Historical important map showing the famous Spice Islands in Maluku Indonesia. The islands shown are; Ternale, Tidore, Timor, Machian, Bachian and the coast of Gilolo. The map is decorated with two beautiful cartouches, vulcanos, sea monsters, European and local sailing vessels. Each of the islands is shown with groves of the prized clove and nutmeg trees and the location of their protective fortresses. The islands were known as the Spice Islands due to the nutmeg, mace and cloves that were originally exclusively found there, the presence of which sparked colonial interest from Europe in the 16th century.
The map is based on the islands described by Jan Huyghen van Linschoten. This map was the first large scale map of the region and depicts the islands which provided first the Portuguese, and then the Dutch with a monopoly on the lucrative spice trade. This almost 400 year old map was published in Amsterdam around the year 1640 by the famous Willem and Joan Blaeu.
The Blaeu Family
Willem Blaeu (1638) was the founder of the Blaeu cartographic dynasty, the finest mapmakers of the Golden Age of Dutch cartography. He studied astronomy and instrument making under Tycho Brahe in his tower at Uranienborg in 1594, before moving to Amsterdam and eventually established a shop in 1605, close to his contemporaries and rivals Johannes Janssonius and Jacob Colom. He was granted a privilege to print a navigational guide in 1606. Two years later, he produced a set of large carte-à-figure wall maps of the four continents and published ‘Het Licht der Zeevaerdt’, a traditional oblong format pilot with coastal profiles to accompany the sailing instructions. The book was very popular, popular enough for Janssonius to publish a pirated version in 1620. Blaeu responded by issuing the ‘Zeespiegel’ in 1623, an enlarged and improved version of his earlier work. The ‘Zeespiegel’ also sold well, but Blaeu could not afford to rest on his laurels; Jacob Colom produced a cheap and accurate challenger, ‘De Vyerighe Colom’ (1632). Blaeu’s parting shot was the ‘Havenwyser van de oostersche’ in 1634, an amalgamation of his previous work, but it was prone to the same errors it singled out in its competitors.
Blaeu also battled with rivals in his globe making business, in particular the firm of Jodocus Hondius. He designed a completely original globe in 1599 (as opposed to simply compiling the works of others), in an attempt to outshine Hondius’s terrestrial globe published two years before. In his subsequent production of globes he would take care to update the astronomical information, recalculating the positions of the constellations for the new epoch in order to completely revise his celestial gores, drawing on the astronomy he learnt under Brahe. His greatest feat, however, was to publish a pair of globes 68 centimetres in diameter in 1616, beating Hondius’s largest globes by fifteen centimetres. He also made giant metal globes for Prince Crain Patenglo of Makasar and Christina of Sweden.
Willem’s sons joined him in the firm, with the eldest Joan (1598) quickly assuming the lead. Joan went to university in Leiden, studying mathematics and astronomy. After returning to work for his father, they produced their first atlas together in 1630, the ‘Atlas Appendix’. The title was deliberately chosen to position is as a supplement to the well-respected atlases of Abraham Ortelius and Gerard Mercator, and it mostly contained maps from their stock of plates. Five years later, they produced their ‘Atlas Novus’ with more than twice the number of maps in the ‘Appendix’, which was published in four languages. After Willem died, Joan expanded the ‘Atlas Novus’ into the ‘Atlas Maior’, the largest and grandest atlas of its time. An edition had between nine and twelve volumes, beautifully engraved and coloured, and cost as much as a house in Amsterdam. He also issued a wall map in 20 sheets in 1648, ‘Nova totius terrarium orbs tabula’. He continued to issue his father’s globes, only modifying the largest. (ref. Crouch)