The only celestial atlas published during the Golden Age of Dutch cartography
Harmonia Macrocosmica
sev atlas universalis et novus, totius universi creati cosmographiam generalem, et novam exhibens.
Amsterdam,
Johannes Janssonius,
1661
First edition, second issue. Folio (565 by 355 mm). [14], 125, [1b.] pp.; 219 pp. Engraved allegorical frontispiece by F.H. van Hoven and 29 double-page astronomical maps, all finely coloured by a contemporary hand. Publisher's Dutch vellum, gilt-panelled with large central arabesque, smooth spine in eight compartments, yapp board-edges, gilt edges, recased in original binding.
10715
notes:
First edition, second issue – the first being dated 1660 – of the only celestial atlas published during the Golden Age of Dutch cartography, and probably the finest celestial atlas ever realized.
The first 21 sumptuous Baroque style charts beautifully represent the three competing astronomical models of the day: the Ptolemaic, Tychonic and the Copernican. The Ptolemaic, named after the second century A.D. astronomer Ptolemy, was the oldest of the celestial theori...
The first 21 sumptuous Baroque style charts beautifully represent the three competing astronomical models of the day: the Ptolemaic, Tychonic and the Copernican. The Ptolemaic, named after the second century A.D. astronomer Ptolemy, was the oldest of the celestial theori...
bibliography:
Brown Astronomical Atlases, pp. 40-41. Biblioteca Civica Bertoliana, Vicenza, Teatro del cielo e della terra, p. 33-34; 36. Brown, Astronomical atlases, pp. 40-42. Honeyman Coll. II, 658; Lalande, p. 248; Lister, p. 48. Poggendorf, I, 409 Koeman, Atlantes Neerlandici, IV, Cel I
provenance:
Speed’s map of Derbyshire
Rocque’s large and detailed plan of the cities of Georgian London and the country ten miles round
The Sunda Strait
Lusvergh’s sales catalogue of artists’ drawing and optical instruments, including Galileo’s Sector
Kandy land
Full of “non descript” natural history
Duchetti’s plan of Florence
Map of Japan published in Dufour’s ‘Atlas Populaire’
John Rocque’s rare index to his large wall map of Dublin, including a price list of all Rocque’s published works 






