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Le Royaume de Hongrie, et les Estats qui en ont este sujets, et dependans de sa Couronne, scavoir La Transilvanie, Moldavie, Valaquie, Croacie, Bosnie
Article ID | EUH5414 |
Title | Le Royaume de Hongrie, et les Estats qui en ont este sujets, et dependans de sa Couronne, scavoir La Transilvanie, Moldavie, Valaquie, Croacie, Bosnie |
The map shows the entire Dalmatia, Hungary, Moldova, Bulgaria, Romania, Bosnia, Serbia, partially Croatia, Turkey, one title cartouche, and one map scale cartouche. | |
Year | ca. 1690 |
Artist | Jaillot/ Sanson (1632-1712) |
Alexis Hubert Jaillot (1632–1712) was a prominent French cartographer and publisher. In 1665, he married into the Berey family of map publishers. After the death of his brother-in-law Nicolas II Berey in 1667, Jaillot bought the Berey map collection from his sister-in-law, acquiring a valuable stock without having ever created a map himself. Jaillot entered the map business at a favorable time—after Louis XIV’s early victories in the Reunions Wars in 1668, France’s territory expanded rapidly, creating high demand for maps showing French triumphs, new borders, and expansion plans. His collection included plates originally made by Pierre Duval, who resisted Jaillot’s reissues. At the height of this conflict, Jaillot gained the support of Guillaume and Adrien Sanson, sons of Nicolas Sanson, as mapmakers and partners, enabling him to publish new maps under the prestigious Sanson name. His first atlas, Atlas Nouveau (1681), was a commercial success, leading to widespread piracy by other publishers. | |
Historical Description | In the historical sense, Eastern Europe refers to Ukraine, the European part of Russia, Belarus and the Republic of Moldova. Occasionally, the Caucasian countries of Georgia, Armenia and, conditionally, Azerbaijan are also seen as part of Eastern Europe. By Christian Giordano and other scholars, one of the six historical regions of Europe is called "Eastern Europe." The Eastern European countries are historically and culturally largely influenced by the Orthodox Church (Islamic Azerbaijan excepted) and were - in contrast to the Ottoman-dominated Balkans - under the rule of the Russian Empire. Like the Balkan countries, the countries of Eastern Europe were for a long time backward agricultural states (cf.: Intermediate Europe) and had no or only a limited share in the social developments of the Renaissance, Reformation and Enlightenment of the Western world. |
Place of Publication | Paris |
Dimensions (cm) | 58 x 87 cm |
Condition | Some folds |
Coloring | original colored |
Technique | Copper print |