INDIA, 1692
Impero del Gran Mogol
60 x 45 cm copperplate engraving, 66 x 47.5 cm sheet size, modern hand colour, Venice, 1692
We are
pleased to offer this scarce original
map of the Mughal
Empire (encompassing what is today northern
India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, and
Burma) at the height of its power by Vincenzo Coronelli (1650-1718) of
Venice, a Franciscan friar who also served as Royal Geographer
to Louis XIV of France. Perhaps best known for his magnificent
globes, Coronelli
produced over 400 maps throughout his long career and this
scarce and important map is an example of his meticulous
emphasis on detail and accuracy while still retaining charming
baroque embellishments. In 1684 Coronelli founded the first
modern geographical society - the Accademia Cosmografica
degli Argonauti, which eventually attained a membership
of over 200 cartographers and scholars throughout Europe. The
basic cartography follows the traditional 17th century Dutch
"Magni Mogolis Imperium" format of essentially identical maps
issued by Hondius, Blaeu, Jansson and others which were in
turn based on British East India Company charts including a
survey by the
British explorer William
Baffin.
However, Coronelli also draws on Venetian sources for
extensive text entries regarding different cities and peoples
of the region that provides a rich portrait of European
understanding of the Mughal Empire during the long reign of Emperor
Aurangzeb. Coronelli's bold engraving style, the large
format and charming decorative elements - all accentuated here
by hand colour work of the very highest calibre - have
deservedly made this one of the most sought after antiquarian
maps of the region and this example will make an elegant
presentation if matted and framed.
We
begin
our survey of the map with the handsome
title cartouche featuring a martial theme -
note "Cabul" (Kabul) in what is now
Afghanistan:
A
separate dedication cartouche honours
Venetian statesman Girolamo Correr (aka
Corraro), a patron of Coronelli's geographic
academy:
Moving
to the map itself we find the spurious Lake
Chiang
Mai or Lake Chiamay as the source for
rough representations of the Yangtze,
Mekong, Salween and Brahmaputra rivers - a
fiction first reported by the Portuguese
Antonio de Faria y Sousa in 1543.
Coronelli's notation discusses seasonal,
annual flooding:
Mouths
of the Ganges:
Source
of the Ganges - note variants of spelling
for town names, with some listing as many as
four:
Gulf of Khambhat - to get a sense of
map detail consider that the distance from
Chittaurgarh (here shown as "Chitor") to Burhanpur
(here shown as "Brampore") at lower right as seen in
the enlarged photo below measures just 8.5 cm actual
size:
And
people in the region near Kandahar are
described as warlike:
The western part of the Indian Ocean, by Vincenzo Maria Coronelli, 1693, from his system of *"global gores"*; with detailed scans of: *the cartouche*; *the Makran coast*; *the Gujarat coast*; *the northern Deccan*; *the south*
"Mare L Indiae. This original Globe Gore map section - from Coronelli's 42in Globe - of India, Persia, Oman and the Maldives was published by Vincenzo Maria Coronelli (1650 - 1718) in the 1693 Venice edition of Libro dei Globi. Plate size: - 11 ½in x 11in (295mm x 280mm)."
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