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Wäldseemüller’s chart of the world known as the ‘Admiral’s Map’

Stock No. 5926 Category: Tag: Cartographer: WALDSEEMULLER, Martin.

Orbis Terrarum Universalis Iuxta Hydrographorum Traditionem.
Strasbourg, Johannes Shott, 1513. FIRST EDITION. Woodcut, printed area 440 x 570mm.

£72,500

Out of stock

The first printing of Waldseemuller's chart of the world, called the 'Admiral's Map' as a reference to Columbus. It only shows the very edges of the Americas: Shirley hypothesises that when work on the atlas started this map was the first to be cut, so the information given in the Americas dates from what was known c.1506. Cuba and Hispaniola the only named islands of the West Indies, with a large landmass in South America, from the discoveries of Pedro Alvares Cabral. Further north the east coast of an incomplete landmass is closer to Europe than the West Indies. In the Old World, Greenland is connected to Scandinavia; Ceylon now appears, and Taprobana has moved east. India is recognisable, but there are two more large peninsulas further east, one each taken from the Cantino and the Martellus manuscript maps. According to Suarez , this is the only map to show both 'sub-continents'.

A very scarce map.

Additional information

Cartographer

Date

1513

Extra Info

Orbis Terrarum Universalis Iuxta Hydrographorum Traditionem.

Publication

Strasbourg, Johannes Shott, 1513. FIRST EDITION. Woodcut, printed area 440 x 570mm.

Condition

A few small repairs.

References

SHIRLEY: World 35; SUAREZ: Early Mapping of Southeast Asia, p.96-97.