946 résultats
2007500178017Editions Caramel 2007 2007. Relié.
28812Paris: Sanson. 1654. 36.6 x 48 cm. Original outline colour. Double page map of the south east England shown with the adjacent coastline of France and Belgium. Title cartouche to lower right corner. Blank on verso. Wear to centrefold with some loss Paris: (Sanson). 1654 unknown
165417463Paris: N. Sanson 1654. Other. In very good condition. 365 by 580mm 14¼ by 22¾ inches. 365 by 580mm 14¼ by 22¾ inches. Copper-engraving handcolored in outline when published. Fine and strong impression of this early decorative mid-seventeenth century map of this English regional map covering the area Chester Darbing Nottingham. by the famous French cartographer Nicolaus Sanson. Very detailled and naming many cities and villages as well many places along the coastline. Showing prominently the eastern part of central England. In the lower right corner with a large floral title cartouche and milage scale. N. Sanson unknown
16546571Paris 1654. Copper engraving 37 x 48 cms modern hand-colour blank verso. Nicolas Sanson 1600-1667 founder of the Sanson dynasty of map-makers is considered by many to be the father of the French school of cartography. He was a prolific and original map-maker admired for the clarity and scientific accuracy of his maps. Map unknown
1696M8798Paris : Pierre Mariette c. 1696. Very Good. Notes: Fine detailed map of the straight of the Bosphorus and the city of Constantinople. Size : 405x528 mm 15.94x20.79 Inches Coloring: Hand Colored Category: Maps Asia Near East Turkey; Pierre Mariette unknown
19105891910 1 Paris, Garnier, 1910, in-8 relié demi-percaline vieux rose.
1691LBW-3673Paris, H. Jaillot, 1691. En deux feuilles jointes de 573 x 884 mm.
053872Paris Chez Delaforest, libraire 1827 in 12 (16,5x11) 1 volume reliure plein veau lisse bleu nuit, large guirlande d'encadrement estampée à froid sur les plats avec un grand fleuron central estampé à froid, dos à nerfs orné de roulettes dorées et de fleurons estampés à froid, roulette dorée intérieure, roulette dorée sur les angles des coupes, tranches dorées, frontispice gravé (Céix et Alcyone), IX et 119 pages [1], quelques rares petites rousseurs claires éparses. Jean Baptiste Antoine Aime Sanson de Pongerville. Reliure attribuable à l'atelier R. P. Gout. Gout et son fils étaient relieurs établis à Montpellier, place Notre-Dame, au milieu du XIXe siècle. Gout fils fut relieur et laveur de livres. Il trouva des procédés pour rendre au papier sa blancheur première sans en altérer la substance, et reçut pour cela une récompense à l'Exposition universelle de 1855. Mathurin Régnier, Chartres, 1573 - Rouen 1613, poète satirique français. Bel exemplaire, fine reliure romantique issue du meilleur atelier installé à Montpellier au XIXe siècle. Bel exemplaire, fine et très fraîche reliure romantique
166925695Paris: Chez Pierre Mariette 1669. Copper-engraved map period hand colouring in outline. The most important French map of North America of its generation produced by the country's most esteemed family of cartographers.<br/> <br/>This very influential map was the official successor to Nicolas Sanson's 1650 map of North America. When Nicolas Sanson regarded as the father of the renaissance of cartography under Louis XIV died in July 1667 he left his flourishing business in the care of his eldest son Guillaume. The younger Sanson continued his father's partnership with the Mariette family who were prominent Parisian printers. Guillame was determined to publish a new updated edition of his father's Cartes Generales de toutes parties du Monde the first French general atlas originally published in 1657. The map of North America that appeared in the atlas although masterful was now considered to be geographically outdated. The present map which appeared in the second edition of the atlas featured updated toponymy and is geographically based on Nicolas Sanson's wall map of 1666 of which only two copies survive. While California is shown to be an island in line with popular perception unlike the map from 1650 it no longer attempts to build a geographical mythology in the place of the Pacific Northwest which was then totally unknown. Appropriately the magnificent baroque title cartouche which features swags and ribbons held aloft by putti has been placed to fill this enigmatic space. Cartographically the map appears to be based on Sanson's maps of "Le Canada ou Nouvelle France" and "Le Nouveau Mexique et La Floride." Lake Erie is shown in a recognizable form and the entire Great Lakes network is shown in greater detail than his father's map although the western lakes are still open-ended. On the East coast Long Island is shown and the shape of the Outer Banks is improved. Several Indian tribes are identified in New Mexico where the R. del Norte Rio Grande mistakenly flows from an interior lake and empties into the Mar Vermeio ou Mer Rouge Gulf of California. Iceland now appears in the Atlantic as well as a bit of Britain. The map proved to be highly successful and was sourced on numerous occasions by other mapmakers. The present copy is an example of Burden's first state of the map; a second state would be issued in 1690.<br/> <br/>Burden The Mapping of North America I 404; first state McCorkle New England in Early Printed Maps 669.4; McLaughlin California as an Island 45; Wagner Cartography of the Northwest Coast of America 399; Tooley "California as an Island" 8 in TooleyThe Mapping of America. Chez Pierre Mariette unknown books
169025648Paris: Chez Pierre Mariette 1690. Copper-engraved map period hand colouring in outline. Among the most important French maps of North America of the second half of the 17th century produced by the country's most esteemed family of cartographers.<br/> <br/>This very influential map was the official successor to Nicolas Sanson's 1650 map of North America. When Nicolas Sanson regarded as the father of the renaissance of cartography under Louis XIV died in July 1667 he left his flourishing business under the charge of his eldest son Guillaume. The younger Sanson continued his father's partnership with the Mariette family who were prominent Parisian printers. Guillame was determined to publish a new updated edition of his father's Cartes Generales de toutes parties du Monde the first French general atlas originally published in 1657. The map of North America that appeared in the atlas although masterful was now considered to be geographically outdated. The present map which appeared in the second edition of the atlas featured updated toponymy and is geographically based on Nicolas Sanson's wall map of 1666 of which only two copies survive. While California is shown to be an island in line with popular perception unlike the map from 1650 it no longer attempts to build a geographical mythology in the place of the Pacific Northwest which was then totally unknown. Appropriately the magnificent baroque title cartouche which features swags and ribbons held aloft by putti has been placed to fill this enigmatic space. Cartographically the map appears to be based on Sanson's maps of "Le Canada ou Nouvelle France" and "Le Nouveau Mexique et La Floride." Lake Erie is shown in a recognizable form and the entire Great Lakes network is shown in greater detail than his father's map although the western lakes are still open-ended. On the East coast Long Island is shown and the shape of the Outer Banks is improved. Several Indian tribes are identified in New Mexico where the R. del Norte Rio Grande mistakenly flows from an interior lake and empties into the Mar Vermeio ou Mer Rouge Gulf of California. Iceland now appears in the Atlantic as well as a bit of Britain. The map proved to be highly successful and was sourced on numerous occasions by other mapmakers. The present copy is an example of Burden's second state of the map with the date changed to 1690 in the cartouche and with additional place names and other changes: ".with minor alterations Terre de Jesso and Conibas inserted but without a coastline. Detroit d'Anian placed immediately above California and a few changes in spelling . New Albion is inserted in the north of the island and New York replaces New Amsterdam" Tooley.<br/> <br/>Burden The Mapping of North America 404 second state; McCorkle New England in Early Printed Maps 669.4; cf. McLaughlin California as an Island 45; cf. Wagner Cartography of the Northwest Coast of America 399; Tooley "California as an Island" 9 in TooleyThe Mapping of America. Chez Pierre Mariette unknown books
165124777Paris: N. Sanson & P. Mariette 1651. Copper-engraved map with original outline colour. The rare second state of this highly important map of North America by the founder of the French School of cartography.<br/> <br/>This very rare map is the most geographically progressive portrayal of the continent made at its time and was not superseded until Vincenzo Maria Coronelli's map of 1688. Importantly it is the first map to depict the Great Lakes in a recognizable form and the first to name Lake Ontario and Lake Superior. In his rendering of the region Sanson benefited from having received a copy of The Jesuit Relations published in Paris in 1649 a detailed account by French missionaries who had traveled in the region. Most notably this included Father Paul Ragueneau's account of his visit to Niagara Falls and Jean Nicollet's discovery of Lake Michigan "Lac des Puans" in 1634. Down the St. Lawrence River from the lakes Montréal is named the settlement having been founded by the Sieur de Maisonneuve in 1642. Elsewhere to the north a mysterious strait weaves over "New South Wales" on Hudson's Bay terminating in the interior of the continent a blank space labeled as "Mer Glaciale". This alludes to the existence of a much hoped-for Northwest Passage. On the eastern seaboard the map notes "Nouvelle Amsterdam" in the place of present day New York and is the first printed map to label "Nouvelle Suede" referring to the Swedish colony centered on Fort Christina founded on the site of present-day Wilmington Delaware in 1638. To the far southwest Sanson based his depiction on the Father Alonso Benavides Memorial a travel account of New Mexico published in Madrid in 1630. It is the first printed map to label "Santa Fe" which is incorrectly shown to be on the banks of the Rio Grande and the domains of various native tribes such as the "Apache" "Navajo" and the "Taosij" Taos. To the west California is shown as a large island and features some of the same nomenclature as found on Johannes de Laet's map of 1630. A striking aspect of the map is the sinusoidal projection employed by Sanson that essentially places the globe on an elliptical graticule creating a very pleasing aesthetic. The composition is finished by an extremely elegant Baroque title cartouche featuring swags of fruit and vegetation. Nicholas Sanson was born in the town of Abbeville in Picardy. Something of a child prodigy by the age of eighteen he could already be found in Paris drafting his own maps. There he quickly rose to become Royal Geographer to Louis XIII in 1630. He maintained the position upon the ascension of the "Sun King" Louis XIV in 1643 and later served as tutor to the ambitious young monarch. In 1644 he formed a lucrative partnership with Paris publisher Pierre Mariette with the objective of producing a great atlas that could rival those of the Amsterdam houses such as Blaeu and Jansson. The present map was devised as one of the most important maps in the atlas. The first state of the map was printed in 1650 and the present second state appeared a year later. The atlas itself entitled Les Cartes Générales de toutes les parties du Monde was not finally assembled until 1658. It was however a landmark moment in the history of French cartography being the first folio atlas produced in that country. The extremely high quality of Sanson's work motivated other French mapmakers to improve the standard of their production. Sanson also greatly influenced Louis XIV's chief minister Jean-Baptisite Colbert to heavily fund cartographic projects. This gave rise to a great French School of cartography that was to eventually wrest dominance of the mapmaking market from the Dutch by the 1680s. After Sanson's death in 1667 his work was continued by his sons Guillaume d.1703 and Adrian d.1708. The first state of this map is extremely rare with Burden citing but two copies in private American collections. This second state is also quite rare and can be recognized by addition of a coastline north west of California but with Lake Ontario unshaded and with the appearance of a river system. "With his 1650 Map of North America Sanson had introduced a great deal of information concerning the nomenclature of American Indians with words such as Apache and Navajo appearing on printed maps for the first time. He was also the first cartographer to show Santa Fe as the capital of New Mexico . an extraordinary document of the cultural and geographical resources known in the centers of learning in Europe" Martin & Martin.<br/> <br/>Burden The Mapping of North America I 294 state 3; Leighly California as an Island p.33 pl.7; McLaughlin The Mapping of California as an Island 12; Pastoreau Les Atlas Français XVIe-XVIIe Siècles p.387-9; Wagner The Cartography of the Northwest Coast of America to the Year 1800 360 pp.130-2; Wheat Mapping of the Transmississippi West I p.39; cf. Martin & Martin Maps of Texas and the Southwest p. 83 plate 10. N. Sanson & P. Mariette unknown books
165924778Paris: N. Sanson & P. Mariette 1659. Copper-engraved map with original outline colour. The third state of this highly important map of North America by the founder of the French School of cartography.<br/> <br/>This very rare map is the most geographically progressive portrayal of the continent made during its generation and was not superseded until Vincenzo Maria Coronelli's map of 1688. Importantly it is the first map to depict the Great Lakes in a recognizable form and the first to name Lake Ontario and Lake Superior. In his rendering of the region Sanson benefited from having received a copy of The Jesuit Relations published in Paris in 1649 a detailed account by French missionaries who had traveled in the region. Most notably this included Father Paul Ragueneau's account of his visit to Niagara Falls and Jean Nicollet's discovery of Lake Michigan "Lac des Puans" in 1634. Down the St. Lawrence River from the lakes Montréal is named the settlement having been founded by the Sieur de Maisonneuve in 1642. Elsewhere to the north a mysterious strait weaves over "New South Wales" on Hudson's Bay terminating in the interior of the continent a blank space labeled as "Mer Glaciale". This alludes to the existence of a much hoped-for Northwest Passage. On the eastern seaboard the map notes "Nouvelle Amsterdam" in the place of present day New York and is the first printed map to label "Nouvelle Suede" referring to the Swedish colony centered on Fort Christina founded on the site of present-day Wilmington Delaware in 1638. To the far southwest Sanson based his depiction on the Father Alonso Benavides Memorial a travel account of New Mexico published in Madrid in 1630. It is the first printed map to label "Santa Fe" which is incorrectly shown to be on the banks of the Rio Grande and the domains of various native tribes such as the "Apache" "Navajo" and the "Taosij" Taos. To the west California is shown as a large island and features some of the same nomenclature as found on Johannes de Laet's map of 1630. To the north an entirely unknown realm is named "Conibas" a mythical land that lay between North America and Asia. A striking aspect of the map is the sinusoidal projection employed by Sanson that essentially places the globe on an elliptical graticule creating a very pleasing aesthetic. The composition is finished by an extremely elegant Baroque title cartouche featuring swags of fruit and vegetation. Nicholas Sanson was born in the town of Abbeville in Picardy. Something of a child prodigy by the age of eighteen he could already be found in Paris drafting his own maps. There he quickly rose to become Royal Geographer to Louis XIII in 1630. He maintained the position upon the ascension of the "Sun King" Louis XIV in 1643 and later served as tutor to the ambitious young monarch. In 1644 he formed a lucrative partnership with Paris publisher Pierre Mariette with the objective of producing a great atlas that could rival those of the Amsterdam houses such as Blaeu and Jansson. The present map was devised as one of the most important maps in the atlas. The first state of the map was printed in 1650 a second state appeared a year later and the third state in 1659. The atlas itself entitled Les Cartes Générales de toutes les parties du Monde was not finally assembled until 1658. It was however a landmark moment in the history of French cartography being the first folio atlas produced in that country. The extremely high quality of Sanson's work motivated other French mapmakers to improve the standard of their production. Sanson also greatly influenced Louis XIV's chief minister Jean-Baptisite Colbert to heavily fund cartographic projects. This gave rise to a great 'French School' of cartography that was to eventually wrest dominance of the mapmaking market from the Dutch by the 1680s. After Sanson's death in 1667 his work was continued by his sons Guillaume d.1703 and Adrian d.1708. The first state of this map is extremely rare with Philip Burden citing only two copies in private American collections; this third state can be recognized by the addition of hachuring around Lake Ontario.<br/> <br/>Burden The Mapping of North America I 294; Leighly California as an Island p.33 pl.7; McLaughlin The Mapping of California as an Island 12; Pastoreau Les Atlas Français XVIe-XVIIe Siècles p.387-9; Wagner The Cartography of the Northwest Coast of America to the Year 1800 360 pp.130-2; Wheat Mapping of the Transmississippi West I p.39. N. Sanson & P. Mariette unknown books
1792M4892Amsterdam 1792. Excellent. Notes: North America revised from the Sanson/Jaillot maps. California is shown as a peninsula but named "isle de California" to the northwest is "Mer de Iesso" and beyond that a small stretch of coastline "Terre de Iesso ou Ieco." The Great Lakes are defined if not with great accuracy a number of settlements in Nouveau Mexico are identified and a R. del Norte flows southwest from a large lake near Taosii to the Gulf of California. Size : 480x580 mm 18.875x22.875 Inches Coloring: Original Hand Coloring Category: Maps North America; Maps Central America; Maps West Indies General unknown
1698M10786Paris 1698. Very Good. Notes: A charming large scale 17th century map of South America with two decorative cartouches and original outline colouring. Size : 460x648 mm 18.11x25.51 Inches Coloring: Original Outline Coloring Category: Maps South America Continent; unknown
1691M1345Paris 1691. Very Good. Size : 590x885 mm 23.25x34.875 Inches Coloring: Hand Colored in Outline Category: ; Maps South America Continent unknown
1650309461Paris: Pierre Mariette 1650. unbound. Abraham Peyrounin. Map. Engraving with original outline color. Image measures 15 3/4" x 21 3/4"<br/> <br/> This exceptionally fine map of South America covers the continent in fine detail. Coastlines are extensively labeled and mountains beautifully rendered in profile. The Orinoco and Amazon Rivers as well as Rio de la Plata are prominently rendered. Sanson refrains from drawing a southern coastline to Tierra del Fuego and the relatively unknown Amazon region is depicted in minimal detail. Sanson does however include the mythical lake "Lac de Parime" and the city of gold "Manoa del Dora" between the Orinoco and Amazon rivers. Nice dark impression. In very good condition. Minor dampstain to lower margin not affecting the image and some faint stains near the center of the map - otherwise clean and bright. Hard to find. <Br> <br> Nicolas Sanson 1600-1667 is considered the founder of the French school of cartography. In reaction to the prevailing trend of Dutch lavishness Sanson favored minimal details focusing rather on accurate cartography than ornament.<br/> <br/> Pierre Mariette unknown
104573aafA Paris chez Langlois, s.d., (ca. 1700), 51x72 cm, carte aux contours coloriée, cartouche-titre en haut a droite. Eschelle en bas a gauche. Tachée d’eau dans la partie haute de la feuille, / Oben am Rand leicht wasserfleckig, 1 Blatt.
166033638ABA Paris chez P. Mariette 1660. Blattgrösse: 44x58 cm. Grenzkolorierte Karte (36,7x55 cm) von Nicolas Sanson, gestochen von Somer.
RO80019263DEUX-TROIS / BERNARDIN-BECHET. Non daté. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Manque en coiffe de pied, Intérieur frais. 142 pages. Nombreuses figures en noir et blanc. Coiffe en tête abîmée, avec charnières fendues.. . . . Classification Dewey : 794.1-Echecs
R200139717Librairie Bernardin-Béchet. non daté. In-12. Broché. A relier, 1er plat abîmé, Dos abîmé, Quelques rousseurs. 142 pages, nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - papier jauni, 1er plat manquant, pliure et déchirure sur le 2e plat, dos partiellement manquant, ouvrage désolidarisé, déchirure et tampon en page de faux-titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 794.1-Echecs
bf3466Deux-Trois Broché In-12 (19*12), dos broché, couverture souple illustrée, 142pp., explications des termes techniques, notions de jeu, reproductions de parties, rousseurs, dos abîmé, état correct. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
170054035Amsterdam: 1700. Map of Germany divided into regions which at the time extended over much of the Low Countries. Maps by Sanson in original colour are rare. Nicolas Sanson was founder of the French school of mapmakers at a time when the leadership in European cartography passed from the Low Countries to France. This map was published in Brion's treatise on globes. Nicolas Brion was a famous French mathematical and scientific instrument maker. L'Usage des Globes. Copper engraving. Fine condition. Original colour. Size: 23.5 x 18.5 cm. unknown
1892RO80034277LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 2ème édition. 1892. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 170 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 590-Zoologie
1892R320041470LIBRAIRIE AGRICOLE DE LA MAISON RUSTIQUE. 1892. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 172 pages - Renfort adhésif en coiffes en tete et pied.. . . . Classification Dewey : 636.089-Art vétérinaire
1650M6678Paris: Pierre Mariette c. 1650. Very Good;. Notes: Title cartouche bordered by two outward-facing birds of prey.<br><br>Norwich writes: "This is an early Sanson map. An odd feature is the name Barditus Mons given to a long chain of mountains running continuously from somewhere in Angolato Algoa Bay. No place names appear even on the coast of the southern part of the continent which is labelled 'Agi Symba' a name usually referring to the northern African region and inhabitants are 'Anthropophagi Aethiopes' or cannibals." Size : 396x553 mm 15.59x21.77 Inches Coloring: Hand Colored Reference: Norwich's Map 35. Category: Maps Africa Continent; Pierre Mariette unknown