Leen Helmink Antique Maps & Atlases

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Jodocus Hondius II
NOVA TOTIUS TERRARUM ORBIS ...


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 1621, today 403 years ago.
April 19, 2024

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

Jodocus Hondius II

First Published

Amsterdam, 1621

This edition

1680

Size

41.5 x 54 cms

Technique

Copper engraving

Stock number

18995

Condition

excellent

Antique map of the World by Jodocus Hondius II
Antique map of the World by Jodocus Hondius II

Description


The first printed map to show any of the Dutch discoveries in Australia, made by Jodocus Hondius the Younger between 1621-24. Here in the 1680 state with the impressum of Johannes van Keulen. All states are of exceptional rarity.

A milestone in the cartography of the fifth continent and the beginning of the cartographical development and the mapping of Australia. Of the utmost rarity and significance.

(Günter Schilder)

Condition

Very fine collector's condition



Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612)
Jodocus Hondius II (son) (1594-1629)
Henricus Hondius (son) (1597-1651)


Jodocus Hondius the Elder, one of the most notable engravers of his time, is known for his work in association with many of the cartographers and publishers prominent at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century.

A native of Flanders, he grew up in Ghent, apprenticed as an instrument and globe maker and map engraver. In 1584, to escape the religious troubles sweeping the Low Countries at that time, he fled to London where he spent some years before finally settling in Amsterdam about 1593. In the London period he came into contact with the leading scientists and geographers of the day and engraved maps in The Mariner's Mirrour, the English edition of Waghenaer's Sea Atlas, as well as others with Pieter van den Keere, his brother-in-law. No doubt his temporary exile in London stood him in good stead, earning him an international reputation, for it could have been no accident that Speed chose Hondius to engrave the plates for the maps in The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine in the years between 1605 and 1610.

In 1604 Hondius bought the plates of Mercator's Atlas which, in spite of its excellence, had not competed successfully with the continuing demand for the Ortelius Theatrum Orbis Terrarum. To meet this competition Hondius added about 40 maps to Mercator's original number and from 1606 published enlarged editions in many languages, still under Mercator's name but with his own name as publisher. These atlases have become known as the Mercator/ Hondius series. The following year the maps were re-engraved in miniature form and issued as a pocket Atlas Minor.

After the death of Jodocus Hondius the Elder in 1612, work on the two atlases, folio and miniature, was carried on by his widow and sons, Jodocus II and Henricus, and eventually in conjunction with Jan Jansson in Amsterdam. In all, from 1606 onwards, nearly 50 editions with increasing numbers of maps with texts in the main European languages were printed.

(Moreland and Bannister)