Malaspina expedition, Spain’s answer to the voyages of James Cook and La Perouse. Bauza was in charge of charting on the expedition. On the way back to Spain, he and a colleague, Espinosa y Tello, traveled overland from Valparaíso to Buenos Aires, making important observations along the way. However, back in Spain, the publication of the materials from the expedition staled due to political machinations.

Bauza was appointed to the Dirección de Hidrografía in 1797, where he served for decades. After fighting for Spanish independence from Napoleon’s troops, Bauza returned to Madrid to take on the Depósito Hidrográfico. This was not his only accolade; Bauza was a member of the Real Sociedad Económica Matritense (1805), the Real Academia de la Historia (1807), the Royal Bavarian Academy (1816), the Royal Society of London (1819), the Turin Academy of Sciences (1821), the Academia Nacional (1821), the Royal Geographical Society (1831), the Royal Maritime Society of Lisbon (1832), and awarded the Order of St. Vladimir by the Tsar of Russia.

In the 1820s, Bauza entered politics. This led to his exile in 1823. He lived in London, with a sizeable collection of charts that he had brought with him, hoping to return to Spain. However, in 1826, the Spanish Crown confirmed his death sentence. This sentence was finally lifted due to the amnesty of 1832 issued by Queen Maria Christina, but Bauza was not able to take it up. He died in London in 1834. His considerable chart collection was sold to various entities, including the British Admiralty, the British Museum, and the government of Venezuela.