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Janssonius’ Map of Staffordshire & Shropshire

SKU: 8728
£500.00
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Title:
Janssonius’ Map of Staffordshire & Shropshire

Date of publication:

  • 1649
  • Printed Measurement:

  • 42.5 x 53 cm
  • Colour:

  • modern
  • These maps of Staffordshire and Shropshire are presented on one sheet.

    Unlike Kip and Hole, Speed and Blaeu – who all devoted an entire map-sheet to each county – Janssonius occasionally depicted adjacent counties together. He may have been influenced in this by the example set by the father of English county cartography, Christopher Saxton.
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    Joannes Janssonius II (1588-1664) married into the Hondius family and, with Henricus Hondius, worked on a revised edition of the Mercator-Hondius atlas (which was known as the Atlas Novus from 1638 onwards).

    The Hondius-Janssonius map publishing business traced its roots back to Gerardus Mercator. Mercator coined the term 'atlas' (after the wise, mythical, Mauritanian king rather than the weary titan) and the original Mercator Atlas (published in parts between 1585 and 1595) was an enormous advance in scientific terms: like Abraham Ortelius, Mercator edited his maps from the best available sources, but he advanced a step further and mapped the world on a standard projection.

    However, the Atlas was not an immediate commercial success; the copper printing plates were purchased by Jodocus Hondius c. 1604, and a large number of maps were added for his first edition of 1606, which still traded on Mercator's name. His son-in-law Janssonius took over the business in the mid 1630s. He began to erase Hondius' name and replace it with his own at this time, and eventually expanded the atlas to create an Atlas major which rivalled Blaeu's.

    Condition & Materials

    Copper engraving, 42.5 x 53 cm, modern hand-colour, French text on verso.

    References

    Koeman, Atlantes Neerlandici, Me 161 Read less