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Jacques-Nicolas Bellin
Port Royal, Jamaica, 1764
8.5 x 6.5 in
22 x 17 cm
22 x 17 cm
WIND4332
Copyright The Artist
£ 225.00
Jacques-Nicolas Bellin, Port Royal, Jamaica, 1764
Sold
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Plan of the city of Port Royal Jamaica, showing its situation on the promontory between Rackham Cay and Cagway Bay in Kingston Harbour. Jacques-Nicolas Bellin was one of the greatest...
Plan of the city of Port Royal Jamaica, showing its situation on the promontory between Rackham Cay and Cagway Bay in Kingston Harbour.
Jacques-Nicolas Bellin was one of the greatest 18th century map makers. He specialised in hydrography and was appointed to the French Hydrographic office at the young age of 18 in 1721. Twenty years later he was named the first “Ingenieur de la Marine” for the “Depot des Cartes et Plans de la Marine” as well as Hydrographer to Louis XV of France. Over a fifty year career, he published a multitude of important maps often from first hand sources provided by naval officers, merchants and government sources. His level of access was extraordinary. As well as publishing his own atlases, he was a contributor to many seminal French works on exploration, including Abbee Raynal’s “Histoire des Deux Indes”, Abbee Prevost’s “Histoire Generale des Voyages” and Pierre de Charlevoix’s “Histoire et Description Generale de la Nouvelle France”.
In 1762, Bellin decided to publish one of his most popular and accessible works: “Le Petit Atlas Maritime”. The work came out in 1764 in five volumes and proved extremely popular. Many of the maps were reduced versions which Bellin had either contributed or published previously. The five volumes usually contain between 575 and 590 maps with variations noted between individual examples. As the preparation took only two years, it is very likely that Bellin had a majority of these copper plates already available. The initial financial support for the atlas was from Etienne-Francois, Duc de Choiseul, a highly placed French politician who was credited for strengthening both the army and navy. Due to its accessibility, he perceived the ”Petit Atlas Maritime” as a method of publicising both the work of the “Depot de la Marine” and the Navy to the general public. Bellin includes a long dedication to Choiseul on the front of each volume.
For collectors today, the work presents one of the widest selection of extremely desirable smaller maps. They provide clear, concise and attractive geographical records of some of the most inaccessible and exotic areas of the world in the mid-18th century. Bellin was part of a group called “Les Philosophes”, the French counterpart to the pioneers of the English Age of Reason and his maps are a lasting legacy from the Age of French Enlightenment.
Port Royal was one of the most notorious privateer and later pirate republics in the world. For a period of approximately the last twenty years of the 17th century, it acted as the central focus for English and Dutch privateers who raided Spanish shipping and settlements in the Caribbean and New World. During that short period of time it gained such notoriety that it was contemporaneously described as the "wickedest city on earth". Although it was almost completely destroyed in an earthquake and accompanying tsunami in 1692, it was rebuilt. However, by then, the heyday of the pirate was over and it became an important dockyard and base for the Royal Navy. The commercial activity of the area was taken over by the newly built Kings Town or Kingston.
Original colour. [WIND4332]
Jacques-Nicolas Bellin was one of the greatest 18th century map makers. He specialised in hydrography and was appointed to the French Hydrographic office at the young age of 18 in 1721. Twenty years later he was named the first “Ingenieur de la Marine” for the “Depot des Cartes et Plans de la Marine” as well as Hydrographer to Louis XV of France. Over a fifty year career, he published a multitude of important maps often from first hand sources provided by naval officers, merchants and government sources. His level of access was extraordinary. As well as publishing his own atlases, he was a contributor to many seminal French works on exploration, including Abbee Raynal’s “Histoire des Deux Indes”, Abbee Prevost’s “Histoire Generale des Voyages” and Pierre de Charlevoix’s “Histoire et Description Generale de la Nouvelle France”.
In 1762, Bellin decided to publish one of his most popular and accessible works: “Le Petit Atlas Maritime”. The work came out in 1764 in five volumes and proved extremely popular. Many of the maps were reduced versions which Bellin had either contributed or published previously. The five volumes usually contain between 575 and 590 maps with variations noted between individual examples. As the preparation took only two years, it is very likely that Bellin had a majority of these copper plates already available. The initial financial support for the atlas was from Etienne-Francois, Duc de Choiseul, a highly placed French politician who was credited for strengthening both the army and navy. Due to its accessibility, he perceived the ”Petit Atlas Maritime” as a method of publicising both the work of the “Depot de la Marine” and the Navy to the general public. Bellin includes a long dedication to Choiseul on the front of each volume.
For collectors today, the work presents one of the widest selection of extremely desirable smaller maps. They provide clear, concise and attractive geographical records of some of the most inaccessible and exotic areas of the world in the mid-18th century. Bellin was part of a group called “Les Philosophes”, the French counterpart to the pioneers of the English Age of Reason and his maps are a lasting legacy from the Age of French Enlightenment.
Port Royal was one of the most notorious privateer and later pirate republics in the world. For a period of approximately the last twenty years of the 17th century, it acted as the central focus for English and Dutch privateers who raided Spanish shipping and settlements in the Caribbean and New World. During that short period of time it gained such notoriety that it was contemporaneously described as the "wickedest city on earth". Although it was almost completely destroyed in an earthquake and accompanying tsunami in 1692, it was rebuilt. However, by then, the heyday of the pirate was over and it became an important dockyard and base for the Royal Navy. The commercial activity of the area was taken over by the newly built Kings Town or Kingston.
Original colour. [WIND4332]
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