Skip to main content

IMIS

[ report an error in this record ]basket (0): add | show Print this page

Making war from a map: Andrada's atlas for privateers (1641–1661)
Sánchez, A.; Valladares, R. (2012). Making war from a map: Andrada's atlas for privateers (1641–1661). Imago Mundi 64(2): 201-215. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03085694.2012.673764
In: Imago Mundi: a review of early cartography. Routledge: Lympne. ISSN 0308-5694; e-ISSN 1479-7801, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    Cartography
    Charts
    Pirates > Piracy

Authors  Top 
  • Sánchez, A.
  • Valladares, R.

Abstract
    This paper concerns a seventeenth-century manuscript nautical atlas of the coast of Portugal that was compiled in the context of the Hispanic-Portuguese crisis of 1640. The atlas was the work of Antonio da Cunha e Andrada, a Portuguese operating under the orders of King Philip IV of Spain, who seems to have been an amateur cartographer. Andrada’s own description of his cartographical achievement as an atlas for privateers is upheld in the light of the accompanying text, which contains a strategy for blockading the coastal trade of secessionist Portugal to ruin her economy and force her back under Spanish rule. The extant version of the atlas is dated 1661, but the author tells us it was a copy of the one he had made in 1641.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Authors