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ROUX, JOSEPH: MAP OF PORT ST. GEORGE ON THE ISLAND OF VIS

ROUX, JOSEPH: MAP OF PORT ST. GEORGE ON THE ISLAND OF VIS

Inventory number 501
Author: ROUX, JOSEPH
Original title: Port S George sur l'Isle de Lisba
Publishing year: 1754
Place of publishing and publisher: Marseille
Format: 12 x 19 cm
Technique: Partially coloured copper engraving

The plan represents the Vis port with a significant number of data on the depth of the sea in the bay of St. George (sv. Juraj), expressed in feet (Pieds). South is at the top of the chart, and a graphical scale expressed in miles (Echelle de 2 Milles) is by the left edge. The Host Island is visible at the entrance to the Vis port, and the church of St. Jerome (sv. Jeronim) is highlighted on the small peninsula. Important anchorages are marked around the peninsula. Settlements on land are depicted with simplified ground plans. Relief is indicated by hatching. This view of the port of Vis is a part of the opus made up of plans first published in the atlas Recueil des principaux plans des ports et rades de la Mer Mediterranee in 1764. The selected part of Roux's works was later included in the rare edition, the so-called "National or Popular Atlas", edited by Carlo Tesi in Livorno in 1858. The copper engraving was subsequently manually coloured. The plate label P. 68 is above the upper edge of the chart. The wind rose, divided into 16 segments, with the lily marking the south at the top of the chart, is drawn within the harbour.

ROUX, JOSEPH
ROUX, JOSEPH (1725-1793), a French cartographer and hydrographer, most productive in the second half of the 18th century. He also made navigational instruments. He worked in Marseille, where he printed, published and sold his own maps and nautical instruments. In the mid 18th century, he received the honorary title of the royal hydrographer (Hidrographe du Roy), and in 1764 he published a series of 12 maps of the Mediterranean (Carte de la Mediterraneé), and after that a small atlas, comprising about 100 plans of the ports in the Mediterranean. Subsequent variants of this atlas would appear throughout the entire 19th century, as a sort of “people’s atlas”. The maps depict territory from France to Italy, mostly with the following accompanying dedication: Recueil Des Principaux Plans, des Port, et Rades de la Mer Mediterranée, Estraits de ma Carte en Douze Feuilles DEDIEE A MONS.gr.LE DUC DE CHOISEUL Ministre de la guerre et de la Marine gravee avec Privilege du Roy. Only very few have survived and those that have are considered to be a true rarity. The dedication refers to Étienne-François, Duke of Choiseul, who was the French Minister of War and the Navy at the time. The first and only edition of the collection with all 170 maps was published in 1764, and today it is a rarity, with its title page in the style of Rococo and depictions of ports throughout the Mediterranean. Particularly represented were the Eastern Mediterranean ports, which had been rarely analysed on nautical maps and portulan charts up to the mid 18th century. The French explorations of the Levant between the 1730s and the 1760s were mostly undertaken by Chambert, and his son Joseph Roux introduced some novelties in 1764. The same principles of mapping were used by Nelson 40 years later because of the intended purpose of the maps, which were to be used by the very seafarers. Despite the popularity of the edition, the French prohibited its further duplication in the 1770s. According to some sources, there were three different versions of this atlas. The first abridged edition comprised 66 maps, the majority depicting the sites of the western Mediterranean. It was followed by the official edition comprising 121 maps of the entire Mediterranean, with the Eastern Mediterranean being represented only by maps of the most significant ports and hubs. Finally, the third edition was published, which comprised all 170 maps and was intended for sailing the Levant.
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