Treaty concluded between the Crowns of Spain and Portugal on the demarcation of limits in the provinces of America. Signed in Madrid on 13 January 1750.
Treaty concluded between the Crowns of Spain and Portugal on the demarcation of limits in the provinces of America. Signed in Madrid on 13 January 1750.
Map of the Iberian Peninsula, made by Iudocus Hondius (author) and Petrus Kaerius (engraver), based on Mercator’s Atlas sive Cosmographicae Mediationes de Fabrica mundi et fabricati figura (1595), where this map, which Mercator had not drawn, was added, in any case following his style in the aforementioned work. Published in Amsterdam, c. 1606.
Map of the Iberian Peninsula, made by Johann Baptist Homann from Jaillot’s geographical information. In the lower right-hand corner is the cartouche which is practically copied from Pierre Mortier’s “Theatre de la Guerre en Espagne et en Portugal” of 1705. Published in Nuremberg in 1720.
Map of the Iberian Peninsula, made by Sanson d’Abbeville (royal geographer of France), but edited by H. Laillot. Published in Paris in 1692.
Map of the Iberian Peninsula, made by Abraham Ortellius and first published in 1570 (Netherlands). This edition was edited by Aegidius Coppenius Diesth and published in Antwerp in 1584
Map of the Iberian Peninsula, made by Sebastian Münster and first published in 1544 (Basel). Publisher Henri Petri
Geographical Atlas of the Kingdom of Spain, and Adjacent Islands, and Portugal, first published by Tomás López in 1757. This edition corresponds to the third and last edition of this work, published in Madrid in 1792
Geographical atlas of Spain divided into kingdoms and provinces and composed by the sons of Tomás López in 1804 from different editions of the maps published by Tomás López during his lifetime
Geographical map of the Iberian Peninsula, with the division of Portugal and Spain, and the internal royal divisions, by Tomás López, which forms part of the Geographical Atlas of Spain published by the author’s sons in 1804, compiling various cartographic works by his father.
Correspondence of Miguel José de Azanza, viceroy of Mexico, with José de Mazarredo Salazar on different political matters