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1849 Meyer Map of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz

Mecklenburg-meyer-1849
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Mecklenburg Schwerin und Strelitz. - Main View
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1849 Meyer Map of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz

Mecklenburg-meyer-1849


Title


Mecklenburg Schwerin und Strelitz.
  1849 (dated)     8.5 x 10.5 in (21.59 x 26.67 cm)     1 : 1000000

Description


This is a scarce 1849 map of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin by Joseph Meyer. It covers the two territories of the House of Mecklenburg from the Baltic Sea south as far as Wittstock and from Lubeck east to Prenzlau. Throughout the map identifies various cities, towns, rivers and an assortment of additional topographical details. Four insets detailing Gustrow, Neustrelitz, Rostock and Schwerin are included in the four quadrants.

Following the Napoleonic Wars, the Duchy of Mecklenburg Schwerin and the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz joined the German Confederation and were elevated to the status of Grand Duchy. After the German Unification, They would become the German States of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz in 1871.

This map was issued as plate no. 37 in Meyer's Zeitung Atlas. Although all the maps in this atlas are not individually dated, the title page and maps were often updated while the imprint with the date was not, causing confusion to the exact date for some of the maps. Moreover some maps in the atlas were taped in at a later date as an update to the atlas. We have dated the maps in this collection to the best of our ability.

Cartographer


Joseph Meyer (May 9, 1796 - June 27, 1856) was a German industrialist, merchant, and publisher, active in Germany in the early to mid 19th century. He is best known for publishing the encyclopedia Meyers Conversation-Lexicon. Born in Gotha, Germany, Meyer was educated as a merchant in Frankfurt am Main. He moved to London in 1816, but returned to Germany in 1820 after his stock speculations and business adventures fell through. Once back in Germany, he began by investing in the textile trade (1820 - 24). Meyer began creating business plans concerning how to start railways soon after the first steam-hauled railway began operation in December 1835. He founded the Deutsche Eisenbahnschienen-Compangie auf Actien (German Railway Rail joint stock company) in 1845. Meyer also found great success as a publisher, utilizing the system of serial subscriptions to publications, a new idea for the time. He founded a company, Bibliographisches Institut in Gotha in 1825, which published several versions of the Bible, works of classical literature, atlases, the world in pictures on steel engravings, and an encyclopedia. He moved the Institut from Gotha to Hildburghausen in 1828. He published several atlases, including Meyer's Groẞer Hand-Atlas (1843 - 1860). In 1848, he supported the Springtime of the Peoples Revolutions that took place throughout Germany and much of Europe. When the revolutions failed in 1849, Meyer was briefly imprisoned for his support of revolutionary activities. The revolutions also began to take a toll on Meyer's business interests, and when he died, in 1856, the Bibliographisches Institut was struggling financially. His son, Herrmann Julius Meyer, took over the firm, spearheading a rapid recovery. This, and other businesses prospered under Herrmann Julius (April 4, 1826 - March 12, 1909) and when he died in 1909, he led the richest family in Saxony, with more total wealth than the King of Saxony More by this mapmaker...

Source


Meyer, J., Meyer's Zeitung Atlas, 1852.     Meyer's Zeitung Atlas, formally titled Neuster Zeitungs-Atlas Fuer Alte und Neue Erdkunde was a popular German hand-atlas published in Heidelberg by Joseph Meyer between, roughly, 1848 and 1859. The atlas is well engraved in the German style with exceptionally dense detail and minimal decoration. Meyer's Atlas, and its constituent maps, are typically very difficult to date as later editions often contain earlier maps and earlier editions later paste-in updates. That said, the atlas' frequent updates and publication run during a turbulent decade provide a noteworthy cartographic record of the period.

Condition


Very good. Minor toning and spotting at places. Some white stains near bottom border.