1840 Ritter Map of Altai Krai and the Altai Republic

Altai-ritter-1839
$750.00
Karte vom Russischen Altai. - Main View
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1840 Ritter Map of Altai Krai and the Altai Republic

Altai-ritter-1839

Compiling European Explorations of the Altai.
$750.00

Title


Karte vom Russischen Altai.
  1839 (dated)     14 x 18.5 in (35.56 x 46.99 cm)     1 : 1500000

Description


This is Carl Ritter and Heinrich Mahlmann's 1839 map of the Altay region of central Asia. This map was compiled at a time when Europeans knew little of this region, but compiles the tracks of European explorers who, between 1771 and 1829, explored the mountainous region. It represents a revolutionary amalgam of explorers' accounts and speculation expounded through the lens of Ritter's German Romantic theories of the Earth as a 'cosmic individual'.
A Closer Look
Coverage embraces an area incorporating primarily modern-day Altai Krai and the western part of the Altai Republic. Kazakhstan lies to the southwest. The map notes the borders of the Russian and Chinese Empires, as well as the administrative regions of Kolyvan, Barnaul, Kuznetsovo, Charysh, and Ust-Kamenogorsk (Oskemen, in Kazakhstan.) The map is a dense amalgam of the accounts of the mainly German and Russian explorers and naturalists who had ventured into this tenuously understood and hitherto poorly mapped region. Its detail ranges from post roads, cities, fortresses, and other defenses to remote, outposts, villages, mines, factories, yurts, and even abandoned villages. The cartographers were assiduous in naming their sources, which appear in a table, along with voyage dates, in the upper right. That being said, the exceptional density of cartographic information presented belies the fact that this region was then only tenuously understood and poorly mapped.
Publication History and Census
This map was compiled by Carl Ritter and Heinrich Mahlmann. It was engraved by Mahlmann and published by Carl Ritter and Franz August von Etzel. It is extremely scarce, with no history on the market. We do see examples at the David Rumsey Collection, the University of Milwaukee, the British Library, Utrecht University, and Leiden University.

CartographerS


Carl Ritter (August 7, 1779 - September 28, 1859) was a German geographer. Born in Quedlinburg, Ritter attended the Schnepfenthal Salzmann School from the age of five. This school, which focused on the study of nature, would influence Ritter for the rest of his life. Ritter was introduced to Bethmann Hollweg, a banker from Frankfurt, after he graduated. Hollweg soon arranged for Ritter to tutor his children, in exchange for which Ritter would attend the University of Halle at Hollweg's expense. Ritter began tutoring Hollweg's children in 1798 and continued to do so for the following fifteen years. He even spent 1814 - 1819 in Göttingen to continue this work, which is also when Ritter began to devote himself exclusively to the study of geography. He also married his wife Lilli Kramer and wrote the first two volumes of his masterwork, Erdkunde, during his time in Göttingen. Ritter was named professor of history at the University of Frankfurt in 1819 and gained a position in the history department at the University of Berlin the following year. Ritter received his doctorate from the University of Berlin in 1821 and was appointed the first professor of geography there in 1825. He was elected to the Prussian Academy of Sciences in 1822 and became a corresponding member of the Société Asiatique de Paris two years later. Ritter founded the Berlin Geographical Society (Gesellschaft für zu Berlin) in 1828 and in 1849 was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was appointed curator of the Royal Cartographic Institute of Prussia in 1856 and died in Berlin in 1859. His masterwork, Erdkunde im Verhältnis zur Natur und zur Geschichte des Menschen oder allgemeine, vergleichende Geographie, als sichere Grundlage des Studiums und Unterricts in physicalischen und historischen Wissenschaften, consists of 19 parts and 21 volumes, and is one of the most extensive works of geography written by a single author. More by this mapmaker...


Heinrich Mahlmann (1812 - December 12, 1848) was a German engraver, lithographer, and cartographer based in Berlin. He worked with Carl Ritter (1779 - 1859), Franz August von Etzel (1784 - 1850), and Heinrich Kiepert (1818 - 1899), among others. We have found references to both 'Carl Heinrich Wilhelm Mahlmann' and 'Heinrich Christian Ludwig', some suggesting they were brothers, and both involved in cartography. Which Heinrich is which, however, is unclear. We believe the engraver who signed his work 'H. Mahlmann' is most likely the latter, 'Heinrich Christian Ludwig'. Learn More...


Franz August von Etzel (July 19, 1784 - December 25, 1850) was a Prussian military officer and the first 'Royal Prussian Telegraph Director'. He was born in Bremen to an Irish immigrant family of noble lineage. He initially applied to the Königlichen Ingenieurakademie in Potsdam, but was declined as his Irish noble heritage was not recognized. Instead, he studied pharmaceuticals, but retained a lifelong passion for technology and geography. He traveled to Paris to extend his studied in geography and mining engineering. It was there that he befriended Alexander von Humboldt (1769 - 1859), with whom he maintained a lifelong correspondence. From 1808 to 1810 he ran the 'Zum krönten Schwarzen Adler' pharmacy in Berlin. He joined the Prussian Army in 1810, taking part in the battles of Ligny and Waterloo. His superiors became aware of his geographical interests and assigned him to compile a military-topographical survey of the Rhine Province, which he worked on from 1816 - 1820. He then served as a geodesist. In 1831, back in Berlin, he was appointed to the 'Immediate Commission for the Establishment of the Telegraph'. He was commissioned to build a 550 km long optical telegraph line from Berlin to the Rhine Province. He also developed the code system and the procedural instructions for the operation of the telegraph and managed the entire system from 1835 as 'Royal Prussian Telegraph Director'. As such, he dealt intensively with the emerging electromechanical telegraphy, developed the corresponding equipment himself and carried out preparatory work for the introduction of the system in Prussia, which took place while he was still in office. His noble heritage was finally recognized on June 25, 1846, and he changed his name to 'von Etzel'. Unfortunately, in that same year he suffered a stroke, from which he never recovered. He was promoted to Major General before retiring, but died shortly thereafter. Learn More...

Source


Ritter, C., Erdkunde im Verhältnis zur Natur und zur Geschichte des Menschen oder allgemeine, vergleichende Geographie, als sichere Grundlage des Studiums und Unterricts in physicalischen und historischen Wissenschaften, (Atlas Accompaniment) (Berlin: G Reimer) 1816 - 1859. / Zimmerman, K., Atlas von Asien in Zwanzig Blaettern, Zu C. Ritter's Allgemeiner Erdkunde, II. Abtheilung. Entworfen und bearbeitet von J.L. Grimm und H. Mahlmann, herausgegeben von C. Ritter und F.A. O'Etzel. I. Lieferung, (Berlin: Verlag von G. Reimer) 1840.     Carl Ritter's Erdkunde im Verhältnis zur Natur und zur Geschichte des Menschen oder allgemeine, vergleichende Geographie, als sichere Grundlage des Studiums und Unterricts in physicalischen und historischen Wissenschaften [Geography in relation to nature and human history or general, comparative geography, as a secure basis for studying and teaching physical and historical sciences], is considered the largest work on geography by a single author. Published in parts from roughly 1816 - 1859, the expansive work consisted of 21 volumes in 19 parts. Despite its enormity, the work was left incomplete on Ritter's 1859 death. Although intended to embrace the whole world, only the African and Asian sections were finished. The work is significant not only for its size, and thoroughness, but also its introduction of Ritter's unique methodology and ways of conceptualizing geography as a 'cosmic individual'. He argued that geography was a 'physiology and comparative anatomy of the earth …. with rivers, mountains, glaciers, etc.' comparable to 'so many distinct organs, each with its own appropriate functions; and, as his physical frame is the basis of the man, determinative to a large extent of his life, so the structure of each country is a leading element in the historic progress of the nation'. Examples of the atlas volumes are exceedingly scarce, although text volumes occasionally appear on the market.

Condition


Very good. Some water staining and creases, else an attractive example with original outline color.

References


OCLC 1123112491. Rumsey 7925.012.