German Empire - Chatelain c.1705-1720
Chatelain’s Map of the German Empire (c. 1705–1720) Title: Nouvelle Carte de l’Allemagne avec des Tables des Branches de la Noblesse... Cartographer: Henri Abraham Chatelain Origin: Amsterdam, Netherlands Date: c. 1705–1720 Technique: Copperplate engraving with professional hand-colouring The Narrative: A Portrait of the Holy Roman Empire This map tells the story of Germany at a time when it was a sprawling, intricate mosaic of hundreds of sovereign states, duchies, and free cities known as the Holy Roman Empire. Henri Abraham Chatelain—a Huguenot pastor living in Amsterdam—designed this map not just as a geographic guide, but as a political and genealogical encyclopedia. Surrounded by extensive text panels, the map provides a comprehensive directory of the German nobility and the ruling families of the era, such as the House of Saxony and the Electors of Brandenburg. It captures a continent in a state of high-baroque complexity, where every border was a subject of diplomatic and genealogical importance. Chronicles of the Map • The "Noblesse" Tables: The map is uniquely flanked by large columns of French text that categorize the various branches of the German nobility and their seats of power, making this a vital document for 18th-century heraldry. • Regional Detail: From the Baltic Sea (Mer Baltique) in the north to the Tirol and Venice in the south, the map plots cities, river systems (the Rhine, Danube, and Elbe), and the fragmented borders of the various Electorates. • Encyclopedic Scope: Chatelain’s Atlas Historique was one of the most ambitious publishing projects of the early 18th century, designed to merge geography with history, genealogy, and social studies. • Dutch Cartographic Quality: Though the text is in French, the engraving was executed in Amsterdam, then the world capital of high-quality map production, ensuring exceptional clarity and artistic merit.
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- Default Title — 1275.00 USD — In stock
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