Digital Image: 1794 Laurie and Whittle Map of Table Bay, Cape Town, South Africa

TableBaySouthAfrica-lauriewhittle-1794_d
A Plan of Table Bay with the Road of th Cape of Good Hope, from the Dutch Survey Published by Joannes Van Keulen. - Main View
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Digital Image: 1794 Laurie and Whittle Map of Table Bay, Cape Town, South Africa

TableBaySouthAfrica-lauriewhittle-1794_d

This is a downloadable product.
  • A Plan of Table Bay with the Road of th Cape of Good Hope, from the Dutch Survey Published by Joannes Van Keulen.
  • Added: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 13:03:00
  • Original Document Scale: 1 : 40000
Scarce nautical chart of Table Bay, Cape Town, South Africa.
$50.00

Title


A Plan of Table Bay with the Road of th Cape of Good Hope, from the Dutch Survey Published by Joannes Van Keulen.
  1794 (dated)     19.5 x 22 in (49.53 x 55.88 cm)     1 : 40000

Description


FOR THE ORIGINAL ANTIQUE MAP, WITH HISTORICAL ANALYSIS, CLICK HERE.

Digital Map Information

Geographicus maintains an archive of high-resolution rare map scans. We scan our maps at 300 DPI or higher, with newer images being 600 DPI, (either TIFF or JPEG, depending on when the scan was done) which is most cases in suitable for enlargement and printing.

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Cartographer S


Laurie and Whittle (fl. 1794 - 1858) were London, England, based map and atlas publishers active in the late 18th and early 19th century. Generally considered to be the successors to the Robert Sayer firm, Laurie and Whittle was founded by Robert Laurie (c. 1755 - 1836) and James Whittle (1757-1818). Robert Laurie was a skilled mezzotint engraver and is known to have worked with Robert Sayer on numerous projects. James Whittle was a well-known London socialite and print seller whose Fleet Street shop was a popular haunt for intellectual luminaries. The partnership began taking over the general management of Sayer's firm around 1787; however, they did not alter the Sayer imprint until after Sayer's death in 1794. Apparently Laurie did most of the work in managing the firm and hence his name appeared first in the "Laurie and Whittle" imprint. Together Laurie and Whittle published numerous maps and atlases, often bringing in other important cartographers of the day, including Kitchin, Faden, Jefferys and others to update and modify their existing Sayer plates. Robert Laurie retired in 1812, leaving the day to day management of the firm to his son, Richard Holmes Laurie (1777 - 1858). Under R. H. Laurie and James Whittle, the firm renamed itself "Whittle and Laurie". Whittle himself died six years later in 1818, and thereafter the firm continued under the imprint of "R. H. Laurie". After R. H. Laurie's death the publishing house and its printing stock came under control of Alexander George Findlay, who had long been associated with Laurie and Whittle. Since, Laurie and Whittle has passed through numerous permeations, with part of the firm still extant as an English publisher of maritime or nautical charts, 'Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Ltd.' The firm remains the oldest surviving chart publisher in Europe. More by this mapmaker...


Johannes Van Keulen (1654 – 1715) was a Dutch cartographer active in Amsterdam during the late 17th century. Van Keulen was the son of Lucas van Keulen. Van Keulen's firm, ‘In de Gekroonde Lootsman' (In the Crowned Pilot), was founded in 1678 and registered with the Amsterdam bookseller's guild as 'Cross staff-maker and bookseller.' (The cross-staff is a nautical instrument used to determine latitude.) Two years later, in 1680, they obtained a patent from the States General of Holland and West Friesland to publish nautical charts and atlases. Together with his partner, the cartographer Claes Janz Vooght, Van Keulen published numerous atlases and nautical charts, including the Zee Atlas and Nieuwe Lichtende Zee-Fakkel. It was a massive five-volume atlas containing more than 130 nautical charts. The Zee-Fakkel established the Van Keulen firm as the pre-eminent maker of Dutch sea charts in the late 17th and early 18th century. In 1714, one year before Johannes Van Keulen's death, his son, Gerard van Keulen (1678 - 1726), took charge. Gerard continued to update and republish the Zee-Fakkel until his own death in 1726. The firm was later passed on to Gerard's son, Johannes II Van Keulen (1704 - 1755), who significantly updated the atlas, especially with regard to Asia, issuing the 1753 4th Volume, known as the 'Secret Atlas'. The final editions of the atlas were published by Gerard Hulst van Keulen (1733 - 1801), Joannes II's son. The final true Van Keulen edition of the Zee-Fakkel was published posthumously in 1803. It is noteworthy that though ostensibly controlled by the Van Keulen men, it was the Van Keulen widows who maintained and managed the firm in the periods following their husbands' deaths. After the death of Gerard Hulst Van Keulen's son, Johannes Hulst Van Keulen, ownership of the family plates and business fell into the hands of the Swart family, who continued to publish until the company closed its doors 1885, ending a cartographic legacy spanning nearly 207 years. Learn More...

References


Afriterra, no. 446. Tooley, R.V., Collectors' guide to maps of the African continent and southern Africa p.63, pl.47 (Sayer & Bennett issue). Norwich, O.I. #269.