Keywords: 1772 Vaugondy - Diderot Map of Alaska, the Pacific Northwest ^ the Northwest Passage - Geographicus - DeFonte2-vaugondy-1768.jpg A truly fascinating 1772 map of the northwestern parts of North America by Robert de Vaugondy and Thomas Jefferys Essentially depicts the north eastern parts of Asia speculations on northwestern America and Admiral De Fonte ™s mythical conception of a Northwest Passage Heavily based upon earlier work by Thomas Jefferys Thomas Swaine Drage Gerhard Muller and James De Lisle Vaugondy prepared this map prior to the voyages of James Cook to this region Around this time Europe was rampant with speculation both regarding the existence of a Northwest Passage and the northwestern parts of America in general The discoveries of Admiral de Fonte and Juan de Fuca though now known to be entirely mythical inspired the European imagination Barthlomew de Fonte was supposedly a Spanish Admiral who sailing up the Pacific coast c 1640 discovered a series of gigantic lakes seas and rivers heading eastward towards the Hudson Bay Supposedly upon one of these great inland lakes he met with a ship from Boston that claimed to have come through a Northwestern Passage De Fonte ™s story appeared in a short lived 1706 English publication entitled Memoirs of the Curious The story inspired no less than Joseph-Nicholas de L ™Isle younger brother of the better known Guilleme de L ™Isle Joseph-Nicholas at the time was employed by the Russian Tzar Peter the Great in the compilation of Russian surveys and discoveries in Siberia and the extreme northeast of Asia When he published his somewhat accurate map of northeast Asia he paradoxically decided to include with it an entirely speculative map of North America based largely on De Fonte ™s letter De L ™Isle ™s mantle was later taken up by Jefferys another ardent supporter of the De Fonte Northwest Passage theory in his own map of the region which was ultimately the inspiration for this map by Vaugondy In accord with De Fonte ™s suggestions this map displays the strait of Juan de Fuca continuing inland past the large lakes of Velasco Belle and De Fonte to communicate with the Baffin and Hudson Bay There are also a series of rivers and waterways connecting the lakes themselves to an outlet in the Arctic Based upon Russian reports Vaugondy renames the Straits of Ainan the Detroit de Bering paying homage to the great Russian navigator Anian itself has been moved southward nearer to the Strait of Juan de Fuca Anian is a term derived from a John Donne poem Anyan if I go west by the North-West passage However it was interpreted as the Bering Strait by cartographers successfully transitioning it from the realms of poetry to cartography Anian presupposed the existence of a Northwest Passage and as such was entirely mythical though the lands that are now Alaska long bore that name Further south still we find Quivira one of the legendary northern American Kingdoms of Gold Nearer to Russia the Aleutian Islands have been consolidated into a large peninsular landmass extending eastward towards Asia In the extreme north between 80 and 60 degrees of latitude is an archipelago presumably discovered by Japanese sailors marooned in Kamtschatka and purportedly inhabited entirely by pigmies An altogether fascinating map of the Northwest Passage and the American west and a must for any serious collection dedicated to this region Prepared by Vaugondy as plate no 8 for the Supplement to Diderot ™s Encyclopédie 1772 dated Size in 14 5 12 5 object history credit line accession number DeFonte2-vaugondy-1768 Supplement to Diderot's <i>Encyclopédie ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences des arts et des métiers </i> or Vaugondy's <i>Recueil de 10 Cartes Traitant Particulierement de L'Amerique du Nord</i> 1779 Geographicus-source PD-Art-100 Robert de Vaugondy Old maps of Alaska Old maps of Canada 1772 maps Northwest Passage Old maps of the Arctic Maps in French Thomas Jefferys |