File:Chatelain, Picart et al. Carte tres Curieuse 1713-1720 UTA (bottom).jpg

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Title
Français : Carte tres Curieuse de la Mer du Sud, contenant des Remarques Nouvelles et tres utiles non seulement sur les Ports et Iles de cette Mer mais aussy sur les Principaux Pays de l'Amerique tant Septentrionale que Meridionale
Description
English: Châtelain's highly decorative historical and geographical map of the "New World" embodies the European concept of the cabinet of curiosities, wherein encyclopedic collections of objects were strewn together in an effort to impress, educate, and entertain viewers. Although the general composition is original, many of the pictorial vignettes were directly copied from other maps and travel accounts by the map's engraver, Bernard Picart. The map's illustrations are thus a compilation of New World visual imagery just as the map itself is a compilation of other maps, surveys, and descriptions. For examples, the busy anthropomorphic beavers before Niagara Falls and the scenes of cod fishing on the Grand Banks off Newfoundland that illustrate some of the lucrative products found in North America had already been copied over and over, having originally appeared on a wall map with engraved illustrations by Nicolas Guérard for French cartographer Nicolas de Fer. The image of Niagara Falls itself first appeared in the 1697 account written by the first European eyewitness to the natural landmark, Louis Hennepin. The portrait tondos of European explorers add historical interest and context. Some of the ethnographic depictions of native ceremonies and a bizarrely shaped Aztec pyramid demonstrate that illustrators had as much difficulty as cartographers in authenticating their sources.
Topographically, the map offers only a modest amount of information and was in its time far behind more advanced and innovative French maps of the period by Guillaume Delisle. In the North American Southwest, for example, California is an island, the Mississippi is dangerously close to Texas, and the "Riviere du Nord ou [or] Brave" lacks the Big Bend but at least flows into the Gulf of Mexico and not into the "Mer de Californie" as on some earlier maps.
Date between 1713 and 1720
date QS:P,+1750-00-00T00:00:00Z/7,P1319,+1713-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1326,+1720-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Source UTA Libraries Cartographic Connections: map / text
Creator
Henri Chatelain  (1684–1743)  wikidata:Q18511671
 
Henri Chatelain
Alternative names
Henri Abraham Chatelain
Description French cartographer
Date of birth/death 22 February 1684 Edit this at Wikidata 9 May 1743 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Paris Edit this at Wikidata Amsterdam Edit this at Wikidata
Work location
Paris, St. Martins, London, the Hague, Amsterdam
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q18511671
Zacharias Chatelain  (1690–1754)  wikidata:Q28343295
 
Description book printer, publisher and printer
Date of birth/death 20 April 1690 Edit this at Wikidata June 1754 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Amsterdam Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q28343295
Credit line
English: UTA Libraries Special Collections, Gift of Virginia Garrett
Georeferencing Georeference the map in Wikimaps Warper If inappropriate please set warp_status = skip to hide.
 Bibliographic data
Publication
Atlas Historique
Place of publication Amsterdam
Publisher
Frères Châtelain
L’Honoré & Châtelain
 Archival data
institution QS:P195,Q1230739
Dimensions height: 41 cm (16.1 in); width: 141 cm (55.5 in)
dimensions QS:P2048,41U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,141U174728
artwork-references

van Waning, Jan W. (Spring 2010). "Chatelain's Atlas Historique New Evidence of Its Authorship". Journal of the International Map Collectors' Society (120).

Raymonde L'italien, Jean-François Palomino, Denis Vaugeois (2007) Mapping a Continent: Historical Atlas of North America, 1492-1814, Sillery, Quebec: Les ediions du Septentrion, pp. 12, 13, 142−143, 145

Dahl, Edward H. (December 1984). "The Original Beaver Map – De Fer's 1698 Wall Map of America". The Map Collector (29).

Schwartz and Ehrenberg The Mapping of America, no. 85 , pp. 146−47

Tooley Mapping of America, p. 130

Leighly California as an Island, no. xx
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Licensing

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Public domain

The author died in 1754, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

This file has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights.

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current15:32, 11 February 2022Thumbnail for version as of 15:32, 11 February 20221,473 × 473 (509 KB)Michael Barera (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Map |title = {{fr|'''''Carte tres Curieuse de la Mer du Sud, contenant des Remarques Nouvelles et tres utiles non seulement sur les Ports et Iles de cette Mer mais aussy sur les Principaux Pays de l'Amerique tant Septentrionale que Meridionale'''''}} |description = {{en|Châtelain's highly decorative historical and geographical map of the "New World" embodies the European concept of the cabinet of curiosities, wherein encyclopedic collections of obj...

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