Asia
with the Islands adioyning described, the atire of the people, & Townes of importance, all of them newly augmented by I:S: Ano. Dom: 1626.
[London],
Are to be sold in pops-head alley against the Exchange by G. Humble,
1626, [but 1627-1632].
Double-page engraved map, with hand-colour.
400 by 510mm. (15.75 by 20 inches).
21912
notes:
The first English printed map of the continent of Asia, from the first atlas compiled and published by an Englishman, Speed's 'Prospect'.
The map is heavily influenced by Hondius' 1623 map – and inherits the gaps in his geographical understanding of Asia: Korea is presented as a peninsula, and an anonymous stretch of water separates Asia from America, identified only as a blending of 'The Tartarian Sea' and 'The West Ocean'. In India, one finds the mythical 'Lak...
The map is heavily influenced by Hondius' 1623 map – and inherits the gaps in his geographical understanding of Asia: Korea is presented as a peninsula, and an anonymous stretch of water separates Asia from America, identified only as a blending of 'The Tartarian Sea' and 'The West Ocean'. In India, one finds the mythical 'Lak...
bibliography:
Chubb, XXV; 'Mapping the Continent of Asia', 30; Shirley [Atlases], T.SPE-2a; Suárez, 200.
provenance:
“…the six maps of England that are bound up for the pocket” (Samuel Pepys)
Rare reduction of William Smith’s seminal geological map
Greenough recognises his debt to William Smith
Greenough’s riposte to Smith in the battle of the geological maps
England and Wales as an old man
Unrecorded Spanish edition of the First Sea Atlas of America 




