Brabant  by Willem Janszoon Blaeu
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Brabant 1650

Willem Janszoon Blaeu

€ 475

Inter-Antiquariaat Mefferdt & De Jonge

  • About the artwork
    BLOKKADE VAN DE SCHELDE "Tabula Castelli ad Sandflitam.. Bergas ad Zomam et Antverpiam." Kopergravure uitgegeven ca. 1650 door Willem Blaeu. In de tijd met de hand gekleurd. Afm. ca. 38 x 50 cm. Gedetailleerde kaart van de geïnundeerde gebieden en fortificaties aangelegd ten behoeve van de tolheffing in de Schelde voor Antwerpen (na het Twaalfjarig Bestand 1609-1621), ter hoogte van Zandvliet tot het vasteland van oostelijk Zuid-Beveland ter hoogte van Waarde. Alle schansen en forten in de handen van de Spanjaarden zijn gemarkeerd door een vlag met een kruis (Zantvliet, Ossendrecht, etc.), Nederlandse vlaggen wapperen op de andere. In de Ooster- en Wester Schelde liggen Nederlandse wachtschepen. De Spaanse vluchtroute over land wordt weergegeven met een stippellijn. Het oosten ligt boven. Bovenaan een blanco kader over de gehele breedte van de kaart. Met de titel en uitgeversimpressum in eenvoudig barok cartouche. Linksboven een legenda en ten westen van Reimerswaal een kompasroos. Prijs: Euro475,-  
  • About the artist

    "Willem Janszoon Blaeu and his son Joan epitomised the 'golden age' of Dutch cartography. Working during the seventeenth century, Willem Blaeu drew a number of ground-breaking maps and published the first atlas.

    He was born in 1571 in Amsterdam and worked initially as a clerk in the family herring trade. However, he was not happy with his occupation and left home in 1594 to study mathematics under Tycho Brahe, the famous astronomer. Blaeu was a good student who much impressed his tutor, and when his studies were completed he returned to Amsterdam and set up business as a map maker. His business flourished and his reputation grew. He was the first map-maker to produce single sheet maps of many European countries.

    In 1605 he made a wall map of the world, encompassing 20 sheets, each 8 feet across. This map was by far the most accurate of the period and made an outstanding contribution to knowledge of world geography.

    His map remained the most accurate until 1648, when his son, Joan, who also became a famous map-maker, updated it. But his major achievement was the production of the first atlas in 1630. The name Blaeu was actually a family nickname which Willem took up after confusion had occurred between himself and his great rival Joannes Jansonius."

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