1743 Seutter Celestial Illustration of the Comet of 1742

Cometa-seutter-1743
$2,500.00
Cometa qui Anno Christi 1742. Apparuit, Ex Observationibus, a die 13 Marty usque ad 15 Aprilis, plusquam Vigesies quinquies institutis ... - Main View
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1743 Seutter Celestial Illustration of the Comet of 1742

Cometa-seutter-1743

Luminous comet in Draco.
$2,500.00

Title


Cometa qui Anno Christi 1742. Apparuit, Ex Observationibus, a die 13 Marty usque ad 15 Aprilis, plusquam Vigesies quinquies institutis ...
  1743 (dated)     20.5 x 24 in (52.07 x 60.96 cm)

Description


A striking 1743 Seutter illustration of the Comet of 1742, an exceptionally bright comet whose appearance inspired a wave of intellectual thought and scientific study.
A Closer Look
This exquisite engraving is composed of four distinct sections. The first features two decorative cartouches: one displaying the title along with details about the comet's appearance and trajectory relative to Earth's position, and the other offering commentary on the comet's apparent size and its movement through the constellations Draco, Cassiopeia, Ursa Major, and Ursa Minor. The third section presents a planar diagram of an armillary sphere centered on Earth, illustrating the comet's path. The fourth section showcases a celestial chart that maps the comet's full journey across the sky from March 13 to April 28, 1742.
Comet of 1742
The Comet of 1742, today cataloged as C/1742C1, was a celestial event first observed in March 1742 in the constellation Draco. Its path was recorded by various astronomers, including Jacques Cassini, Leonhard Euler, and Thomas Wright, among many others. Described exceptionally bright, the comet was visible to the naked eye and attracted widespread attention across Europe - and, along with it, portents of impending doom. Its appearance coincided with a period of increasing scientific interest in astronomy, and its luminous passage contributed to ongoing discussions about the nature of comets, their orbits, and their potential impact on Earth. The Comet of 1742 added to the growing body of astronomical observations that would later influence studies of periodic comets, including the work of Edmond Halley.
Publication History and Census
This map was engraved and published by Matthäus Seutter in Augsburg in 1743, one year after the year of the comet. Scarce to the market but well represented institutionally.

Cartographer


Matthäus Seutter (1678 - 1757) was one of the most important and prolific German map publishers of the 18th century. Seutter was born the son of a goldsmith but apprenticed as a brewer. Apparently uninspired by the beer business, Seutter abandoned his apprenticeship and moved to Nuremberg where he apprenticed as an engraver under the tutelage of the prominent J. B. Homann. Sometime in the early 1700s Seutter left Homann to return to Augsburg, where he worked for the prominent art publisher Jeremiad Wolff (1663 - 1724), for whom he engraved maps and other prints. Sometime around 1717 he established his own independent cartographic publishing firm in Augsburg. Though he struggled in the early years of his independence, Seutter's engraving skill and commitment to diversified map production eventually attracted a substantial following. Most of Seutter's maps are heavily based upon, if not copies of, earlier work done by the Homann and De L'Isle firms. Nonetheless, by 1731/32 Seutter was one of the most prolific publishers of his time and was honored by the German Emperor Karl VI who gave him the title of Imperial Geographer, after which most subsequent maps included the Avec Privilege designation. Seutter continued to publish until his death, at the height of his career, in 1757. Seutter had two engraver sons, Georg Matthäus Seutter (1710 - 173?) and Albrecht Carl Seutter (1722 - 1762). Georg Matthäus quit the business and relocated to Woehrdt in 1729 (and probably died shortly thereafter), leaving the family inheritance to his wastrel brother Albrecht Carl Seutter, who did little to advance the firm until in own death in 1762. Following Albrecht's death, the firm was divided between the established Johann Michael Probst (1727 - 1776) firm and the emerging firm of Tobias Conrad Lotter. Lotter, Matthäus Seutter's son-in-law, was a master engraver and worked tirelessly on behalf of the Suetter firm. It is Lotter, who would eventually become one of the most prominent cartographers of his day, and his descendants, who are generally regarded as the true successors to Matthäus Seutter. (Ritter, M. Seutter, Probst and Lotter: An Eighteenth-Century Map Publishing House in Germany., "Imago Mundi", Vol. 53, (2001), pp. 130-135.) More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Good. Some discolorations and margin soiling.

References


OCLC 53179714, 556944420. Kanas, N, Star Maps: History, Artistry, and Cartography, (2nd Ed.), #6.3.4.5.