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Thread: 7 things you probably didn't know about maps

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    Default 7 things you probably didn't know about maps

    7 things you probably didn't know about maps


    London-based map dealer Daniel Crouch shares a few unusual or rare maps from a recent exhibition in Hong Kong. According to Crouch, maps of BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China) are rising in popularity among map collectors. This 17th-century map of China is a double-page hand-colored engraved map published in 1665 by John Speed.

    (CNN) -- Maps can be beautiful and good ones can be great investments.

    But what collectors often find most entrancing about maps are how they provide portals into history.

    The rise and fall of cities, the charting of war and adventure, the promise of riches through trade ... history continues to be rewritten according to scholars' reinterpretations of ancient cartography.

    John Selden's 17th-century map of China made a huge splash recently as the stimulus for two new books analyzing London's rise as an economic hub (the city's success is inextricably linked to trade with China, as the Selden map illustrates).


    This "very fine" Venetian edition of Ptolemy's Geographica is the first atlas wholly printed in color, and the map (pictured) in the atlas is the first printed map to indicate Japan, and the second Ptolemaic world map to show America.

    According to some experts, the current unprecedented volume of global travel is also contributing to a burgeoning interest in map collecting.

    "I believe that as people travel more, migrate more and speak more languages, and as business becomes more globalized, the appeal of two types of attachment to the idea of 'place' increases," says Daniel Crouch, a London based specialist of antique maps and atlases.

    "One, as an identification with, or memory of, a place or homeland left behind, and the other as a statement of a new 'home' or adopted country, or fondness for a land visited."

    Crouch reveals some fascinating map facts gathered from a lifetime of collecting and selling antique maps, and shares favorites from his most recent exhibition in Hong Kong featuring maps of China.


    The world map within the 1482 edition of the Ptolemaic corpus is the first printed cartographical representation of Greenland, Iceland and the North Atlantic and the earliest datable printed map to bear a signature -- that of Johannes of Arnsheim.

    7 things to know about maps

    1. It's still possible to have your own world-class map collection


    Even the wealthiest collectors of old master or impressionist paintings, Chinese ceramics or modern art can never hope to have collections of a quality to match the likes of the Louvre, the British Museum or the Met.

    However, that's not true of maps.

    The savvy collector can still buy maps or atlases as good as, and sometimes better than, those found in the world's major libraries and museums.

    "We have several items in our gallery that are at least as good, if not better, than the equivalent examples in, say, the Bibliotheque Nationale, the British Library or Library of Congress," says Crouch, whose gallery keeps approximately 250 maps and 50 atlases in stock at any one time.


    Founded in 1795 by King George III, the British Hydrographic Office produced sea charts and were allowed to sell them to the public. This Admiralty chart was published by Sir Edward Belcher, a British naval officer and explorer involved in the First China War and the capture of Hong Kong.

    2. "BRIC" nations are hot right now

    Antique maps featuring the world's biggest developing countries have seen a recent spike in prices.

    According to Crouch this heightened interest can be linked to the recently increased inbound and outbound travel from these countries.

    "Maps of B.R.I.C. nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China) have seen the fastest growing markets (and prices) in recent years," says Crouch.

    "I have also noticed an increased interest in 'thematic' and 19th and even early 20th century mapping," he says.


    This detailed manuscript plan of Canton (Guangzhou) depicts the city at the end of the Second Opium War. Shown beyond the city walls to the right are parade grounds, numerous hospices and a leper colony.

    3. The first "modern" map was printed more than 500 years ago

    While the earliest maps were rudimentary diagrams drawn in caves in pre-historic times, the first proper manuscript maps appeared in the 12th century.

    The map of the Holy Land printed in the "Rudimentum Novitiorum," an encyclopedia of world history published in 1475, is considered the first modern printed map.

    A sample of the Rudimentum Novitiorum was sold for Ł500,000 ($829,000) in 2013.


    This woodblock is the first Buddhist world map printed in Japan and the prototype for all subsequent Buddhist world maps printed in Japan until the late 19th century. As an amazing example of Buddhist cosmology combined with real world cartography, the map shows a large India, where Buddha was born, as the heart of the world and echoes the pilgrimage route of famous Chinese Buddhist priest Hsuan-Tsang who traveled to India to visit sacred Buddhist places.

    4. Mapmakers included fake towns to catch forgers

    Ever been to the town of Agloe in New York State? Whitewall in California? Or Relescent in Florida?

    While these towns are clearly marked on a number of antique maps of the United States, they don't actually exist.

    "Paper towns" were fake places added to maps by early mapmakers in order to dupe forgers into copying them, thereby exposing themselves to charges of copyright infringement.


    This woodcut, printed in three colors on mulberry paper, was drawn by Felmish born Jesuit missionary to China Ferdinand Verbiest, who was also a mathematician and astronomer. The map shows Verbiest's prognostication for the lunar eclipse of March 25, 1671, which the emperor wanted six months in advance in order to notify the regions of the empire in time. The scroll shows the phases of the eclipse in 17 drawings -- one for each province, and illustrates his attempt to show the superiority of European science over traditional Chinese beliefs.

    5. The world's best map collection is in Paris

    "The best collection in the world, in my opinion, is that of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France in Paris, followed by the Library of Congress in the United States and the British Library," says Crouch.

    "Many of what we now regard as the major institutional collections of cartography were actually put together by individuals in the 17th and 18th centuries. In the United Kingdom, the best collection of such material was made by King George III."

    The latter collection is known as the "K.Top," and can be found in the British Library.


    Amsterdam globemaker Willem Blaeu's wall maps are considered to be among the most influential and artistically virtuous masterpieces of baroque cartography, and appeared many times in Vermeer's paintings. The map of Africa shows the European conception of the continent at a time when the coastlines had been explored but the interior remained an enigma.

    6. The most expensive map was the first to name America

    The U.S. Library of Congress paid a record $10 million for German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller's Universalis Cosmographia, a wall map of the world printed in 1507.

    It's the only surviving copy of the map, which was the first to use the name "America."

    In 2007, Crouch brokered the sale of the most expensive atlas ever sold -- the 1477 Bologna Ptolemy, the first printed atlas -- for Ł1.9 million ($3.12 million).


    7. The best place to shop for maps is in the Netherlands


    The annual European Fine Art and Antiques Fair in Masstricht, Netherlands is often considered the world's best place to shop for antique maps, classic and modern art and jewelry.

    More than 70,000 people visited the TEFAF Maastricht in 2013 to browse the 260 booths from 20 countries.

    "It's simply the biggest and best fine art fair in the world," says Crouch.


    Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2014/02/02/tr...iref=obnetwork

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    I love maps. Thanks for posting this.

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