IMCoS
     My Account      Basket      Purchase   
Quick Search
 
Advanced Search
Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter
 
Catalogue
ANTIQUE MAPS (1216) Atlases & Reference (18) The World (56) Britain & Ireland (229) Ptolemaic Maps (21) The Americas (143) Africa (63) Asia (131) Europe (322) Oceania & Australia (15) Near East & Arabia (64) City Plans (115) City Views: Britain (18) City Views: North America (4) City Views: Central America (1) City Views: South America (1) City Views: Africa (2) City Views: Asia (2) City Views: Middle East (5) City Views: France (6) City Views: Germany & Austria (25) City Views: Greece City Views: Italy & Sicily (8) City Views: Low Countries (4) City Views: Mediterranean (4) City Views: Scandinavia (4) City Views: Spain & Portugal (11) City Views: Turkey (5) City Views: Eastern Europe (14) City Views: Russia (1) Sea Charts (39) . Recent Acquisitions (81) . Sale! (48) . Recent Sales (803)
Recent Acquisitions
Hiberniae...
Hiberniae...
£650.00
View by Cartographer
Basket
0 items
Currencies
My Account
E-Mail Address:

Password:
 
Information
About Us
How to Order
Shipping & Returns
Privacy Notice
Conditions of Use
Cartographers
Contact Us
London Map Fairs
Schley: Plan van de stad Paita

Price: £60.00

  • Date: 1760
  • Condition: AAA
  • Colour: Uncoloured
  • Size: 20.4 x 36.6 cm
Description

An engraving of the city of Paita in Peru. In 1740 George Anson, commander of a Pacific squadron, was given orders by the Admiralty to raid Spanish possessions along the South American coast and disrupt their trade. What was to be a reasonably short trip turned out to be a circumnavigation of the globe and including the sacking of Paita (Peru) and the captured of the Spanish galleon Nostra Seignora de Cabadonga (which was loaded with silver and two important maps that detailed the route Manila galleons had followed across the Pacific for almost two hundred years). Captain Anson's mission took him 45 months and cost, 6 ships lost, 1000 men lost to scurvy, 300 men lost to typhus and dysentery, and unknown number to shipwrecks and only 4 (!) in action.

Plan van de stad Paita
Click to enlarge