Condition: Near fine. BOWEN, [Thomas] (illustrator). 18.5 cm x 32.5 cm copper engraving. Hand coloured. Presented in cream coloured matting measuring 35 cm x 48 cm. This map charts the itinerary of Captain Vitus Jonassen Behring (1681-1741), a Danish officer in the Russian Navy whose mission was to Russian outposts on the Kamchatka Peninsula. The mission involved both mapping and an investigation into whether or not the American and Asian continents shared a land border. Numerous sites have been named after Captain Behring since his death including, the Bering Strait and the Bering Sea. The map was engraved by Thomas Bowen (d. 1790), a renowned British engraver of maps and charts.
Publication Date: 1744
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Very good. Some areas of discoloration in the margins. Size 7 x 12.75 Inches. This is a 1744 John Harris / Emanuel Bowen map of Siberia, highlighting discoveries made by Vitus Bering's expeditions. This was among the first maps of Siberia produced in the wake of Bering's 'Great Northern Expedition,' (1733 - 1742), demonstrating improved geographical information about the Kamchatka Peninsula and the region as a whole. A Closer Look Coverage stretches from Tobolsk in the west to Chukotka and Kamchatka in the east. Particular attention is paid to rivers, the primary means for traveling through Siberia until the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway in the late 19th century. The Yenisei and Lena Rivers are prominent, along with Lake Baikal at bottom. The legend denotes fortresses, 'boroughs,' and 'convents,' including the string of important fortress-settlements (Irkutsk, Yakutsk, Okhotsk) that Bering relied on to progress eastwards. Unconventionally but usefully, at bottom longitude is measured using Tobolsk as a Prime Meridian (with London at top), which also helps to demonstrate the vastness of Siberia, spanning over 120 degrees of longitude. An elaborate cartouche at top includes hunters (perhaps Cossacks) and a reindeer. The Great Northern Expedition The Great Northern Expedition was one of the largest and best organized voyages of exploration, the results of which completely remapped most of the Arctic coast of Siberia and some parts of the northwest coast of America, filling in vast amounts of previously unknown coastal detail. Originally conceived by Russian Emperor Peter I the Great, the exploration was undertaken under the auspices of Russian Empresses Anna and Elizabeth. The expedition was led by Vitus Bering, who had headed a successful expedition to Kamchatka in 1725 - 1728, which definitively established that Eurasia and America were separated by a sea that now bears his name. Lasting from 1733 - 1742, the Great Northern Expedition was intended to map the eastern reaches of Siberia and the northwest coast of America. Despite enduring years of arduous travel, logistical difficulties resulting in long pauses, and infighting over the role and authority of Bering, the expedition did finally reach Kamchatka in late 1740 and sailed to American shores near Mount Saint Elias the following July. With much of his crew suffering from scurvy, Bering made his way back to Kamchatka, but was driven by storms to seek refuge on the island now bearing his name, where he died on December 19, 1741. The Great Northern Expedition was a costly and difficult undertaking, but it did result in Russians first setting foot on American soil (the first Kamchatka Expedition had only spotted Mount Saint Elias from the sea) along with the discovery of many of the Aleutian and Commander Islands, the founding of Petropavlovsk, and detailed mapping of the northern and north-eastern coast of Russia and the Kuril Islands. Although Bering's expedition was a closely guarded secret in Russia, some of the information it gained was quickly disseminated throughout Europe. The present map appeared too soon after the expedition to fully incorporate its findings, but eventually the full range of the expedition's findings resulted in a set of new and much more accurate maps, such as Nicholas de l'Isle's 1752 and Frederik Müller's 1754 maps. De l'Isle, younger brother of the famed French cartographer Guillaume de l'Isle (often as Delisle), spent a well-timed tenure at Peter the Great's Academy of Sciences and, upon returning to France, published compiled information from several Russian expeditions, including those of Bering, providing the rest of Europe the first accurate maps of Kamchatka. Publication History and Census This map appeared as page 1016 in Vol. II of John Harris' Navigantium atque itinerantium bibliotheca, or, A Complete Collection of Voyages and Travels , published posthumously by John Campbell. It most likely was engraved by Emmanuel Bowen.