File:Delisle Carte de la Louisiane et du cours du Mississippi 1718 UTA.jpg

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Summary[edit]

Title
Français : Carte de la Louisiane et du cours du Mississippi
Description
English: Highly controversial and widely influential in its time, Delisle's 1718 map was one of the landmark maps of the eighteenth century. It caused a considerable stir for several reasons. First, the map's release coincided with the frenzy for investment in John Law's Compagnie d'Occident and the Compagnie des Indes that soon collapsed in the "Mississippi Bubble" stock crash in 1720. Second, it boldly announced that France claimed most of North America under the names of "Louisiane" and "Canada or New France". Although exaggerating the actual topography of French territory and compacting the surrounding lands claimed by foreign powers, it nevertheless gave a good general idea of the course of the Mississippi along with an inset showing its mouth in the Gulf. Further, by emphasizing the river and its important tributaries, the map made visually obvious to all the river's vital strategic importance for the control of North America. Europeans could now see clearly that travel and transportation on rivers rendered the interior of North America wide open to French discovery and exploitation. Spanish Florida had disappeared, Spanish New Mexico was shrinking, and the British were now hemmed in along the east coast. In addition, the map conveyed symbolically without the aid of what was increasingly becoming "trivial" pictorial imagery – the ideas that French power was growing, that French Louisiane was a promising investment, and that French cartographic prowess in producing such an amazing map was evidence of that power.

In addition to sources Delisle had previously used for his earlier maps, this map benefited from a series of manuscript maps compiled, drawn, and sent to France by François Le Maire, a French missionary in Louisiana, who had interviewed the French trader Louis Juchereau de Saint-Denis sometime around 1716. Saint-Denis had traveled through Texas deep into Spanish territory and down to Mexico City and back between 1713 and 1716 (his route shown on Delisle’s map). Saint-Denis would return there again in 1716-1717.

Besides the location of the ill-fated French fort established by René Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle along the Texas coast in 1685, this map now shows La Salle's 1687 assassination site as well as the Spanish "Mission de los Tejas" (re-established in 1716 after an earlier attempt in 1690). The map shows Spaniard Alonso de Leon's route through south Texas in search of La Salle in 1689 and further east. Delisle attempted to show the routes of Hernando de Soto in 1539-1541 and his successor Luis de Moscoso Alvarado in 1542-1543. These reconstructions strongly suggest the influence of Delisle's father Claude Delisle, who was a historian and geographer. Delisle probably rendered Florida as an archipelago based upon the captured Spanish chart by Juan Bisente del Campo. Especially ominous for future Native-American and European relations since it was repeated many times by other European cartographers is a label that would soon come to haunt the coastal-dwelling Karankawa: Indiens errans et Antropophages or "Wandering Indians and Man-eaters".
Date
Source UTA Libraries Cartographic Connections: map / text
Creator
Guillaume Delisle  (1675–1726)  wikidata:Q1389662 s:fr:Auteur:Guillaume Delisle
 
Guillaume Delisle
Alternative names
De L'Isle, Guillaume
Description French cartographer and Royal geographer
Date of birth/death 28 February 1675 Edit this at Wikidata 25 January 1726 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Paris Paris
Work location
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q1389662
Credit line
English: The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections, Gift of Virginia Garrett
 Geotemporal data
Map location North America
Georeferencing Georeference the map in Wikimaps Warper If inappropriate please set warp_status = skip to hide.
 Bibliographic data
Place of publication Paris
Publisher
Delisle family
 Archival data
institution QS:P195,Q1230739
Dimensions height: 49.5 cm (19.4 in); width: 66 cm (25.9 in)
dimensions QS:P2048,49.5U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,66U174728
Medium hand-colored engraving on paper
Inscriptions
Français : Dressée sur un grand nombre de Memoires entrautres sur ceux de Mr. Le Maire par Guillaume Del'isle de l'Académie Rle. des Sciences
artwork-references

Jackson, Jack (1995) Flags Along the Coast: Charting the Gulf of Mexico, 1519-1759: A Reappraisal, The Book Club of Texas, pp. 12–133, sic passim

Jackson, Jack (1998) Shooting the Sun: Cartographic Results of Military Activities in Texas, 1689-1829, 1, Austin: The Book Club of Texas, pp. 39–474, sic passim

Cumming, William P. (1998) The Southeast in Early Maps (3rd ed.), Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 212–214

Petto, Christine Marie (2007) When France was King of Cartography: The Patronage and Production of Maps in Early Modern France, Lanham, Marlyand: Lexington Books, pp. 100, 101–106

Huseman, Ben W. (2016) Enlightenment Mapmakers and the Southwest Borderlands: Treasures from the Virginia Garrett Cartographic Library, Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, no. 12 , pp. 14–16

Huseman, Ben W. (2016) Paths to Highways: Routes of Exploration, Commerce and Settlement, Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, no. 8 , pp. 9–10


Licensing[edit]

Public domain

The author died in 1726, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current22:55, 11 May 2019Thumbnail for version as of 22:55, 11 May 20198,048 × 5,957 (14.47 MB)Michael Barera (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Map |title = ''Carte de la Louisiane et du cours du Mississippi: Dressée sur un grand nombre de Memoires entrautres sur ceux de Mr. Le Maire par Guillaume Del'isle de l'Académie Rle. des Sciences'' |description = {{en|Highly controversial and widely influential in its time, Delisle's 1718 map was one of the landmark maps of the eighteenth century. It caused a considerable stir for several reasons. First, the map's release coincided with the frenzy...

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