1851 Stulpnagel Map Eastern Africa, Arabia and Persia

Arabia-stulpnagel-1845
$450.00
Mittel-und-Nord-Africa (östl. Theil) und Arabien. - Main View
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1851 Stulpnagel Map Eastern Africa, Arabia and Persia

Arabia-stulpnagel-1845

Detailing East Africa and Arabia.
$450.00

Title


Mittel-und-Nord-Africa (östl. Theil) und Arabien.
  1845 (dated)     12.75 x 15 in (32.385 x 38.1 cm)     1 : 14000000

Description


This is an 1845 Johann Friedrich von Stülpnagel map of eastern North Africa, Arabia, and Persia, with an inset map detailing Abyssinia in East Africa.
A Closer Look
The map presents the Middle East in detail, from as far west as Derma on the coast of Libya to the Kathiawar Peninsula and Gujarat, India in the east. It includes the Mediterranean Sea east of Greece, the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, and southern Uzbekistan. The southern limits extend to cover the coast of Somalia; southern Sudan and Darfur are well-detailed. Arabia is mapped meticulously, particularly along pilgrimage routes to Mecca and Medina.

The map's best detail is along the Nile River, especially the Blue Nile and its source at Lake Tsana in the Ethiopian Empire. This reflects current exploration as derived from Carl Zimmerman's 1843 survey, Karte zur Darstellung des Oberen Nillandes und des Östlichen Mittel-Afrika.
Publication History and Census
This map was created by Johann Friedrich von Stülpnagel and published by Justus Perthes in the 1845 edition of Stieler's Hand-Atlas über alle Theile der Erde atlas. Two examples of this 1845 edition appear in OCLC. The plate was much reworked and revised in 1867 for later editions of the atlas.

CartographerS


Johann Friedrich von Stülpnagel (March 13, 1786 - October 18, 1865) was a Prussian cartographer and military officer. He joined the Old Prussian Infantry Regiment No. 7 under the command of Carl Philipp von Owstin in August 1804, became and ensign in December 1806 and a second lieutenant in June 1807. He married Sophie Charlotte Keßler (1791 - 1866) in 1810, with whom he had ten children, eight of which survived him. During Napoleon's 1812 Russian campaign, von Stülpnagel was captured by the Russians at the end of November 1812. He participated in nearly every campaign between 1806 and 1815 and fought in Germany, Russian, the Netherlands, and France. He was forced to retire from the army in 1822 after an ear ailment caused him to become almost totally deaf. At this point, not being a wealthy individual, he moved to Wandersleben and started working as a draftsman for Justus Perthes, the geographic publisher, in 1823. At Justus Perthes he worked with Adolf Stieler on his 'Handatlas'. Von Stülpnagel soon ranked among one of the 'pillars of the business' and drafted numerous supplementary sheets and corrections for the Handatlas. Stülpnagel officially retired from the army on September 10, 1835 as a captain. Stülpnagel moved to Gotha after Stieler's death in 1836 and continued to work on Stieler's Handatlas with Heinrich Berghaus and Joseph Christoph Bär. He worked less and less beginning in 1863 because of age-related complaints. Von Stülpnagel died at seventy-nine years old and left behind his wife and eight children. More by this mapmaker...


Adolf Stieler (1775 – 1836) was a German cartographer who worked most of his life in the Justus Perthes Geographical Institute in Gotha. His atlases are deservedly held in high esteem for their excellence. His Handatlas was the leading German world atlas until the middle of the 20th century, parts of which were printed until 1944. Learn More...


Johan Georg Justus Perthes (September 11, 1749 - May 2, 1816) was one of the most important German cartographic engravers of the 19th century. He was born in the Thuringian town of Rudolstadt, the son of a court physician. In 1778, he began working as a bookseller in Gotha. Perthes began his publishing empire shortly thereafter with the 1784 issue of the famed survey of European nobility known as the Almanac de Gotha. In the next year, 1785, he founded the cartographic firm of Justus Perthes Geographische Anstalt Gotha. His son Wilhelm Perthes (1793 - 1853) joined the firm in 1814. Wilhelm had prior publishing experience at the firm of Justus Perthes' nephew, Friedrich Christoph Perthes, who ran a publishing house in Hamburg. After Justus Perthes died in 1816, Wilhelm took charge and laid the groundwork for the firm to become a cartographic publishing titan. From 1817 to 1890. the Perthes firm issued thousands of maps and more than 20 different atlases. Along with the visionary editors Hermann Berghaus (1797 - 1884), Adolph Stieler (1775 - 1836), and Karl Spruner (1803 - 1892), the Perthes firm pioneered the Hand Atlas. When Wilhelm retired, management of the firm passed to his son, Bernhardt Wilhelm Perthes (1821 – 1857). Bernhardt brought on the cartographic geniuses August Heinrich Peterman (1822 - 1878) and Bruno Hassenstein (1839 - 1902). The firm was subsequently passed to a fourth generation in the form of Berhanrd Perthes (1858 – 1919), Bernhard Wilhelm's son. The firm continued in the family until 1953 when, being in East Germany, it was nationalized and run as a state-owned enterprise as VEB Hermann Haack Geographisch-Kartographische Anstalt Gotha. The Justus family, led by Joachim Justus Perthes and his son Wolf-Jürgen Perthes, relocated to Darmstadt where they founded the Justus Perthes Geographische Verlagsanstalt Darmstadt. Learn More...

Source


Stülpnagel, Friedrich von, Hand-Atlas über alle Theile der Erde nach dem neuesten Zustande und über das Weltgebäude, (Gotha:Perthes) 1845.    

Condition


Very good. Faint waterstain; else excellent with original outline color.

References


OCLC 643291140.