Suriname
By ROGGEVEEN, Arent , 1698

Paskaert vande Cust van Westindien Streckende van Rio Soronama tot Rio Soronama

America South America
  • 作者: ROGGEVEEN, Arent
  • 出版地: Amsterdam
  • 出版商: [Jacobus Robijn]
  • 发布日期: 1698.
  • 物理描述: Double-page engraved chart with fine hand colour in part and in outline.
  • 方面: 430 by 535mm (17 by 21 inches).
  • 库存参考: 2935

笔记

Roggeveen’s large-scale chart of the mouth of the Suriname River – published in Roggeveen’s exceedingly rare sea pilot ‘Het Brandende Veen’.

This map shows the Suriname River where it empties out into the Atlantic Ocean. Featured is “Fort Paramaribo”, known today as Fort Zeelandia, laying on the bank of the Suriname River in the present-day capital of Suriname, Paramaribo. Fort Paramibo was claimed and re-vamped by the French, Dutch and the British to protect them from sea-fareing rival powers. It was also built to protect against slave rebellions – Suriname harbored cocoa, coffee, sugar cane and cotton plantations where conditions were notoriously bad.

Roggeveen, born in Delshaven, came to Middleburg, the seat of both the Dutch East and West India Companies, in 1658. He worked for both companies teaching the art of navigation and helped to maintain their collections of hydrographic manuscripts and charts, including Spanish portolans of the West Indies. In the mid-1660s, assisted by his access to these collections, Roggeveen embarked upon compiling a series of large-scale charts of the North American coastline, West Indies, and, later, West Africa. Many of his charts are based upon the earlier large-scale work of Hessel Gerritsz and Joan Vingboons, both cartographers for the Dutch East and West India Companies, but Roggeveen’s work was the first to show the whole coastline of North America and the Caribbean. He called this pilot ‘Het Brandende Veen’ or ‘The Burning Fen’; a pun on his name, as ‘veen’ means ‘fen’, and a heap of burning fen represents a fire on the coast to guide or warn ships.

The first edition of the atlas was published in 1675 by Pieter Goos, however, due to the death of Goos in the same year, and that of Roggeveen four years later, a second edition would not be published until 1680, by which time the plates had been acquired by the chart dealer Jacobus Robijn. Robijn went on to republish the second edition in 1689, with a third edition appearing in 1698.

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