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Auction archive: Lot number 135

Kotzebue's voyage to the Pacific with Louis Choris

Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
US$1,200
Auction archive: Lot number 135

Kotzebue's voyage to the Pacific with Louis Choris

Estimate
US$2,000 - US$3,000
Price realised:
US$1,200
Beschreibung:

3 volumes in 1. [6], xviii, [4], 91, [6], 96-168; 176; 240, [1] pages. Lacking a leaf (p.9-10) in the second volume, while two leaves and a page of cranial figures (p.195-8) are supplied in photostat facsimile. 20 copper-engraved and aquatint plates (views, natives of Alaska, Hawaii, and Micronesia, and natural history by Louis Choris and other artists; 19 of which are fully colored and on thick wove paper, 4 double-page), 6 copper-engraved maps (5 folding), including Charte von der Behrings Strasse nach Merkators Projection August 1816; 2 folding tables. In contemporary boards, which have been expertly rebacked with the original spine and printed paper spine label laid down. Housed in a custom blue cloth clamshell box. First Edition. First edition of this important account of the second Russian expedition into the Pacific for scientific exploration, sponsored by Count Romanzof, commanded by Kotzebue (who had sailed with Kruzenshtern in 1803-6), and including the famous artist Ludwig Choris. Number 48 of Zamorano 80 "The Enlightenment came to Russia under the reign of Catherine the Great (1762-1796) and the eastward expansion begun under Peter the Great saw fruition in the establishment of Kodiak by Grigor I. Shelikhov and the Russian-American Company in 1783. With a base in America, the Russian Academy of Sciences entered the field of scientific exploration, and, given that communication and supply to Alaska overland through Siberia via Yakutsk, Irkutsk, Okhotsk, and Petropavlovsk required over two years and was extremely arduous, maritime routes from St. Petersburg to Kodiak were established by the Admiralty and its modernized fleet. The first Russian circumnavigation was achieved by Ivan Fedorovich Kruzenstern and Iurii Lisianskii in 1803-1806 via Kodiak and Sitka, founded in 1804, and was a success. The Napoleonic Wars interrupted a continuation of such voyages, resulting in isolation of the Alaskan colonies from St. Petersburg, and the Russian-American Company expanded to Bodega and Ross north of San Francisco in 1812 in an attempt to establish agricultural and stock-raising enclaves, and initiated voyages from Alaska to Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands. The defeat of Napoleon in 1814 reopened the possibilities of maritime supply to Alaska and scientific circumnavigation, and Lieutenant Otto von Kotzebue (1788-1846), a native of Tallinn and young cadet on the Kruzenstern voyage, was appointed to command the second Russian circumnavigation in 1815 with a single ship, the brig Rurik. With thirty-three men, first officer G. S. Shishmarev, artist-naturalists Adelbert von Chamisso M. Wormskiold, and Ludwig Choris, physician Johann Friedrich Eschscholtz, and navigators V. Khromchenko and V. Petrov, there was no space for scientific work aboard. Sailing from Kronstadt on July 30, 1815, the expedition crossed the Atlantic, rounded Cape Horn, reached Concepción, Easter Island, and the Tuamotu Archipelago, and arrived at Petropavlovsk on June 7, 1816. From Kamchatka, Kotzebue conducted an extensive exploration of Bering Strait and rested at the outpost of Unalaska in the Aleutians from August 26 to September 3 before sailing southward. On October 2, Rurik anchored in San Francisco Bay where Kotzebue was well received by commandant José Darío Argüello who agreed to supply the expedition with every necessity. Governor Pablo Vicente Solá traveled from Monterey on October 16 to receive Kotzebue and the officers and scientists and, conversing in French, arrangements were made for supplies for Fort Ross, and for the release of Russian prisoners held for illegal hunting of sea otter in Spanish territory. Solá, nonetheless, registered his complaint over Russian encroachment at Ross and Bodega, and on October 25 Ivan Aleksandrovich Kuskov, commandant of Ross, traveled to San Francisco to negotiate differences. After three days of discussion, Kuskov declined to treat the legality of the Russian presence or abandon Ross, and Kotzebue agreed t

Auction archive: Lot number 135
Auction:
Datum:
7 Feb 2019
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

3 volumes in 1. [6], xviii, [4], 91, [6], 96-168; 176; 240, [1] pages. Lacking a leaf (p.9-10) in the second volume, while two leaves and a page of cranial figures (p.195-8) are supplied in photostat facsimile. 20 copper-engraved and aquatint plates (views, natives of Alaska, Hawaii, and Micronesia, and natural history by Louis Choris and other artists; 19 of which are fully colored and on thick wove paper, 4 double-page), 6 copper-engraved maps (5 folding), including Charte von der Behrings Strasse nach Merkators Projection August 1816; 2 folding tables. In contemporary boards, which have been expertly rebacked with the original spine and printed paper spine label laid down. Housed in a custom blue cloth clamshell box. First Edition. First edition of this important account of the second Russian expedition into the Pacific for scientific exploration, sponsored by Count Romanzof, commanded by Kotzebue (who had sailed with Kruzenshtern in 1803-6), and including the famous artist Ludwig Choris. Number 48 of Zamorano 80 "The Enlightenment came to Russia under the reign of Catherine the Great (1762-1796) and the eastward expansion begun under Peter the Great saw fruition in the establishment of Kodiak by Grigor I. Shelikhov and the Russian-American Company in 1783. With a base in America, the Russian Academy of Sciences entered the field of scientific exploration, and, given that communication and supply to Alaska overland through Siberia via Yakutsk, Irkutsk, Okhotsk, and Petropavlovsk required over two years and was extremely arduous, maritime routes from St. Petersburg to Kodiak were established by the Admiralty and its modernized fleet. The first Russian circumnavigation was achieved by Ivan Fedorovich Kruzenstern and Iurii Lisianskii in 1803-1806 via Kodiak and Sitka, founded in 1804, and was a success. The Napoleonic Wars interrupted a continuation of such voyages, resulting in isolation of the Alaskan colonies from St. Petersburg, and the Russian-American Company expanded to Bodega and Ross north of San Francisco in 1812 in an attempt to establish agricultural and stock-raising enclaves, and initiated voyages from Alaska to Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands. The defeat of Napoleon in 1814 reopened the possibilities of maritime supply to Alaska and scientific circumnavigation, and Lieutenant Otto von Kotzebue (1788-1846), a native of Tallinn and young cadet on the Kruzenstern voyage, was appointed to command the second Russian circumnavigation in 1815 with a single ship, the brig Rurik. With thirty-three men, first officer G. S. Shishmarev, artist-naturalists Adelbert von Chamisso M. Wormskiold, and Ludwig Choris, physician Johann Friedrich Eschscholtz, and navigators V. Khromchenko and V. Petrov, there was no space for scientific work aboard. Sailing from Kronstadt on July 30, 1815, the expedition crossed the Atlantic, rounded Cape Horn, reached Concepción, Easter Island, and the Tuamotu Archipelago, and arrived at Petropavlovsk on June 7, 1816. From Kamchatka, Kotzebue conducted an extensive exploration of Bering Strait and rested at the outpost of Unalaska in the Aleutians from August 26 to September 3 before sailing southward. On October 2, Rurik anchored in San Francisco Bay where Kotzebue was well received by commandant José Darío Argüello who agreed to supply the expedition with every necessity. Governor Pablo Vicente Solá traveled from Monterey on October 16 to receive Kotzebue and the officers and scientists and, conversing in French, arrangements were made for supplies for Fort Ross, and for the release of Russian prisoners held for illegal hunting of sea otter in Spanish territory. Solá, nonetheless, registered his complaint over Russian encroachment at Ross and Bodega, and on October 25 Ivan Aleksandrovich Kuskov, commandant of Ross, traveled to San Francisco to negotiate differences. After three days of discussion, Kuskov declined to treat the legality of the Russian presence or abandon Ross, and Kotzebue agreed t

Auction archive: Lot number 135
Auction:
Datum:
7 Feb 2019
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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