Leen Helmink Antique Maps & Atlases

www.helmink.com

Visscher after Buraeus
Tabula exactissima Regnorum SUECIAE ...


Certificate of Authentication


This is to certify that the item illustrated and described below is a genuine antique
map, print or book that was first produced and published in 1630, today 394 years ago.
March 29, 2024

Dr Leendert Helmink, Ph.D.
Cartographer(s)

Visscher after Buraeus

First Published

Amsterdam, 1630

This edition

1658

Size

46 x 54.5 cms

Technique

Copper engraving

Stock number

18885

Condition

mint

Antique map of Scandinavia by Visscher after Buraeus
Antique map of Scandinavia by Visscher after Buraeus

Description

Nicolaes Visser's very decorative map of Scandinavia and the Baltic. The plate was engraved in 1630 by Abraham Goos, and first published in the 1630 atlas appendix by Jansson.

The map is based on the 1626 wall map of Scandinavia in six sheets by Andreas Buraeus (Anders Bure), "the father of Swedish cartography". The map is dedicated to Gustav Adolf, King of Sweden.

A pristine collector's example, in beautiful original color.



Claes Janszoon Visscher 1587-1652
Nicolaes Visscher I (son) 1618–1679
Nicolaes Visscher II (grandson) 1649-1702
Elisabeth Visscher (widow of N. Visscher II)


"For nearly a century the members of the Visscher family were important art dealers and map publishers in Amsterdam. The founder of the business, Claes Janszoon Visscher, had premises near to those of Pieter van den Keere and Jodocus Hondius whose pupil he may have been.

From about 1620 he designed a number of individual maps, including one of the British Isles, but his first atlas consisted of maps printed from plates bought from van den Keere and issued as they stood with some additions of his own, including historical scenes of battles and sieges for which he had a high reputation.

Some maps bear the latinized form of the family name: Piscator. After Visscher's death his son and grandson, both of the same name, issued a considerable number of atlases, constantly revised and brought up to date but most of them lacking an index and with varying contents.

The widow of Nicholaes Visscher II carried on the business until it finally passed into the hands of Pieter Schenk."

(Moreland & Bannister).