[Charts of the coast of Florida] nautical chart

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[Charts of the coast of Florida] nautical chart

description

Summary

Scales vary.
Title from Philip Lee Phillips' A list of maps of America. 1901. p. 280.
Manuscript, pen-and-ink.
Imperfect: Deteriorated in margins.
Has watermarks.
Relief shown by hachures. Depths shown by soundings.
Individual maps annotated to show dates of receipt. Some maps annotated on verso with variant titles and separate numbering scheme.
Includes coastal profiles and text.
Accompanied by manuscript catalog of exhibition entries. 3 l.
LC Maps of North America, 1750-1789, 1625
Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as a raster image.
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AACR2

The word portolan comes from the Italian adjective portolano, meaning "related to ports or harbors", or "a collection of sailing directions". Portolan charts are maps based on compass directions and estimated distances observed by the pilots at sea. They were first made in the 13th century in Italy, and later in Spain and Portugal where they considered to be state secrets. The English and Dutch found the description of Atlantic and Indian coastlines extremely valuable for their raiding, and later trading, ships. The oldest survived portolan is the Carta Pisana, dating from approximately 1296 and the oldest preserved Majorcan Portolan chart is the one made by Angelino Dulcert who produced a portolan in 1339.

date_range

Date

01/01/1765
person

Contributors

De Brahm, John Gerar William, 1717-approximately 1799.
create

Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

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