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For more information, see the homepage of the map collection's website
at http://icg.Harvard.edu/~maps/


Considered a marvel of utility in its day, Robert Dudley's two-volume Arcano del Mare (Florence, 1661) includes the first detailed coastal chart of New England. An English nobleman self-exiled to Italy, Dudley got most of his cartographic information from existing Dutch charts, but added new data from English sources, including depth soundings over the fishing banks. His map is admired today for its calligraphy, which Dudley may have had difficulty containing. In this detail, note the curlicue at the tip of Cape Cod.


Detail of an earlier chart for mariners, showing the location of ports and coastal features and providing rhumb lines and other navigational aids. Drawn on vellum by Salvator Oliva in Marseilles, it is part of a unique, manuscript atlas of several charts made in 1620. Oliva provides in this detail a profile of his own Marseilles, suggesting how it might appear to sailors approaching by sea. Charts of this sort were secret documents, crucial to trade, and usually were not published, says Cobb. This highly decorative example may have gone to sea but was probably kept safe at home for reference.

The collection has strong holdings of less ornamental but useful nineteenth- and twentieth-century nautical charts of United States and world waters.


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