Carta delle Terre Antartiche Esplorate e Scoperte dalla “Belgica” Compilata da A. Faustini secondo i dati del Commandante A. de Gerlache

Cartographer(s): Stab. P. Casetti
Date: ca. 1900
Place: Rome
Dimensions: 53 x 64.5 (20.9 x 25.4 in)
Condition Rating: VG

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SKU: NL-00778 Category: Tag:

Documenting a first in Antarctic exploration: the Belgian Expedition of 1897 to 1899.

Details

This unrecorded Italian map presents the route of the Belgian Antarctic Expedition of 1897 to 1899, the first expedition to winter in the Antarctic region.

In 1896, after intensive lobbying, Adrien de Gerlache purchased Norwegian-built whaling ship Patria, which, following an extensive refit, he renamed Belgica. Gerlache had worked with the Geographical Society of Brussels to organize a national subscription but was only able to outfit his expedition after the Belgian government voted in favor of two large subsidies, making it a state-supported undertaking. With a multinational crew that included Roald Amundsen from Norway, Emil Racovita from Romania, and Henryk Arctowski from Poland, they set sail from Antwerp on 16 August 1897.

The map shows how in January of 1898, the expedition made its way towards Graham Land. What it doesn’t show is that on 22 January, Carl Wiencke was washed overboard during a storm and drowned. Wiencke Island was named in his honor. Sailing in between the Graham Land coast and a long string of islands to the west, Gerlache named the passage ‘Belgica Strait.’ Later, it was renamed ‘Gerlache Strait’ in his honor. The expedition succeeded in charting and naming several islands, making some twenty separate landings.

On 28 February, the expedition became trapped in the ice of the Bellinghausen Sea, near Peter I Island. Despite the efforts of the crew to free the ship, they quickly realized that they would be forced to spend the winter in Antarctica. Without sufficient supplies for the endeavor, the crew, some of which did not survive, underwent extreme hardship. The vessel was not released from the ice until a year later, in March 1899.

The voyage of Belgica tracked on this map is thus one of the most fascinating of the early Antarctic expeditions.

Cartographer(s):

Stab. P. Casetti

Stab. P. Casetti was a publishing house based in Rome and especially active in the first half of the 20th century.

Condition Description

Wear and minor loss at the folds, scattered foxing. Repairs and chips at margins.

References