Pierre Desceliers

Pierre Desceliers (c. 1500 – c. 1558) was a French cartographer of the Renaissance and an eminent member of the Dieppe School of Cartography. He is considered the father of French hydrography.

Little is known of his life. He was probably born at Arques-la-Bataille about 1500. However, other sources give his birth date as 1483, although this seems unlikely, given the date of his maps. Desceliers' father was an archer at the Chateau d’Arques and his family possibly originated from the d’Auge area, where the family name survives between Honfleur and Pont-l’Évêque.

It is known that Desceliers was ordained and lived near Arques. He was also an examiner of Maritime Pilots and was authorised to award patents on behalf of the French king, as evidenced by the seal found bearing his initials. He probably also taught hydrography. He made a hydrographic chart of the coast of France for Francis, Duke of Guise.

Detail of the Map of Jave La Grande, 1550, by Desceliers
Java, description drawn from Marco Polo and Ludovico di Varthema, Pierre Desceliers, mappmonde, 1550. Java est une grande ysle en laquelle y a 8 Roys et sont ydolatres, et nont pas tous une mesme coustume, car les vngz adorent le soleil, les aultres la lune, les aultres les bœufz, les aultres le dyable, les aultres ce quilz rencontrent le primer au matin. Ont longz cheueulx, guardent droict et iustice, nont aulz canons. Vsent arcz et flesches enuenimees. Ont or, etain, esmeranldes les plus belles du mõde, pouvre, noys muscade, spiti galanye. Ilz ont telle coustume comme dict Ludovicus Romanus Patricius, que quand leurs parentz sont vieilz les vendent a vng peuple nomme Antropofagi lesquelz les tuent et les mengent.

Cartographic work

He was close to Jean Ango and Dieppois, explorers Giovanni da Verrazano and the brothers Jean and Raoul Parmentier. Although it seems unlikely that he took part in any voyages, he was able collect information including portolans, and he incorporated this information into his own maps. A school of cartography formed around him in Dieppe and included Nicolas Desliens among its members.

Desceliers made several large world maps in the style of nautical charts:

The Dieppe maps show a precise knowledge of coastlines, and also included representations of imaginary places, fantastic people and bizarre animals. The representation of eastern Canada was well detailed, along with most of the America north and south, just fifty years after the voyage of Columbus. In the southern hemisphere section, a landmass entitled Jave la Grande was shown in the approximate position of Australia. This has led to speculation that the Dieppe maps are evidence of European (possibly Portuguese) exploration of Australia in the 16th century; one hundred years before its well documented exploration by the Dutch.

The image of Java Major on Desceliers' 1550 map was based on the accounts of Marco Polo and Ludovico di Varthema in the Novus Orbis Regionum ac Insularum Veteribus Incognitarum of Simon Grynaeus and Johann Huttich, published in Paris by Antoine Augurelle in 1532 . This is made clear by the inscription on the map describing Java.[1] Desceliers' representation of the Southern Continent, titled LA TERRE AVSTRALLE NON DV TOVT DESCOVVERTE (“Terra Australis, recently discovered but not yet fully known”), is derived from Oronce Fine’s 1531 world map, which was also published in 1532 in the Novus Orbis: it bears the same title as given it by Fine in Latin: Terra Australis recenter inventa sed nondum plene cognita (“Terra Australis, recently discovered but not yet fully known”). Desceliers seems to have identified the promontory of Regio Patalis on Fine's Terra Australis with Marco Polo and Ludovico di Varthema's Java Major; hence, his Jave la Grande is an amalgamation of the known north coast of Java with Fine's Regio Patalis.[2]

Despite their great value, both artistic and cartographic, the charts quickly fell into disuse after the end of the 16th century, when the market came to be dominated by Flemish and Dutch mapmakers.

Death and memorials

Desceliers is believed to have died in Dieppe in 1558. There is a statue of him in Dieppe, and a street named after him.

References

  1. Chet Van Duzer, The World for a King. Pierre Desceliers' World Map of 1550, London, British Library, 2015, pp.51, 171-2.
  2. Numa Broc, "De l’Antichtone à l’Antarctique", Cartes et figures de la Terre, Paris, Centre Georges Pompidou, 1980, pp.136-49; Paolo Carile, “Les récits de voyage protestants dans l’Océan Indien au XVIIe siècle: entre utopie et réalisme”, Ana Margarida Faleão et al. (eds.), Literatura de Viagem: Narrativa, História, Mito, Lisboa, Edições Cosmos, 1997, pp. 47-58, n.b. p.51; Robert J. King “Havre de Sylla on JAVE la GRANDE”, Terrae Incognitae, vol.45, no.1, April 2013, pp.30-61.


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