Rare Book Monthly

Articles - April - 2026 Issue

Bordone’s Isolario, Insular Poetry

I received a package yesterday that put an end to a 20-year-old quest. At last, I could set my eyes on the first map of the island of Jamaica printed separately! It’s a dreamlike 14.5 cm by 8.5 cm engraving, printed in 1528 in Libro di Benedetto Bordone nel qual si ragiona di tutte l’isole del mondo con li lor nomi antichi & moderni, historie, favole, & modi del loro vivere, & in qual parte del mare stanno, & in qual parallelo & clima giacciono—more conveniently known as Isolario. 


 

When I published a compilation of some early maps of Jamaica (Jamaica Insula), in 2008, I got a digitized copy of Bordone’s map from the National Library of Jamaica (NLJ), which described it as the first map of the island printed separately. Jamaica was granted this honour 104 years after Christopher Columbus first saw it—this is due to the fact that Jamaica didn’t occupy a significant place on the geopolitical chess of the New World until the late 17th century. 

 

This map is included in Bordone’s work (Part XIII of Libro Primo)—but I couldn’t afford such a beautiful book, and had to wait for an isolated map to show up, and at a decent price. This is not a full-page engraving—it’s part of the written description of both Cuba (which map is on the back of the page) and Jamaica. I noticed the binder mark at the bottom, C… and started to wonder. Was I contemplating a genuine map from 1528? Well—yes, and no. Bordone’s Isolario became “one of the most sought-after books during the 16th century,” Sarah Spinella states in her university work*, and as such, was reprinted 3 times in 1534, 1547, and 1565. A digitized copy of the 1528 edition clearly showed that my map comes from a different edition—I wasn’t luckier with the 1534 edition; it turned out that my map actually comes from the 1547 edition. The setting of the letters, and the ill-printed parts of the upper frame of the map leave no doubt about it. So, my map is but a reprint of the very first map of Jamaica printed separately? Fortunately, Götzfried Antic Map informs us that “the maps of all four editions were printed from the same woodblocks in Venice.” A quick comparison confirmed this statement—thank God!

 

The map itself is a poetic and puzzling representation. The global shape of the island is relatively accurate. So is the position of Cuba and Haiti. Bordone drew a mountain at the centre of the island for the Blue Mountains, I guess—and then added a lot of stylized harbours and some arrows to indicate the directions of the winds (P is for the Ponant, S for the Sirocco etc). There’s no mention of any colony although Melilla, the first Spanish settlement on the North coast was known from the early historians of the New World Bordone borrowed information from; Nueva Sevilla isn’t mentioned either, although it was already thriving—but then again, by 1528, the Spaniards had been in Jamaica for less than 20 years. That’s how close Bordone’s map is to history.

 

Bordone dedicated his work to his nephew, a professional navigator—but his work was in the true spirit of the Isolari genre, initiated in 1420 by Cristoforo Buondelmonti. Sarah Spinella explains: “The characteristics of the maps and the lack of scale make Isolario almost useless as far as navigating is concerned, as anticipated by the author who claimed he mostly meant to give “alcuno piacevole dilleto” (a certain pleasure) to the readers, and not to the navigators. The success of Isolario resides in an utopian vision of the insular space, beyond exact coordinates.” Bordone featured several islands from the New World, including Jamaica, describing them “in the classic tradition that represents the insular world as a place remote from the logics of the continental reality” (Spinella). No wonder this map is so dreamlike. There’s something infantile about its simplicity and the neatness of its lines that still fascinates. Even Bordone’s contemporaries could feel the difference. “At the time, Europe was rediscovering Ptolemy’s’ Geography—the Aristotelian model was going out of fashion,” Spinella says. Just as the world was to reveal its hidden parts, people hastily populated it with sea monsters, weird human beings, and magical islands. An island being a closed world, it’s a kind of miniaturized world, almost a parable. That’s why Umberto Eco notes in the preface of Bordone’s reprint (2000): “The lands of Utopia are always islands.” 

 

French bookseller Camille Sourget, from Paris, underlines on their website that Isolaria contains “the first printed map of the island of Corsica” (France), as well as the “earliest authentic description of Pizarro’s entry into Peru to appear in a printed book.” Pandolfini, advertising a 1534 copy for sale at auction last year (Rare Book Transaction History) also points out: “The first map of North America printed separately, and the first map of Japan printed in a European book.” No bookseller mentions the first map of Jamaica printed separately, though—guess this commercial argument is still a little bit confusing for regular buyers, just as Bordone’s outlines of the island. 


 

T. Ehrengardt


 

* https://books.openedition.org/pubp/2680?lang=fr 

Rare Book Monthly

  • Sotheby’s Geek Week
    14-15 July
    Sotheby’s, July 14: Henry De La Beche. "Awful Changes," 1830. $6,000 to $9,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 15: [Apollo 11]. Flight Plan, Complete Original Printing Signed by Buzz Aldrin. $5,000 to $8,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 15: Thomas Alva Edison. Documents Establishing and Ending the Edison Electric Railway Company. $20,000 to $30,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 15: Richard P. Feynman. Feynman's Lectures on Gravitation 1-16, Including the Original Transcriptions of Lectures 12-16 by Morinigo and Wagner, With Richard Feynman's Manuscript Notations, 1971. $12,000 to $18,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 15: [Apollo 9]. A Group of Manuals and Mission Documents used by Stuart Roosa as a member of the Astronaut Support Crew. $5,000 to $8,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 15: [BYTE: The Small Systems Journal]. A collection of early foundational issues of Byte: The Small Systems Journal, with rare hardcover editions. $5,000 to $8,000.
  • Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
    July 16, 2026
    Forum, July 16: Inundation papyrus. P.Michael 4, the ‘Inundation papyrus’, a geographical account of the Nile near Canopus, in Greek, remains of two columns from a manuscript scroll on papyrus, Egypt, second century CE. £12,000-18,000
    Forum, July 16: Book of Hours, use of Sarum, manuscript on vellum, 6 full-page miniatures, with famous Middle English inscriptions, Southern Netherlands for the English market, [c.1430]. £30,000-50,000
    Forum, July 16: Qu'ran, Arabic manuscript on burnished, stencilled, and gold-flecked paper, 447ff., Sultanate Gujarat, Ahmadabad, [after 1411 but no later than 1442]. £15,000-20,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
    July 16, 2026
    Forum, July 16: Turner (William). A New boke of the natures and properties of all wines that are commonly vsed here in England, rare first edition of the first English book on wine, By William Seres, 1568. £20,000-£30,000
    Forum, July 16: Spenser (Edmund). The Faerie Queene. first edition, Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, 1590. £30,000-40,000
    Forum, July 16: Shakespeare (William). The Comedie of Errors, extracted from the first folio, Isaac Jaggard and Edward Blount, 1623. £15,000-20,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
    July 16, 2026
    Forum, July 16: Fleming (Ian). Casino Royale, first edition, signed presentation inscription from the author, 1953. £40,000-60,000
    Forum, July 16: d'Agoty (Jacques-Fabien Gautier). Anatomie de la Tête, first edition, Paris, chez le Sieur Gautier, 1748. £10,000-15,000
    Forum, July 16: Martial Arts.- Lee (Bruce). 'Praying Mantis style' Kung Fu book, containing numerous annotations, diagrams and graphs in Bruce Lee's hand, c. 1960. £50,000-70,000
    Forum Auctions
    The 10th Anniversary Sale
    Fine Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper
    July 16, 2026
    Forum, July 16: Warre (Capt. Henry James). Sketches in North America and the Oregon Territory, first edition, rare hand-coloured issue, 1848. £30,000-40,000
    Forum, July 16: Norie (John William). The Marine Atlas, or Seaman's Complete Pilot for all the principal places in the known world..., 1826. £30,000-50,000
    Forum, July 16: Mao Tse-tung.- Kim Il-sung.-[Note book for visitors from China to Korea], signed by Mao and Kim, [Beijing, 1954]. £10,000-15,000

Article Search

Archived Articles