Presentation copy of Golovnin’s rare account of his circumnavigation on the sloop Kamchatka, incorporating one of the earliest plans of Honolulu.
[Title in cyrillic: Voyage around the world by order of His Majesty, the Emperor, on naval sloop Kamchatka in 1817, 1818, and 1819, by Fleet Captain Golovnin].
St. Petersburg,
Naval Printing Office,
1822-23.
First edition. Two volumes quarto (260 by 195mm), volume I with two folding tables, six folding engraved maps and charts, and six folding plates of engraved landfalls and coastal views, with two to four profiles per plate; volume II with two large folding engraved maps on thick paper, one of Sitka Bay and other adjoining parts of Russian possessions on the northwest coast of America, and the other of Chiniat Bay on Kodiak Island. Full red morocco with gilt roll borders, rebacked with original spines tooled in gilt, morocco lettering pieces, all edges gilt.
Collation: [8]. 512, xliv, [errata leaf]; [8], 205, [1], cxxvii, [3] pp.
Collation: [8]. 512, xliv, [errata leaf]; [8], 205, [1], cxxvii, [3] pp.
11921
notes:
Lada-Mocarski notes that Vasili Golovnin was "one of the outstanding Russia naval officers of the nineteenth century, made several voyages to the North Pacific and to the northwest coast of America. He has left valuable accounts of his voyages and of the investigation of the state of the Russian colonies in America, which he conducted by order of the emperor in 1818... The work described herein is of utmost importance and of great rarity."
Vasili Mikhailovich Gol...
Vasili Mikhailovich Gol...
bibliography:
John Dunmore, Who's Who in Pacific Navigation (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1991), p.118; Forbes 545; Howes G-232; Lada-Mocarski 82.
provenance:
Provenance
1. Presentation copy, with ink inscription in Russian to Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev on the flyleaf of the first volume.
Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev (1754–1826) held the highest offices of state, including those of Minister of Commerce (1802–11), President of the State Council (1810–12), Foreign Minister (1808–12), and Chancellor of the Russian Empire. On receiving the news of Napoleon's invasion of Russia, he suffered a stroke and lost his hearing. He retired in 1814, shortly before the Treaty of Vienna and died twelve years later in his palace on the English Quay in St Petersburg.
2. From the collection of Warren Heckrotte, San Francisco, USA.
1. Presentation copy, with ink inscription in Russian to Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev on the flyleaf of the first volume.
Nikolay Petrovich Rumyantsev (1754–1826) held the highest offices of state, including those of Minister of Commerce (1802–11), President of the State Council (1810–12), Foreign Minister (1808–12), and Chancellor of the Russian Empire. On receiving the news of Napoleon's invasion of Russia, he suffered a stroke and lost his hearing. He retired in 1814, shortly before the Treaty of Vienna and died twelve years later in his palace on the English Quay in St Petersburg.
2. From the collection of Warren Heckrotte, San Francisco, USA.