Clive A. Burden LTD. Rare Maps, Antique Atlases, Books and Decorative Prints

The Mapping of North America

Mr. Philip D. Burden​
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This is the first atlas of the entire British Isles and it has mysterious origins. The year 1617 is the first true published issue of this series of maps in an edition of William Camden’s ‘Britannia’ at the hands of Willem Janszoon (Blaeu). Three of the plates are dated 1599 and the series are known popularly as the ‘miniature Speed’, a title acquired following its first published issue in England in 1627 by George Humble who similarly published the folio Speed atlas.

Collections of the original 44 plates are known lacking title page and text dated to c.1605; Skelton in 1970 recorded seven known examples, one of which was broken shortly after. Only four are complete. If it had been published around 1599 they would pre-date the ‘Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine’ by John Speed, 1612, as the first ‘atlas’ of the British Isles. Christopher Saxton’s published in 1579 contained only maps of England and Wales.

Pieter van den Keere (1571-c.1646) engraved 22 of the maps although some authorities quote 21. The remainder are all in a similar style and are deemed to have been his work. Van den Keere was a protestant émigré to London in 1584 travelling with his sister Colette. She married Jodocus Hondius in 1587, and quite probably they returned together to Amsterdam in 1593. Van den Keere married Anna Bertius, sister to Petrus Bertius. Of the maps 33 are derived from Saxton, some having more anglicised titles; that of Yorkshire only appears in one example and is not considered part of the original set. Indeed in the RGS example it is supplied in manuscript. The 6 maps of Scotland are derived from Abraham Ortelius’ map published in 1573. The 5 of Ireland are from van den Keere’s own engraving of Baptisto Boazio, published in 1591. Three of the maps are dated – Warwick & Leicester, Radnor etc., and northern Scotland.

In this first published edition of van den Keere’s copperplates two further maps are included. These are both folding; one of the British Isles the other of Yorkshire. There is some debate as to whether the latter was engraved at the time of the original proofs. From about 1600-02 the plates were sold as a collection without title page as indicated by Cornelis Claesz’s catalogue of 1609. Claesz died in May 1609 and the following year there was an auction of his stock. The van den Keere plates were amongst many items acquired by Willem Janszoon (Blaeu).

In 1617 the plates were used in an abridgement of William Camden’s ‘Britannia’, compiled by Regner Vitellius and published in Amsterdam by Blaeu. For this edition the maps have Latin text on the verso and a typographic page number printed. The only plate altered is that of ‘TIMEA’ whose title now reads ‘MIDEA’, which also appears on the face of the map, this was the toponym used by Camden. The work was reprinted in 1639 using a different series of maps, by Bertius, as those of van den Keere were then owned by George Humble. He used 40 of Van den Keere’s plates, but has them reworked, titles changed into English and plate numbers added. Provenance: old library stamp to the title of ‘Capni Trento’; Ian Haggis Collection; Daniel Crouch Rare Books (2013) Catalogue of British Atlases item 2. Burden (2007) ‘The Origins of the ‘miniature’ Speed atlas. The first atlas of the British Isles’ in ‘Mappae Antiquae Liber Amicorum Günter Schilder’ pp. 497-508; Chubb (1927) X; Kingsley (1982) no. 5; Krogt (1997-2003) 373:02; Shirley (2004) T.Camd 2a; Skelton (1970) no. 12 (erroneously calling for a portrait).
BLAEU, Willem Jansz

Guilielmi Camdeni, Viri clarissimi Britannia, sive florentissimorum Regnorum Angliae, Scotiae, Hiberniae, & Insularum

Guilielmi Janssonii, Amsterdam, 1617
Octavo (150 x 95 mm.), full contemporary vellum, spine with raised bands, manuscript title in ruled compartment, with recent cloth slipcase. With typographic title page, pp. (16), 714, (26), with forty six engraved maps, two of which are folding, with manuscript notation on front free endpaper ‘The Description of England, Ireland and Scotland’ in very good condition.
Stock number: 9769

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