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Copyright © 2025 Geographicus Rare Antique Maps
Digital Image: 1777 Georg Forster Map of the South Pole
SouthPole-forster-1777_dFOR 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.
Delivery
Once you purchase our digital scan service, you will receive a download link via email - usually within seconds. Digital orders are delivered as ZIP files, an industry standard file compression protocol that any computer should be able to unpack. Some of our files are very large, and can take some time to download. Most files are saved into your computer's 'Downloads' folder. All delivery is electronic. No physical product is shipped.
Credit and Scope of Use
You can use your digial image any way you want! Our digital images are unrestricted by copyright and can be used, modified, and published freely. The textual description that accompanies the original antique map is not included in the sale of digital images and remains protected by copyright. That said, we put significant care and effort into scanning and editing these maps, and we’d appreciate a credit when possible. Should you wish to credit us, please use the following credit line:
Courtesy of Geographicus Rare Antique Maps (http://www.geographicus.com).
How Large Can I Print?
In general, at 300 DPI, you should at least be able to double the size of the actual image, more so with our 600 DPI images. So, if the original was 10 x 12 inches, you can print at 20 x 24 inches, without quality loss. If your display requirements can accommodate some loss in image quality, you can make it even larger. That being said, no quality of scan will allow you to blow up at 10 x 12 inch map to wall size without significant quality loss. For more information, it is best consult a printer or reprographics specialist.
Refunds
If the high resolution image you ordered is unavailable, we will fully refund your purchase. Otherwise, digital images scans are a service, not a tangible product, and cannot be returned or refunded once the download link is used.
Johann George Adam Forster, also known as Georg Forster (November 27 1754 – January 10, 1794) was a German naturalist, ethnologist, travel writer, journalist, and revolutionary. Born near Gdansk, he was the son of Johann Reinhold Forster, a Reformed Protestant pastor and scholar. Georg from early on expressed interest in the study of nature, in which his father indulged and instructed him. The ten-year-old Georg accompanied his father in travels, commissioned by the Russian government, to inspect German settlements along the Volga, a 2,500 mile journey resulting in the collection of hundreds of specimens of plants for taxonomy. Beginning October 1765, George attended Saint Peter's School in St Petersburg, but this was short lived: his father's report on the settlements was critical of the local Russian voivode, and father and son had to leave Russia without being paid. Their travels took them to London in 1766, where they would settle. Georg's facility with languages was such that at the age of 12 he was able not only to translate Lomonosov's history of Russia into English, but to continue it up to the present. The book was published. His father moved to take up a teaching position at Warrington Academy 1767, while Georg remained in London to apprentice with a merchant until, before joining his father at Warrington to study classics, religion, mathematics, French, and natural history: these two latter taught by his father.
His travels with his father would continue, most notably accompanying James Cook's second voyage to the Pacific, 1772-1775. His report of that journey remains an essential document on the ethnology of Polynesia. His efforts would be recognized with his admittance to the Royal Society at the age of twenty-two.
His return to Europe would signal a shift to academic life. He would hold teaching positions in Kassel, Vilna, and Mainz, whilst continuing to write on botany, ethnology and travel; he produced a German translation of Cook's diaries. An important figure in the German enlightenment, he was an active and influential writer: Alexander von Humbolt considered him the founder of both comparative ethnology and regional geography. He held a leading role in the establishment of the Mainz Republic in 1792, The When the French took control of Mainz in 1792, Forster played a leading role in the Mainz Republic, but was in Paris when Prussian and Austrian forces retook Mainz; Forster was thereafter unable to return and died in Paris of illness in 1794.
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William Whitchurch (April 1748 - February 1794) was a British line engraver and printer active in London and Chichester in the second half of the 18th century. Whitchurch was born at St. Andrew Holborn. He apprenticed to the London engraver Joseph Ellis (1734 - c. 1800) from 1762. Whitchurch engraved maps for Cook, Dalrymple, Lerpinière, and others. Learn More...
Captain James Cook (7 November 1728 - 14 February 1779) is a seminal figure in the history of cartography for which we can offer only a cursory treatment here. Cook began sailing as a teenager in the British Merchant Navy before joining the Royal Navy in 1755. He was posted in America for a time where he worked Samuel Holland, William Bligh, and others in the mapping of the St. Lawrence River and Newfoundland. In 1766 Cook was commissioned to explore the Pacific and given a Captaincy with command of the Endeavour. What followed were three historic voyages of discovery, the highlights of which include the first European contact with eastern Australia, the discovery of the Hawaiian Islands (among many other Polynesian groups), the first circumnavigation of New Zealand, some of the first sightings of Antarctica, the first accurate mapping of the Pacific Northwest, and ultimately his own untimely death at the hands of angry Hawaiians in 1779. The influence of Cook work on the mapping and exploration of the Pacific cannot be understated. Learn More...
Copyright © 2025 Geographicus Rare Antique Maps | Geographicus Rare Antique Maps
This copy is copyright protected.
Copyright © 2025 Geographicus Rare Antique Maps