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Moses Pitt Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1639 - d. 1697

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    • M. PITT (1639-1697), Ducatus Brunsvicensis, around 1680,
      Jul. 01, 2023

      M. PITT (1639-1697), Ducatus Brunsvicensis, around 1680,

      Est: €450 - €600

      Moses Pitt (1639 - 1697 ): Ducatus Brunsvicensis accuratissima descriptio, c. 1680, Copper engraving Technique: Hand colored Copper engraving on Paper Inscription: lower left signed in the printing plate: "Ducatus Brunsvicensis. accuratissima descriptio. Apud Tanssonio-Waefbergios: Mosem Pitt et Stephanum Swart.". Date: c. 1680 Description: Historical map with inscription cartouche and coat of arms of the Duchy of Brunswick, map also partly inscribed in gold. Keywords: Map, Brunswick, 17th century, Baroque, Maps, Netherlands,

      Fichter Kunsthandel
    • Moses Pitt, 'Typus Generalis Ukrainae sive Palatinatuum Podoliae, Kioviensis et Braczlaviensis terras nova del
      Dec. 22, 2021

      Moses Pitt, 'Typus Generalis Ukrainae sive Palatinatuum Podoliae, Kioviensis et Braczlaviensis terras nova del

      Est: £80 - £120

      Moses Pitt, 'Typus Generalis Ukrainae sive Palatinatuum Podoliae, Kioviensis et Braczlaviensis terras nova delineatione exhibens', a hand-coloured 17th/18th Century map, with repairs, 16.75" x 21", (unframed).

      John Nicholson's Fine Art Auctioneers & Valuers
    • (Map - North Pole) A Map of the North-Pole and the Parts Adioining
      Jan. 12, 2019

      (Map - North Pole) A Map of the North-Pole and the Parts Adioining

      Est: $3,000 - $3,750

      Moses Pitt. A Map of the North-Pole and the Parts Adioining. This is undoubtedly the most attractive English map of the North Pole and Arctic regions. The map combines some out-dated cartography with a solid view of Hudson and Baffin bays. In Canada the unusual three-island configuration of northern Labrador is derived in part from Sanson's map of 1656. Pitt includes the mythical island of Freesland complete with several place names, and Forbishers Strait bisects the southern tip of Greenland. Cartographically the map is notable for the small inset map of Nova Zembla with an explanation that new information had arrived from Russia indicating that it was joined to the mainland instead of being an island as shown on the main map. The superb title cartouche emphasizes the importance of whaling in the region with whaling scenes, walruses, narwhals, and Inuits in their kayaks. A magnificent coat of arms dedicates the map to Charles Fitz Charles, Earl of Plymouth. This is the only original work prepared by Pitt for his ill-fated and uncompleted atlas. It was likely engraved by Michael Burghers, a Dutch emigrant who became the official engraver to the University of Oxford. The atlas was projected to be a 12 volume work in the tradition of the earlier Dutch atlases and was to use updated copperplates belonging to Johannes Jansson van Waesberge, son-in-law and heir of Jan Jansson. Only 4 volumes were completed before the venture failed and Pitt was thrown into debtor's prison.

      Old World Auctions
    • Pitt's English Atlas
      Jul. 28, 2018

      Pitt's English Atlas

      Est: $120,000 - $150,000

      PITT, Moses (ca. 1639-1697). The English Atlas. Printed at the Theater, for Moses Pitt at the Angel in St.. Pauls Church-Yard, London, 1680-1681-1683-1682. 4 volumes. Folio (21 4/8 x 14 inches). Letterpress title-pages, two printed in red and black and with small engraved vignettes, letterpress in volume one ruled in red throughout. Fine engraved portrait of Charles II, engraved by R. White, in volume one by (laid down on heavier stock at an early date) and double-engraved plate of Laplanders by F. van den Houe with magnificent original hand-colour in full, 3 further folding plates and 166 double-page maps of the world by John Seller and Janssonius and Northern Europe, all with original hand-colour in part, the cartouches with original hand-colour in full, those in volume one occasionally HEIGHTENED IN GOLD and gum arabic, all cartouches and other fine details in volume IV HEIGHTENED IN GOLD and gum arabic, all maps in this volume ruled in red (world map by Seller trimmed and laid down on heavier stock, volume one without map 35 'Ducatus Stomariae' and 40 'Regni Norvegiae'; map 35 in volume II 'Marchia Vetus' trimmed and laid down on heavier stock; volume III with maps 'Totius Sveviae', 'Walachia' and 'Iuliacensis Ducatus' trimmed and laid down, without map 126 'Diocesis Leodeniensi' but with additional map 'Oldenburg'; volume IV lacking map 141 'Fossa Eugeniana' but with additional map 'Namurcum Comitatus'). Fine contemporary blind paneled smooth and mottled calf, the spines in 8 compartments with 7 raised bands, one lettered in gilt, the others decorated with fine gilt tools (expertly rebacked preserving the original backstrips, a bit rubbed). Provenance: with the engraved armorial bookplate of George Tollet Esq. (d. 1719), mathematician and naval administrator, on the verso of each title-page; with the engraved armorial bookplate of the Weston Library of the Earls of Bradford on each front paste-down. First edition. The two world maps are John Seller's "Novissima Totius Terrarum Orbis Tabula..." (Shirley 460) and Pieter van den Keere's "Nova totius terrarum orbis geographica ac hydrographica tabula" in the revised Janssonius, post 1620, state (Shirley 504) with a dedication to the Bishop of Oxford in the upper left. The map of the North Pole is Janssonius's "Nova et accurata Poli Arctici" and not that of Moses Pitt. The remaining maps are of Northern and Eastern Europe, all based on Dutch cartography, as Pitt's intention had been to publish a mammoth atlas to rival that of Blaeu, "giving a reprise to many of the plates which Janssonius had acquired over the years, some of them going as far back as the stocks that were used for Mercator's Atlas" (Goss) . However, as with many grand publishing designs the venture faltered after only these four volumes. The maps in volume one, in addition to the world map, and that of the Arctic, are of Russia, Poland, and Scandinavia; volumes II and III are of the German Empire; and IV contains the Seventeen Provinces of the Low Countries, or Netherlands. Moses Pitt was neither a cartographer nor a scholar, yet in 1670 he undertook a project that came to be called 'The English Atlas'. Despite the seemingly difficult, if not unrealistic, task at hand--hardly mitigated by the paucity of skilled commercial cartographers in England--Pitt's endeavor was backed by Sir Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke, and his partners included the Dutch map publisher Jan Jansson and the Englishman Steven Stewart. Based on the concept of the Atlas Maior by Joan Blaeu ,Pitt's atlas was to consist of twelve volumes, but only four were completed (covering places "next to the North-pole," Muscovy, Poland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany and the seventeen provinces of the Low Countries). Pitt had envisioned the project as a reissue of a Dutch atlas in "English guise"--in which existing Dutch maps would be repackaged with accompanying text in English--whereas his partners envisioned the printing of an atlas with entirely new maps. Such conflicts, along with economic factors and the overly ambitious nature of the project envisioned, eventually led to its demise. After only four parts of the atlas were completed, Pitt was in financial ruin and was imprisoned for debt from 1689 to 1691. Nonetheless, the four volumes that were produced signal the sumptuous nature of the project, as the highest production values were lavished upon it in terms of engraving, paper and coloring. From the distinguished library of George Tollet, who in 1683 became a founder member of the Dublin Philosophical Society—"a sister organization to the Royal Society—and would become one of its more active members: his experiments and presentations, as well as his correspondence with other scientists, including Edmond Halley, are often remarked upon in its minute book, which records his election to the position of treasurer on 2 November 1685... several of Tollet's contributions to the Dublin society's meetings involved applied mathematics—he presented papers on gunnery and on longitude, for example—...In 1688 Tollet moved to England. Luttrell's parliamentary diary reports that Tollet was chosen secretary to the ‘commissioners for taking the public accounts’ in March 1691; was made ‘comptroller of the foreign post office in the room of Mr Brocket’ in May 1697; took a post at ‘the custome house’ in November 1697; and in June 1700 was made ‘secretary of the excise, worth £500 per annum’ (Luttrell, 2.192; 4.219, 306, 661). Not mentioned in Luttrell's diary, but noted by both Hinchliffe and Speake, is Tollet's appointment as accountant-general of Ireland, granted in December 1691" (Michael Londry for DNB). And from the library of the Earls of Bradford, probably Henry Bridgeman, first Baron Bridgeman (1725-1800) who inherited Weston Park from his mother's family in 1762. E. G. R. Taylor, "The English Atlas of Moses Pitt, 1680-83," Geographical Journal 95, 4 (April 1940), 292-299; Lloyd Arnold Brown, The World Encompassed, exh. cat. (Baltimore, 1952), n. 172; Rodney W. Shirley, The Mapping of the World (London, 1983), n. 504.

      Arader Galleries
    • [RUSSIAN MAP] PITT, MOSES. Russiae, vulgo Moscovia dictae, Partes Septentrionalis et Orientalis Auctore Isaaco Massa. Oxfor...
      May. 25, 2017

      [RUSSIAN MAP] PITT, MOSES. Russiae, vulgo Moscovia dictae, Partes Septentrionalis et Orientalis Auctore Isaaco Massa. Oxfor...

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      [RUSSIAN MAP] PITT, MOSES. Russiae, vulgo Moscovia dictae, Partes Septentrionalis et Orientalis Auctore Isaaco Massa. Oxford: Moses Pitt, circa 1680. 16 1/4 x 21 inches (41 x 53 cm) to neatlines; copper-engraved, the cartouches and scale indication hand-colored, some color washes and outlines on the map proper. The Moses Pitt reissue of Blaeu's map of Russia (from Blaeu's Atlas Major) was used in the English Atlas of 1680. The map is based on the travels of Isaac Massa. C 

      DOYLE Auctioneers & Appraisers
    • Orbis Terrarum Nova Et Accuratissima Tabula. Auctore Ioanne a Loon
      Apr. 18, 2015

      Orbis Terrarum Nova Et Accuratissima Tabula. Auctore Ioanne a Loon

      Est: $3,000 - $4,000

      Moses Pitt (c. 1639?1697). London, 1680. 22 x 24 1/2 inches. Stunning Seventeenth-Century Map Showing Partial Coastlines of New Zealand & Australia. This stunning double hemisphere world map is a fine example of Moses Pitt?s work. Pitt and his partner acquired the plates from Blaeu?s Grand Atlas and set out to issue and even larger Atlas in London. However, after completing four volumes the pair were thrown in Debtor?s prison and the atlas was never completed

      Arader Galleries
    • Pitt, Moses: Orbis Terrarum Nova Et Accuratissima Tabula.
      Apr. 15, 2015

      Pitt, Moses: Orbis Terrarum Nova Et Accuratissima Tabula.

      Est: €300 - €500

      Pitt, Moses. Orbis Terrarum Nova Et Accuratissima Tabula. Auctore Ioanne a Loon. Weltkarte in 2 Hemisphären. Kolorierter Kupferstich. 45 x 53,5 cm. Mit Passepartout unter Glas in vergoldeter Holzprofilleiste gerahmt. 63 x 70 cm. (London, Moses Pitt, 1680). Shirley 439. - Hübsches Doppelhemisphärekarte der Welt nach dem Atlas Mayor des Johannes Blaeu und der weiteren Bearbeitung durch Visscher und Van Loon (vgl. Shirley 406). Der englische Buchhändler und Verleger Moses Pitt (1639-1697) hatte die Platten von Blaeu aufgekauft, um einen großen, auf vier Bände angelegten Atlas zu veröffentlichten, musste dann aber wegen Fehlkalkulation ins Schuldgefännis. Dargestellt sind u. a. Neuseeland und Kalifornien noch als Insel, die großen nordamerikanischen Seen fehlen noch. Pitt fügte unten die bei Joon noch fehlende Kartusche mit Widmung an Charles II. hinzu sowie vier herrliche Szenen, die die vier Elemente, Feuer, Luft, Wasser und Erde, symbolisieren. - Unschöner Mittelriss, der unten schräg abdriftet, aber ohne Bildverlust und gut restaurierbar. Teils gebräunt, nicht ausgerahmt und möglicherweise mit Passepartout-Lichträndern. Hübsches, zartes Kolorit.

      Bassenge Auctions
    • A framed map, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica, from an original engraving by Moses Pitt in 16
      Jan. 14, 2015

      A framed map, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica, from an original engraving by Moses Pitt in 16

      Est: -

      A framed map, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Geographica, from an original engraving by Moses Pitt in 1681.

      Golding Young & Mawer
    • 1682 Coat-of-Arms.
      Dec. 06, 2014

      1682 Coat-of-Arms.

      Est: $100 - $300

      The Antient Usage In Bearing of such Ensigns of Honour As are commonly call'd Arms. With a Catalogue of the Present Nobility of England. By William Dugdale. Oxford: Moses Pitt, 1682. First edition, duodecimo, 19th century half leather, folding table, slight foxing.

      Sydney Rare Book Auctions
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