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Tierra nveva.
Gastaldi, Giacomo, ca. 1500-ca. 1565. Venice: Valgrisi?, between
1561 and 1564.
The coastline on this map was copied from maps made by the explorers
Jacques Cartier and Giovanni da Verrazano who had sailed to the
northeast coast of North America earlier in the sixteenth century.
The mapmaker hypothesized the presence of mountains inland and joined
the Hudson and St. Lawrence Rivers, believing that they had a common
source.
Pearl Herlihy Daniels Map Collection
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John Farrer
A mapp of Virginia discouered to ye Hills. 1651.
This map was engraved by John Goddard for the third edition of Edward
Williams' Virginia.
Farrer, a member of the Virginia Company of London believed that
America was only about three hundred miles from ocean to ocean.
The map indicates a narrow isthmus at the head of James and Hudson
Rivers which connects to a lake running to the Sea of China and
the Indies. The map shows Dutch and Swedish settlements to the north
(right). It also identifies the "Checopiacke" Bay.
Pearl Herlihy Daniels Map Collection
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Arnoldus Montanus, 1625?-1683.
Die unbekante Neue Welt. Amsterdam: J. von Meurs, 1673.
Montanus's Amerika was perhaps the greatest illustrated book on
the New World produced in the seventeenth century. Montanus's work contained
over one hundred beautifully engraved plates, views, and maps of North
and South America. This map identifies the names of the Native American
tribes in the region.
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Novii Belgii, Novaque Anglia nec non partis Virginia Tabulae.
Justus Danckers, Amsterdam, circa 1682.
Novii Belgii, by the Dutch cartographer Justus Danckers,
was based on a prototype first issued by Jan Jansson around 1651
and decorated with a cartouche showing a view of New Amsterdam,
first issued by Nicholas Visscher about 1655. This edition of the
map was published after the founding of Philadelphia in 1682. It
also includes the designation "Niew Castel alias Sandhoeck."
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A new map of the most considerable plantations of the English in America.
Sutton Nicholls sculp. Wells, Edward, 1667-1727. Oxford: Printed at the
Theatre, 1701.
This map was included in an atlas entitled A New Sett of Maps both
Antient and Present Geography, first published in 1700 and in print
until 1738. Chesapeake Bay and Cape Henlopin are the only Delaware locations
identified.
Pearl Herlihy Daniels Map Collection
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Thomas Campanius Holm, ca. 1670-1702.
Kort beskrifning om provincien Nya Swerige uti America : som
nu fortjden af the Engelske kallas Pensylvania Stockholm: J.H.
Werner, 1702.
Kort beskrifning, the first detailed account of the colony
of New Sweden was written by Holm, based primarily on manuscripts
written by his grandfather Johan Campanius Holm (1601-1683), who
arrived in America in 1643 as minister for the colony. This image
portrays Fort Casimir, which was established in 1651 by Peter Syuyvesant
in the settlement of Santhoeck, now New Castle.
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Anonymous manuscript map of Maryland and Delaware, circa 1715.
Ink and wash on paper.
The inclusion of Queen Anne County, Maryland, which was established
in 1706, and the omission of Dover, Delaware, which was laid out
in 1717, can help scholars determine the date of the map.
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Johann Baptistus Homann.
Virginia Marylania et Carolina in American Septentrionali 1720.
The geography on this map was outdated even when it was published because
Homann took information from maps published a hundred years earlier. The
map, published in Nürnburg, was apparently an attempt to encourage
German immigration to the New World. The ornate title cartouche shows
the wealth of the country including fish, plants, gold, and slaves.
A New Map of Virginia and Maryland. Herman Moll. London, 1730.
Herman Moll (d.1732) was born in the Netherlands and moved to London
about 1680. He began his career as an engraver and was renown as the foremost
map publisher in England in the early eighteenth century. This map, which
depicts the entire Chesapeake Bay, is important because it was probably
the most widely owned map of the Tidewater Region in the eighteenth century,
having been published in numerous editions.
Pearl Herlihy Daniels Map Collection
Tobias E. Bjorck, 1668-1740.
Dissertatio Gradualis, de Plantatione Ecclesiae Svecanae in America.
Upsaliae: Literis Wernerianis, 1731.
This dissertation, presented at the University of Upsala, concerns the
history of the Swedish Church in America and missionary activities among
the Indians. Dissertatio Gradualis appears to be the first work
about New Sweden written by a native born author. The map, engraved by
Jonas Silverling, shows the Swedish settlements between the Chesapeake
Bay and New York.
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Delaware. Philadelphia: J. Scott, 1795.
Philadelphia engraver and publisher Joseph T. Scott was, along with
fellow Philadelphian Mathew Carey, one of the first American cartographic
publishers. His important United States Gazetteer included
a map of the United States and separate maps of all the states.
Pearl Herlihy Daniels Map Collection |
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Special Collections
Last Modified
5/6/09
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