Nicolas de Fer Geographie de sa Majeste
Catholique et de Monseigneur le Dauphin.
[Paris,
I.F. Benard,
1743].
Engraved portrait.
252 by 184mm. (10 by 7.25 inches).
17785
notes:
Portrait of Nicolas de Fer (1646–1720), who was apprenticed to Parisian engraver Louis Spirinx, and made his first map at 23. In 1687, his father's printing firm was passed on to Nicolas, who rapidly expanded the cartographical side of the business. Perhaps de Fer's greatest work, 'L'Atlas curieux' was published from 1700 until 1705, at which point it spanned four volumes and contained 113 maps and views, many of which focused on the regions and monuments of France. The ent...
bibliography:
provenance:
The first regional map of the “great south land” (Clancy)
“A milestone polar map” (Clancy)
Lesser Antilles
The first state of the first map to be to be “devoted exclusively to the [south] Polar Regions” (Tooley)
St. George's Chapel
1827 edition of Martyn’s large-scale map of Cornwall, with the 1816 index
Seoul at the moment of the division of Korea
Adam Johann Ritter von Krusenstern 

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