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Volume II only of 2 volumes. Folio (21 x 14 inches). Latin text, with both Dutch and French Privilege leaves, letterpress title pasted within engraved architectural border, 9 divisional half-titles and 93 (of 95, lacking plates 94 and 95: Gulich and Linga, both full-pages, not double-page, engravings, water-staining at upper inner margin of first leaves and affecting several map images, repaired worm-holes on lower margins of a few leaves, some leaves browned). Contemporary Dutch gilt panelled vellum (stained). Third edition of volume II, the towns belonging to Spain, of BLAEU'S GREAT WORK ON THE TOWN'S OF THE NETHERLANDS. "Of all the Blaeu atlases, the townbooks of the Netherlands are held in the highest esteem in the Netherlands. This is partly due to the fact that their composition is linked up with the struggle for independence from Spain of the Dutch Republic in the 17th-Century. Bound up, by sentiment, with the most dramatic and heroic period of the shaping of the Dutch State it shows the proud and industrious cities of the North in their full splendour. Towards the end of the battle with Spain, Joan Blaeu planned his town books which were to contain ca. 220 maps, evenly distributed over two volumes: the towns of the Republic in Volume I, the towns belonging to Spain in Volume II. In the planning stage of the atlas, some years before 1648, while the text had been printed and also most of the plates, Joan Blaeu could not know how the Peace treaty would turn out. In the last decades of the war, several towns and fortresses in the south had been or were besieged by the army of the Republic and Blaeu had to take a decision as to inclusion of these disputed towns into the two volumes of his atlas. The very first edition of his town atlas reflects the situation during the last years of the war: 26 maps of towns and fortresses are incorporated in the "Spanish" volume, but had to be transferred to the "Republic" volume in a second edition. Five maps of the "Republic" had to be transferred to the "Spanish" side. Consequently, apart from the very rare first edition, the volumes I and II are uneven in the number of maps, the first volume being the larger. At the end of the Index of the first edition, printed in 1649 after the Treaty of Westphalia, Joan Blaeu [gives a] notice to the reader" explaining the arrangement of the maps" (Koeman I, page 295). The Blaeu family firm was founded by Willem Janzoon Blaeu (1571-1638) in 1596. He was eventually joined by his sons, Cornelius (1616-1648) and Joan (1596-1673). The firm became the most productive cartographic establishment in the Netherlands until it was destroyed by fire in 1672. The elder Blaeu initiated the great series of atlases that culminated in the "Atlas Maior", in which Joannes Blaeu incorporated much of the geographical knowledge bequeathed him by his father. Koeman 1, BL 67. Catalogued by Kate Hunter.
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