Within Australia
All orders ship freewithin Australia
Rest of the World
Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide
Very detailed German c.19th map of the poles and hemisphere from the 3rd edition of Stielers Handatlas. Collections: National Library Australia: Bib ID 1052266 (1908 9th edition) State Library New South Wales: Call Numbers TX00140 (4th edition) David Rumsey Collection: … Read Full Description
$A 195
Within Australia
Rest of the World
Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide
Full Title:
Date:
Condition:
Technique:
Image Size:
Paper Size:
Genuine antique
dated:
Description:
Very detailed German c.19th map of the poles and hemisphere from the 3rd edition of Stielers Handatlas.
Collections:
National Library Australia: Bib ID 1052266 (1908 9th edition)
State Library New South Wales: Call Numbers TX00140 (4th edition)
David Rumsey Collection: 0960.000 (1873 5th edition)
Adolf Stieler (1775 - 1836)
Stieler was a German cartographer and lawyer who worked most of his life in the Justus Perthes Geographical Institute in Gotha. His Handatlas was the leading German world atlas until the middle of the 20th century. Stieler spent much of his early youth in Gotha, where his father was the mayor. In his adolescence, he showed an interest in geography and maps. Stieler's cartographic career began with a position as a geography teacher at a girls' school in Gotha and then with Franz Xaver von Zach, the director of the Gotha Observatory. His works during this period include publishing cartographic representations of a number of von Zach's observations. From 1804, Stieler worked in the Geographical Institute of Weimar, continuing his goal of starting a geographical publishing business.
View other items by Adolf Stieler
Johann Friedrich von Stulpnagel (1786 - 1865)
German cartographer whose father was a Prussian infantry captain. When the war broke out in 1812/13 , he joined the 1st Baden Infantry Regiment of Count Wilhelm von Hochberg's brigade as a lieutenant. In 1822 an ear ailment that caused almost total deafness forced him to request his departure from the army. Since he had little wealth and little income, he moved to Wandersleben and in 1823 became a draftsman in the geographic institute of Justus Perthes in Gotha . There he worked with the cartographer Adolf Stieler on the continuation and improvement of his " Handatlas over all parts of the world " , which appeared for the first time in the years 1817–1823 . On September 10, 1835, Stulpnagel was finally retired from the army and received a pension as a captain. After Adolf Stieler's death in 1836, he moved to Gotha and continued the map series of his predecessor at Perthes in association with Heinrich Berghaus and Joseph Christoph Bar.
© 2023 Antique Print & Map Room. All rights reserved. ABN: 96 162 378 326.
Exchange rates are only indicative. All orders will be processed in Australian dollars. The actual amount charged may vary depending on the exchange rate and conversion fees applied by your credit card issuer.
Join our exclusive mailing list for first access to new acquisitions and special offers.