C1852

Posesiones de Oceania. Islas Filipinas

Rare c.19th wall chart of the Philippine islands by Francisco Coello de Portugal y Quesada (1822-1898) of the Phillippines islands of Batan and Babuyan, located between Luzon and Taiwan. The lower half shows the north eastern tip of Borneo (Kalemantan), … Read Full Description

$A 1,250

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S/N: PI-PHIL-1852-QUES–341388
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Details

Full Title:

Posesiones de Oceania. Islas Filipinas

Date:

C1852

Condition:

Minor wear at folds, otherwise in good condition, with folds as issued. Laid on archival linen.

Technique:

Copper engraving with original hand colouring.

Image Size: 

1060mm 
x 765mm

Paper Size: 

1105mm 
x 812mm
AUTHENTICITY
Posesiones de Oceania. Islas Filipinas - Antique Map from 1852

Genuine antique
dated:

1852

Description:

Rare c.19th wall chart of the Philippine islands by Francisco Coello de Portugal y Quesada (1822-1898) of the Phillippines islands of Batan and Babuyan, located between Luzon and Taiwan. The lower half shows the north eastern tip of Borneo (Kalemantan), the Sulu Archipelago, and the Talaud Islands. the panels of text provide detailed information on the area. The inset at bottom is of all of the Philippines.

Francisco Coello de Portugal y Quesada (1822 - 1898)

Quesada was a Spanish cartographer and military officer and author of Atlas of Spain and its overseas possessions. He was one of the most outstanding cartographers in Spain in the 19th century. He retired from the Army with the rank of colonel. Atlas of Spain and its overseas possessions On his return from Africa he continued to collaborate closely with Pascual Madoz and his famous Geographical-Statistical-Historical Dictionary of Spain and its overseas possessions , in which Coello dealt with cartography, published in a separate work entitled Atlas of Spain and his possessions de Ultramar , [ 18 ] which included maps of all the provinces of Spain at a scale of 1: 200,000. [ 14 ] Specifically, Francisco Coello and Pascual Madoz requested the Madrid City Council in 1847 the cartographic base of a plan of the city at a scale of 1: 1,250, completed in 1846 by the road engineers Merlo, Gutiérrez and Ribera - a project directed by Mesonero Romanos - to add it to the Atlas , in which they would finally include it with a scale 1: 5,000, [ 19 ] in 1849. [ 20 ] This map was later designated by the Madrid City Council as "Official Map of the Villa". [ 20 ] The Atlas was the first work to reflect the new territorial division of the country in 1833

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