Detail of a pink, orange, and blue colored, engraved map shows islands of Philippines such as "Masbate" and "Ticao." Other details include a line partially labelled "de la Nao para la Nueva Espanna."
Detail of a colored, engraved map shows red, pink, and blue toned cartouche of nautical-mythological motifs around title and other French text.
Detail of a  colored, engraved map of the Philippines shows mountains and text in Spanish such as "Manobos Infieles." Other details include a label reading "Derrotero d. Hernando Magalanes Anno 1552."

Carte Hydrographique & Chorographique des Isles Philippines…

Pedro Murillo Velarde
1760

In 1734 in Manila, the Jesuit Pedro Murillo Velarde drew a magnificent map of the Philippines, on which this JCB map is based. The Velarde map was engraved and printed by Nicolas de la Cruz Bagay, an indigenous Tagalog who was the official printer of the Jesuit press in the Philippines, and it was the most ambitious and detailed map of the archipelago yet produced. The map combined enormous coastal and topographical detail with the attributes of a sea chart, showing the sailing courses for vessels heading to both Spain (Madrid) and New Spain (Mexico), as well as the course taken by Magellan in 1521. Velarde’s map was frequently copied, including by George Lowitz, a German mathematician who reduced the map’s size so it could be included in a 1759-60 atlas published in Nuremberg, the origin of the map now owned by the JCB.

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