- Some tears in blank margins, 1x touching the image; trifle creased; a few brown stains in image near left edge.
= Sixt v. Kapff K263.
ADDED: 2 others similar of Vlissingen, publ. by the same: "'t Stadhuis te Vlissingen" (worn. Sixt v. Kapff 257) and "De stad Vlissingen uit de zee te zien" (damaged. Sixt v. Kapff 256).
= Table model zograscope with a large lense for viewing optical prints. Can be taken apart in 3 separate screwable pieces.
= Table model zograscope with a lense for viewing optical prints. Can be taken apart in 3 separate screwable pieces.
- With a few wormholes; mirror largely oxidized.
= Device to view optical views and other prints in private settings.
- Tiny closed tear and brown stain in the centre; nevertheless an attractive map.
- Trifle yellowed/ thumbed; paper along margins partly restored; upper margin unevenly trimmed just outside the border line; middle fold flattened. Nevertheless an attractive copy of a rare map.
= Betz 60.2, 2nd state (of 5), with all. elaborate borders and with "Sumptibus et typis Joannis Janssonii (...)" in the cartouche; Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8600:1C.1. Very rare. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXXV.
- A few vague foxed spots. = Rare.
= With a sl. later engr. legend "Bedeutung der Farben" on 2 sm. pieces of paper laid down below.
= Showing the exploration route of captain Cook between 12 May to 9 June 1778 in the south of Alaska with the Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound.
"Carte de la Virginie et du Mariland". Handcol. map, 17,7x22 cm., Paris, Pierre Bertholon, 1795.
- Sl. foxed.
= Created when the United States were internationally recognized, shown by the words "etats unis". Part of the Atlas Moderne Portatif. With some odd state boundaries.
AND 2 others: a small handcol. steelengr. view of Baltimore and a small col. lithographic view of New York and Williamsburg (Brooklyn), both ±1850.
- Somewhat browned and w. a few foxed spots.
= Bird's eye view of the harbour and city of Santo Domingo, nowadays the capital of the Dominican Republic. From A. MONTANUS, De Nieuwe en Onbekende Weereld: of Beschryving van America en 't Zuid-Land (Leyden, 1671).
"The Island of St. Christophers". Engr. map w. handcol. borders by H. MOLL, 18x25,6 cm., London, 1708.
- Sl. offsetting. = Small inset maps of Saint Kitts, Antigua and general map of the Carribeans.
AND 10 cut-out illustrations from A. MONTANUS, De Nieuwe en Onbekende weereld (...), showing people and animals from i.a. Mexico and Peru.
- Some offsetting of green colouring; green somewhat discoloured to brown; a few foxed spots.
= From part V of the Zee-Fakkel, published between 1683 and 1782. Koeman IV, p.374 [156]. Shows the northeastern coastline of Argentina, with Buenos Aires (and inset plan "El Poco De Haaven van Boinos Airos"), and the entire coastline of Uruguay, with its capital Montevideo (shown as a mountain, "Monte Vedio"). Rare.
- Two vague oblique folds in upper right corner; trifle dustsoiled in left part; a few foxed spots.
= The first detailed map of Aruba, "gevolgd naar de opmeting in den jare 1820 gedaan, onder directie van den Kapitein ter Zee W.A. van Spengler en in den jare 1825 met verscheidene nieuwe bepalingen verrykt door den Kapitein R.F. van Raders". In 1773 a large map on seventeen sheets was made, which showed only the island's coastline. The present map was made after the Netherlands regained possession of 'Curaçao en Onderhorigheden' in 1816. Up-to-date reports and maps of Curaçao and Bonaire were soon made, but a survey of Aruba had to wait until 1820, when Captain Van Spengler, port warden of Curaçao from 1816 onwards, offered to perform this task. A copy of his manuscript map eventually found its way to the 'Departement van oorlog of Koloniën' in The Hague. In 1824, news arrived in The Hague that gold was found on Aruba. Immediately, Captain R.F. van Raders was sent to the island to investigate. During his three visits to Aruba in 1824 and 1825, Van Raders carried Van Spengler's map or a copy of it, and added new information to it concerning the gold mining. In 1825, this manuscript map was made in print. For extensive information on the mapping of Aruba in this period, see Caert Thresoar 2009-3, p.65-70.
- Doubled w. Japanese, closing tear along lower part of middle fold and sm. acid-tear along border of Japan; remnants of Japanese paper (used for former mounting(?)) on verso, but not visible on recto.
= Decorative map by Witsen, who was mayor of Amsterdam and administrator of the East India Company (VOC), whence came his extensive geographical knowledge of Asia.
- Partly trifle browned; nevertheless fine. = Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8000:1A.
- Doubled; paper along margins partly restored; 2 oblique neatly closed tears in left part of the map; a few sm. closed tears sl. thumbed; right margin unevenly trimmed just outside the border line. Nevertheless an attractive copy of a rare map.
= Van der Krogt/ Koeman I, 8000:1C.1; first state (of 2). SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LXXV.
- Waterstain in centre lower margin, ±3,5 cm. within the image.
- A few foxed spots.
= With on verso: an elaborate woodcut decoration, possibly by A. DÜRER.