“The greatest and finest atlas ever published”

£750,000

In stock

more...

Le Grand Atlas,

BLAEU, Johannes
Amsterdam,
Jean Blaeu,
1663.

12 volumes. Folio. Letterpress title-pages with engraved vignette and divisional half-titles to each volume. Magnificent engraved allegorical architectural frontispiece title-pages to each volume, 597 engraved maps and plates, mostly double-page (some folding), engraved illustrations, all with mangnificent contemporary hand-colour, map of Holy Land supplied, lacking leaves Cc1-Cc2 from Asia volume, and divisional title from volume VI (as common) occasional browning and marginal staining. Superb publisher's Dutch gilt-panelled vellum, each cover decorated with gilt stylised foliate roll-tool panels, arabesques at inner corners and surrounding a large central arabesque medallion, the smooth spines gilt ruled in eight compartments each decorated with fleur-de-lys corner pieces around a central rose tool, yapp fore-edges, remnants of green silk ties.

540 by 340mm (21.25 by 13.5 inches).
18463

To scale:

notes:

notes:

An uncharacteristically fine and attractive example of "the greatest and finest atlas ever published" (Verwey).

The 'Atlas Major' in its various editions was the largest atlas ever published. It was justly famed for its production values, its high typographic standard, and the quality of its engraving, ornamentation, binding, and colouring. The atlas frequently served as the official gift of the Dutch Republic to princes and other authorities. It is one of the...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Brotton, 260-293; Hermann de la Fontaine Verwey, "Het werk van de Blaeus', Maandblad Amstelodamum 39 (1952), 103 quoted in Brotton, 265; Van der Krogt, 2:611-2; Shirley, British Library, T:BLA-1q.