Carte de la Californie Suivant I. la Carte Manuscrite de l’Amerique de Mathieu Neron Pecci…

Cartographer(s): Didier Robert de Vaugondy
Date: 1772
Place: Paris
Dimensions: 38.6 x 29 cm (15.2 x 11.4 in)
Condition Rating: VG

Out of stock

SKU: NL-00300 Category: Tag:

Vaugondy’s essential 1772 presentation of California variants

Details

This sheet has five depictions of California that present a fascinating cartographic history of the region. It was one of ten maps compiled by Robert de Vaugondy for Diderot’s important encyclopedia and depicts the mapping of California by five important cartographers.

The earliest map reproduces Neron Pecci’s manuscript map of 1604 showing the peninsula with a ragged coastline and place names derived from Cabrillo’s voyage of 1542-3.

The second map is a detail from Sanson’s 1656 map showing the island of California with place names from the voyage of Vizcaino.

Map three is from Delisle’s map of America of 1700 with the question of California’s insularity left open to interpretation.

Next is Fra. Eusebio Kino’s important map of 1705 that finally ended that cartographic myth. It is based on his overland expedition from the mainland to the Sea of Cortez.

Finally, map five is a portion of a Spanish map, showing the Jesuit explorations, that first appeared in Miguel Venegas’ Noticia de la California in 1757, which is the first published history of California.

This is an essential map for any California map collection.

Cartographer(s):

Didier Robert de Vaugondy

Didier Robert de Vaugondy (1723 – 1786) was an 18th-century French geographer.

The son of Robert de Vaugondy, he was appointed geographer of the King by Louis XV, geographer of the Duke of Lorraine by Stanisław Leszczyński, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania, Duke of Lorraine. In 1773, he became royal censor for works related to geography, navigation, and travels.

Condition Description

Issued folding on watermarked paper with wide margins and faint toning along one fold at top left.

References

McLaughlin #241; Fite & Freeman #52; Heckrotte & Sweetkind #15; Pedley #474.