1827 Vandermaelen map of the Society Islands and French Polynesia
SocietyIslands-vandermaelen-1827
Title
1827 (undated) 18.5 x 22 in (46.99 x 55.88 cm) 1 : 1641836
Description
Many Rediscoveries
The nature of trans-Pacific voyages during the age of discovery was such that islands found during one voyage would often go unconfirmed for more than a century. For example, a French Polynesian atoll here is marked according to the several European encounters, and the respective names applied to it. Le Maire and Schouten's 1616 visit is noted, with their name Vlieghen Eiland translated to the French I. Aux Mouches (Island of Flies). The map records John Byron's visit during his 1765 circumnavigation, during which he named the atoll after the Prince of Wales. A 1791 date notes the name change to Dean's Island. The indigenous name for this atoll, not noted on the map, is Rangiroa.Publication History and Census
This map appeared in the sixth part, 'Océanique,' of Vandermaelen's Atlas universel de géographie physique, politique, statistique et minéralogique. The atlas was produced in one edition in 1827; only 810 complete sets were sold. The full set of six volumes appears in eleven institutional collections in OCLC, and the 6th volume alone is listed in 10, but the map is not independently cataloged.Cartographer
Philippe Marie Guillaume Vandermaelen (December 23, 1795 - May 29, 1869) was a Flemish cartographer active in Brussels during the first part of the 19th century. Vandermaelen is created with "one of the most remarkable developments of private enterprise in cartography," namely his remarkable six volume Atlas Universel de Geographie. Vandermaelen was born in Brussels in 1795 and trained as a globe maker. It was no doubt his training as a globe maker that led him see the need for an atlas rendered on a universal scale in order that all bodies could be understood in relation to one another. In addition to his great work Vandermaelen also produced a number of globes, lesser maps, a highly detailed 250 sheet map of Belgium, and several regional atlases. More by this mapmaker...