This product is successfully added to your cart
Questions about this product? (#23682)

Authenticity Guarantee
All items are guaranteed authentic prints (woodcuts or engravings) or manuscripts made at or about (c.) the given date and in good condition unless stated otherwise. We don’t sell facsimiles or reproductions. We deliver every map with a Certificate of Authenticity containing all the details.

Liège, by Covens & Mortier. 1721-41

Covens & Mortier. A Map Publishing House in Amsterdam. 1721-1866.

For almost two centuries, the most significant and crucial Dutch publishing house in commercial cartography was the Amsterdam firm of Covens & Mortier. Concerning quantity, it was the biggest contemporary map-trading house worldwide. They distributed innumerable maps, atlases, globes, and books.

Pieter (Pierre) Mortier (Leiden, 1661 – Amsterdam, 1711)

Nothing is known about the youth of Pieter Mortier. He studied in Paris from 1681 to approximately 1685. He must have come into contact with French 'libraires' and learned the bookselling trade there. In 1685, he returned to Amsterdam and opened a small bookshop. He joined the Book, Art Sellers' and Printers' Guild in the same year.

Pieter sold books in Dutch and foreign languages, but he also published books on his own, usually in French. His business flourished so much that in 1688, he was forced to rent another house on the Vijgendam.

Pieter Mortier's first privilege for maps was granted by the States of Holland and West Friesland on September 15 1690. It refers to the maps of Sanson that he 'is printing and correcting with great pains and care'.

Pieter began the large-scale publication of maps and atlases. By the beginning of the 18th century, Pieter had become so wealthy that he could purchase three houses in Amsterdam: the Beurssluis, on the Vijgendam, and the Heremietensteeg. He rebuilt the house on the Vijgendam into a large, prestigious house that would serve for over a century as a shop, business, and residential structure for Covens & Mortier's publishing house.

He died on February 13, 1711, after a brief illness. The company continued under Pieter's widow's management, Amelia' s-Gravesande.

After she died in 1719, her son, Cornelis, took over the management for a few years.

On November 20, 1721, a company was founded by Cornelis Mortier and Johannes Covens I. The latter was married the same year to Cornelis's sister. From that year on, the name of :

Covens & Mortier.

Their firm would see a massive expansion in the next 140 years. In 1732, the heirs sold the property to their brother Cornelis and his partner Covens. Their main competitors were Reinier & Josua Ottens and Gerard Valck & Petrus Schenck. After the death of Johannes Covens I (1774), his son Johannes Covens II (1722-1794) entered the business. In 1778, Johannes added a new company name :

J. Covens & Son.

Johannes Covens II was succeeded by his son Cornelis Covens (1764-1825), who, in turn, brought Peter Mortier IV, the great-grandson of Petrus Mortier I, into the business. The name was from 1794 to 1866:

Mortier, Covens & Son.

The last Covens in the series was Cornelis Johannes Covens (1806-1880).

Covens & Mortier had a large stock of atlases and maps, including Delisle, Jaillot, Johannes Janssonius, Sanson, and Claes Jansz. Visscher, Nicolaas Visscher, and Frederik de Wit. For decades, an impressive number of atlases came from the press.

back

Carte Particulière des environs de Liège, Limbourg et Partie de Luxembourg.

€250  ($272.5 / £210)
add to cart
Buy now
questions?
PRINT

Item Number:  23682 Authenticity Guarantee

Category:  Antique maps > Europe > Belgium

Old, antique map of Liège, by Covens & Mortier.

Title: Carte Particulière des environs de Liège, Limbourg et Partie de Luxembourg.

Cartographer: E. Fricx.

Date: 1721-41.

Copper engraving, printed on paper.
Size (not including margins): 435 x 545mm (17.13 x 21.46 inches).
Verso: Blank.
Condition: Old body colour, on heavy paper, no centrefold (plano bound), excellent.
Condition Rating: A+.

From: Composite Atlas. Amsterdam, Covens & Mortier, 1721-41.

Covens & Mortier. A Map Publishing House in Amsterdam. 1721-1866.

For almost two centuries, the most significant and crucial Dutch publishing house in commercial cartography was the Amsterdam firm of Covens & Mortier. Concerning quantity, it was the biggest contemporary map-trading house worldwide. They distributed innumerable maps, atlases, globes, and books.

Pieter (Pierre) Mortier (Leiden, 1661 – Amsterdam, 1711)

Nothing is known about the youth of Pieter Mortier. He studied in Paris from 1681 to approximately 1685. He must have come into contact with French 'libraires' and learned the bookselling trade there. In 1685, he returned to Amsterdam and opened a small bookshop. He joined the Book, Art Sellers' and Printers' Guild in the same year.

Pieter sold books in Dutch and foreign languages, but he also published books on his own, usually in French. His business flourished so much that in 1688, he was forced to rent another house on the Vijgendam.

Pieter Mortier's first privilege for maps was granted by the States of Holland and West Friesland on September 15 1690. It refers to the maps of Sanson that he 'is printing and correcting with great pains and care'.

Pieter began the large-scale publication of maps and atlases. By the beginning of the 18th century, Pieter had become so wealthy that he could purchase three houses in Amsterdam: the Beurssluis, on the Vijgendam, and the Heremietensteeg. He rebuilt the house on the Vijgendam into a large, prestigious house that would serve for over a century as a shop, business, and residential structure for Covens & Mortier's publishing house.

He died on February 13, 1711, after a brief illness. The company continued under Pieter's widow's management, Amelia' s-Gravesande.

After she died in 1719, her son, Cornelis, took over the management for a few years.

On November 20, 1721, a company was founded by Cornelis Mortier and Johannes Covens I. The latter was married the same year to Cornelis's sister. From that year on, the name of :

Covens & Mortier.

Their firm would see a massive expansion in the next 140 years. In 1732, the heirs sold the property to their brother Cornelis and his partner Covens. Their main competitors were Reinier & Josua Ottens and Gerard Valck & Petrus Schenck. After the death of Johannes Covens I (1774), his son Johannes Covens II (1722-1794) entered the business. In 1778, Johannes added a new company name :

J. Covens & Son.

Johannes Covens II was succeeded by his son Cornelis Covens (1764-1825), who, in turn, brought Peter Mortier IV, the great-grandson of Petrus Mortier I, into the business. The name was from 1794 to 1866:

Mortier, Covens & Son.

The last Covens in the series was Cornelis Johannes Covens (1806-1880).

Covens & Mortier had a large stock of atlases and maps, including Delisle, Jaillot, Johannes Janssonius, Sanson, and Claes Jansz. Visscher, Nicolaas Visscher, and Frederik de Wit. For decades, an impressive number of atlases came from the press.

Related items

Vetustiss. Ad Mare Thyrrhenum Terracinae Oppidum 1623
Old, antique map - bird's-eye view of Liège by J. Blaeu
[Item number: 2628]

€1300  ($1417 / £1092)
The Spanish troops defeated near Liège, by Frans Hogenberg.

Liege. 1583-1612
The Spanish troops defeated near Liège, by Frans Hogenberg.
[Item number: 7945]

€120  ($130.8 / £100.8)
Liège, by N. Visscher II.

Leodiensis Episcopatus in omnes subjacentes Provincias distincte divisus. 1683-1696
Liège, by N. Visscher II.
[Item number: 10967]

€300  ($327 / £252)
Liège by Eisen F.C.

With train station
Panorama von Lüttich - Panorama de Liége. c. 1840
Liège by Eisen F.C.
[Item number: 17581]

€600  ($654 / £504)
Liège by Ludovico Guicciardini.

Liège. 1588
Liège by Ludovico Guicciardini.
[Item number: 18509]

€250  ($272.5 / £210)
Diocese of Liège, by Willem Blaeu.

Leodiensis Dioecesis. 1635
Diocese of Liège, by Willem Blaeu.
[Item number: 20335]

€350  ($381.5 / £294)
Liège, by Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg.

Leodium 1612
Liège, by Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg.
[Item number: 22308]

€420  ($457.8 / £352.8)
Hasselt, Maastricht, Liège by Guicciardini Ludovico

Leodiensis Episcopatus Delineatio. 1609
Hasselt, Maastricht, Liège by Guicciardini Ludovico
[Item number: 27020]

€220  ($239.8 / £184.8)
Liège, by Jodocus Hondius.

Leodiensis Dioecesis Typus. 1623
Liège, by Jodocus Hondius.
[Item number: 27964]

€350  ($381.5 / £294)
Liège, by Abraham Ortelius.

Leodiensis Dioecesis Typus. After 1612
Liège, by Abraham Ortelius.
[Item number: 28111]

€550  ($599.5 / £462)
Limburg - Liège by Pierre Husson.

Carte contenant le Duché de Limbourg et partie du Diocèse de Liège. c. 1709
Limburg - Liège by Pierre Husson.
[Item number: 29590]

€420  ($457.8 / £352.8)
Diocese of Liège, by Willem Blaeu.

Leodiensis Dioecesis. 1643
Diocese of Liège, by Willem Blaeu.
[Item number: 29933]

€400  ($436 / £336)
Diocese of Liège by Johannes Janssonius.

Dioecesis Leodiensis Accurata Tabula. 1653
Diocese of Liège by Johannes Janssonius.
[Item number: 30372]

€360  ($392.4 / £302.4)