Description
This handcoloured print shows a map of Persia or Iran and the Middle East in the 18th century. Corrected and enlarged again according to the most recent and most faithful accounts travellers.
Made by an anonymous engraver after Pieter van derf Aa.
Medium: Engraving on hand laid (verge) paper.
Sheet size: 38.8 x 31.7 cm (15.28 x 12.48 inch). Image size: 34.5 x 29.5 cm. (13.58 x 11.61 inch).
Condition: good, given age. Folds as published. Tears restored in margin. Paper loss in lower left corner. Creases. General age-related toning and/or occasional minor defects from handling. Please study scan carefully.
MAP-IRAN-PERSIA-MIDDLE EAST-TRAVELERS | RBOS-A9-30
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
This attractive print was published in “Voyages tres curieux et tres renavez faits en Muscovie, Tartarie et Perse: (…)” by Adam Olearius in 1719. .
Biography artist: The publisher was Pieter van der Aa (1659 – 1733). A Dutch publisher of maps and atlases active in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Van der Aa was born in Leyden in 1659. At nine, he was apprenticed to a local bookseller and, by 21, had established his own publishing, printing, and auctioneering house. In 1692, Van der Aa was appointed to be one of the High Commissioners of the Booksellers Guild. During his long and impressive career Van der Aa produced thousands of maps, including a vast 28-volume atlas containing no less than 3,000 maps. Few of Van der Aa’s maps were original productions, most being copied from the work of earlier cartographers. Nonetheless, when one of Van der Aa’s rare original pieces does appear, his style, with unusual projections, elegant engraving, and precise detail, is instantly recognizable and highly desirable. He also pioneered the cartographic idea of separating border artwork from the map plate itself such that every map in a collection could have a similar elaborate border without actually having to re-engrave the complex plates. This technique was used to great effect by later 18th century publishers like Brion de la Tour. Following Van der Aa’s death in 1733, his much admired Nouvel Atlas was reissued by the Dutch firm of Covens & Mortier. Today Van der Aa’s work is admired for its fine, delicate engraving and unusual projections and is considered highly desirable among collectors.
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