Henry Briggs, The North part of America Conteyning... the large and goodly Iland of California, double-page engraved map, London, 1625. Estimate $8,000 to $12,000.
For more than a century, the state of California was widely accepted by mapmakers to be an island. Paul Cohen in Mapping the West: America's Westward Movement 1524-1890 (2002), notes that "Briggs' extraordinary map [pictured above] was one of the very first to show California as an island, and it was the most influential in disseminating the misconception."
Henry Briggs, The North Part of America (detail)
Briggs' inscription in the lower left corner of his map says, "California sometymes supposed to be a part of ye westerne continent, but since by a Spanish Charte taken by ye Hollanders it is found to be a goodly land..." indicating that this famous cartographic misconception was Spanish in origin. It is believed that a Spanish ship containing an earlier chart depiction of the Isle of California was captured by the Dutch. The vessel was subsequently taken to Amsterdam, where European cartographers quickly propagated maps of the fictitious island.
Henricus Hondius, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica ac Hydrographica Tabula (detail),
double page engraved map (detail), Amsterdam, 1630. Estimate $2,000 to $3,000.
Richard William Seale, A New Map of North America, double page engraved map, London 1745. Estimate $600 to $900.
Although prior evidence had been proposed that Southern California was indeed a peninsula and not an island, the theory was not readily accepted. In the end, a royal decree by Ferdinand VII of Spain in 1747 was required before the masses would accept the actuality of California's geography.
Emanuel Bowen, A New & Accurate Map of Mexico or New Spain together with California, double page engraved map, London, 1752. Estimate $200 to $300.
But California itself is a sort of island in other, disparate ways, as author and researcher Rebecca Solnit reflects:
"I had long thought that we asked the wrong question of these maps, which are usually discussed as though the most salient point is that they are wrong. To me, in other crucial ways they are right, in ways that raise resonant questions about what California is and what islands are. [An] island is anything surrounded by difference, which is why we also talk about heat islands or cultural islands, and California—a densely populated landscape of great biological diversity and richness surrounded by ocean, desert and mountains, beyond which lie starker realms—is all kinds of island, or archipelago."
The maps featured in this post are part of Swann's May 19 auction of Maps & Atlases, Natural History & Color Plate Books.