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Large and important C18th chart of the South China Sea, the busiest waterway in the east, published in Mannevillette’s, Le Neptune oriental (Oriental Pilot), the most highly regarded pilot for the Eastern trade for both French and English ships. The chart is … Read Full Description
$A 4,250
Within Australia
Rest of the World
Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide
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Large and important C18th chart of the South China Sea, the busiest waterway in the east, published in Mannevillette’s, Le Neptune oriental (Oriental Pilot), the most highly regarded pilot for the Eastern trade for both French and English ships. The chart is dedicated to Alexander Dalrymple, who was the first Englishman to extensively explore, chart and collect detailed information of the seas and coasts of Borneo, the Philippines and China on behalf of the East India Company. He proposed the possibilities of establishing a direct trade with the East Indies and China from a British base in Borneo trading with the Chinese junks that annually visited the area . His plan was to bypass the corrupt Chinese officials in Canton and the prohibitive port costs imposed on British ships.
From about 1735 Mannevillette had set about collecting detailed charts of the known coasts from Africa to Australia and which with the financial support of the Comapne des Indes and the Academie des Sciences, published his ground breaking sea atlas, Le Neptune Oriental in 1745. The first issue comprised twenty two charts, superior to any previously available and consequently quickly became the indispensable atlas for ship owners, captains and pilots engaged in the Southeast Asian sea routes. In 1775 d’Apres issued the second edition of Le Neptune Oriental, expanded to approximately 69 charts which Mannevillette had applied his advances in navigational techniques which he had refined in the intervening 30 years. There is no standard collation of the the second edition with the number of maps varying in atlases held by major institutional libraries. Mannevillette kept updating the charts and eventually this required a supplement, published posthumously in 1781 and reissued in 1797.
The 2nd issue of this chart, identified by the plate number 52 at top left (the 1st issue is numbered to 30). Both issues are rare, as the atlas was usually used at sea and would have been discarded once more up to date charts were made in the early C19th onward. In 1775 d’Apres issued the second edition of Le Neptune Oriental expanding it to 63 charts.
From Mannevillette’s, Le Neptune oriental.
References:
National Library of Australia; Mapping Our World p.191, ill.p.190
Collections:
National Library of Australia: Bib ID 3770071
Jean-Baptiste de Mannevillette (1707 - 1780)
Mannevillette was a French mapmaker who had studied under the royal cartographer Guillaume de L’Isle and was one of the first to use the method of measuring distances from the sun and moon to determine latitude. He took part in numerous voyages to the East and was made director of the Depot des Cartes et Plans de la Navigation des Indes. All French ships navigating the Indian Ocean used these charts and as a consequence of this on board use, many are found in poor and damaged condition. References: Moreland p.134
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