1852 Vuillemin Map of Holland and Belgium

HollandBelgium-vuillemin-1852
$150.00
Carte des Royaumes de Hollande et Belgique. - Main View
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1852 Vuillemin Map of Holland and Belgium

HollandBelgium-vuillemin-1852

$150.00

Title


Carte des Royaumes de Hollande et Belgique.
  1857 (undated)     13 x 10 in (33.02 x 25.4 cm)

Description


An uncommon and extremely attractive 1852 map of Holland (The Netherlands) and Belgium. The map covers from the North Sea to Luxembourg in the south. Throughout, the map identifies various cities, towns, rivers and assortment of additional topographical details. In 1830, the Belgian Revolution led to the secession of Belgium from the United Kingdom of Netherlands into the independent Kingdom of Belgium. Though Belgium had successfully made itself independent, the Netherlands refused to recognize the new country until the 1839 Treaty of London. The map features a beautiful frame style border. Prepared by A. Vuillemin for publication as plate no. 14 in Maison Basset's 1852 edition of Atlas Illustre Destine a l'enseignement de la Geographie elementaire.

CartographerS


Alexandre Aimé Vuillemin (1812 - 1880) was an engraver, publisher, and editor based in Paris, France in the middle of the 19th century. Despite a prolific publishing career, much of Vuillemin's life is shrouded in mystery. In 1852, he married Josephine Caroline Goret and they had at least one child, Ernestine Adèle Vuillemin, later in the same year. What is known is that his studied under the prominent French Auguste Henri Dufour (1798 - 1865). Vuillemin's most important work his detailed, highly decorative large format Atlas Illustre de Geographie Commerciale et Industrielle. More by this mapmaker...


Jean Denis Barbie du Bocage (1760 - 1825) and his son Jean-Guillaume Barbie du Bocage (1795 - 1848) were French cartographers and cosmographers active in Paris during late 18th and early 19th centuries. The elder Barbie du Bocage, Jean Denis, was trained as a cartographer and engraver in the workshops of mapmaking legend J. B. B. d'Anville. At some point Jean Denis held the post of Royal Librarian of France and it was through is associations with d'Anville that the d'Anville collection of nearly 9000 maps was acquired by French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The younger Barbie du Bocage, Jean-Guillaume, acquired a position shortly afterwards at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and, in time, became its head, with the title of Geographe du Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres. Learn More...

Source


Barbie du Bocage, J. D., Atlas Illustre Destine a l'Enseignement de la Geographie Elementaire, (Paris: Maison Basset) 1852.    

Condition


Very good. Blank on verso. Minor foxing throughout.