1671 Ogilby / Montanus View of Fort Caroline (Jacksonville, Florida)

ArxCarolina-montanus-1671
$750.00
Arx Carolina. - Main View
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1671 Ogilby / Montanus View of Fort Caroline (Jacksonville, Florida)

ArxCarolina-montanus-1671

Early French Settlement in Florida.
$750.00

Title


Arx Carolina.
  1671 (undated)     11 x 12.5 in (27.94 x 31.75 cm)

Description


This is a beautifully realized 1671 Arnoldus Montanus view of Arx Carolina, or Fort Caroline, situated on the present-day St. John's River, in the vicinity of Jacksonville, Florida. It portrays the French Huguenot fort, imagined as it was before its 1565 destruction by the Spanish.
De Bry Source
While it includes no place names pinning the pictured fort to any specific location, the triangular layout of the city walls appears to be closely modeled on those depicted by Theodore De Bry in the passages pertaining to the construction of Fort Caroline in Jacques Le Moyne's Brevis Narratio, the most complete narrative of the French Huguenot efforts to settle in Florida. Both Le Moyne's text and De Bry's image were unambiguous that Fort Caroline was placed on the 'River of May' (later termed St. John's) and took a triangular form. While showing the fort incomplete, the De Bry view clearly illustrates the shape of the walls and the 16th-century-styled corner bastions visible here.
A Closer Look
The fort is shown with buildings both within and without and surrounded by a moat spanned by a single bridge. The surrounding forest is made up of a fanciful blend of trees: evergreen, deciduous, and palm. The scene is very active. Natives and Europeans are illustrated working and trading together while cargo comes and goes via land and sea. The river, in particular, is filled with small craft and warships. Indeed, this vibrant activity is among the surest signs of how imaginary the view is: would so new a settlement be so vital in the single year it survived? Would so vigorous a settlement be so easily quashed by the Spanish in 1565?
Publication History and Census
This view was prepared for Arnoldus Montanus' 1671 De Nieuwe en Onbekende Werlde, engraved by Jacob van Meurs, and was included unchanged in John Ogilby's book America Being the Latest, and most Accurate Description of the New World…, printed the same year. A further edition was printed c. 1710 by Van der Aa. This latter example was amended to include more text and is easily distinguishable from the 1671 printings of the view. Despite its occasional appearance on the market, we see only four examples listed in OCLC - these universally mis-describing it as Charleston, South Carolina.

CartographerS


John Ogilby (November 17, 1600 - 1676) was a Scottish translator and cartographer. John Ogilby's life seems to be one of extremes, teetering between wealth and poverty, success and failure. Ogilby was born near Edinburgh, Scotland, into a once wealthy family laid low by extreme debt. Struggling with poverty at every turn, Ogilby involved himself in various businesses ranging from dancing master, to actor, to tutor. In 1612, at age 12, Ogilby won a lottery run to advance the colonial interests of Virginia. His winning were sufficient to pay of many of his father's debts and apprentice himself to a dancing master. Ogilby proved a natural and graceful dancer and even made extra money tutoring his fellow apprentices. Starcrossed as he was, Olgiby's dancing career ended when a misstep when a misstep at a masked ball injured his leg and left him lame for live. Afterwards he managed to leverage his contacts in the dance world to secure a position as a dance instructor to the daughters of Sir Ralph Hopton. Hopton struck an immediate friendship with Olgiby and trained him in Military Science. Later Ogilby relocated to Ireland where he worked an as actor and later as Master of Revels. The Irish Rebellion of 1641 again dashed Ogilby's fortunes and forced him to flee Dublin by ship. On the way, the ship sunk but the survivors were rescued and eventually made their way to England, which was then under the strict rule of Oliver Cromwell. Ogilby took refuge at Cambridge where he mastered Greek and Latin. Following the Restoration of Charles II, Ogilby invested in his first major literary venture, a translation of Virgil into English. This work earned him the patronage of Charles II, despite the ridicule of prominent poets Dryden and Pope. Under Royal patronage Ogilby published several volumes relating to the Restoration. In short order he has established a successful London publisher based out of the Whitefriars district. This, unfortunately turned out to be a fateful choice of location as in 1666 the Great Fire of London tore through this are destroying Ogilby's publishing stock, home, and business. Once again Ogilby exhibited a remarkable phoenix-like ability to literally rise from the ashes. Shortly after the Great Fire, he began his most important ventures as a publisher of geographical works. In order to recover from the fire, Ogilby and his grandson were took positions as surveyors commissioned to create a large property map of London. The resultant map of London, "London Survey'd", was published in 1677 and earned Ogilby the honorific "Kings Cosmographer and Geographic Printer". His most famous works are his 1675 Road Atlas of England, Britannia which redefined road mapping, and his 1671 Atlas of the Americas. More by this mapmaker...


Arnoldus Montanus (c. 1625 - 1683) was a Dutch scholar, publisher, schoolmaster and author active in Amsterdam during the latter half of the 17th century. Montanus is a Latinized form of van den Berg or van Bergen. He studied theology at Leiden University and was ordained a minister in 1653. In 1667 he became headmaster of the Latin School of Schoonhoven, where he died in 1683. Most of Montanus's work was published in conjunction with engraver Jacob van Meurs and focused on travel narratives to Asia and the Americas. His most famous book, De Nieuwe en Onbekende Weereld, contains what is arguably the first view of New York City, the New Amsterdam. His other works offer up some of the earliest known descriptions of China and Japan. Much of Montanus' work was translated and published in English by John Ogilby. Learn More...


Jacob van Meurs (c. 1620 - 1680) was a Dutch engraver active in Amsterdam during the second half of the 17th century. Van Meurs is best known for his collaboration with Arnoldus Montanus in the publication of numerous engraved maps and views for Montanus' various influential histories and travel narratives. Some of his most important works include a few of the earliest known views of the Americas (including New York City), Japan, and China. Learn More...

Source


Montanus, A., De Nieuwe en Onbekende Werlde, (Amsterdam) 1671.    

Condition


Excellent. Light toning, else fine.

References


OCLC 556873889.