Skip to product information
Nouveau Voyage D’Italie. Tom. I With: 3 Additional Engravings by Misson, Maximilien, a rare highlight from the volume of the 1698 - illustrated book.
1/21

Half the fun is in the hunt: can you spot the curious doubles among the plates?

Misson, Maximilien

Nouveau Voyage D’Italie. Tom. I With: 3 Additional Engravings

Avec Un Memoire Contenant Des Avis Utiles A Ceux Qui Voudront Faire Le Mesme Voyage.

1698, La Haye, Henri Van Bulderen

3rd Edition

$880 USD

Overview

First volume of the third edition of Misson’s immensely popular “touristic guide,” beaucoup augmentée, & enrichie de nouvelles Figures (“greatly enlarged and enriched with new illustrations”).

The volume is sold as a lot with three separate engravings which are mirrored copies of the plates found in the book - identical in design but reversed, and showing slight typographical differences in the legends. These curious plates were drawn and engraved by copying the book’s images directly, resulting in reversed impressions.
Piazza San Marco, see book p.197 Palazzo Ducale, and a gondola); Rialto, see book p. 228; a gondola, see book p. 243

The three engravings, identified through personal research (and not part of the original publication), stand as tangible evidence of a common (but not easy to document) practice of the time, making this ensemble particularly intriguing and historically significant.

Inside the book

The book, in letter form, carries a Dutch privilege granted to publisher Henry van Bulderen by the States of Holland and West-Friesland, funnily protecting his exclusive rights for 15 years and penalizing counterfeit editions (see the 3 engravings sold in the lot!). The letters first describe travels through Holland, The Hague, Rotterdam, Delft, and Amsterdam, blending historical remarks, civic description, and personal observation. Entering Germany, the author records Bavarian landscapes near Munich and the Alps, with details of chalets, cheese-making, and mountain hospitality.
Crossing the Tyrol into Italy, he depicts dramatic geography and the dangers of brigands, requiring armed escorts. Arrival in Verona brings sharp observations of city life and landscape. The engravings are a highlight, balancing antiquarian detail with ethnographic curiosity. They include a full-page plate of a German woman in mourning dress, accompanied by commentary on police regulations governing attire by religion and social rank, and a large folding plate of Roman antiquities, vases, lamps, ritual implements, arms, and ornaments, numbered with a French legend, one of the book’s most striking antiquarian features. Later letters describe Italy in greater depth, including Venice and the Rialto Bridge, with architectural commentary and measurements that combine firsthand observation with antiquarian interest. As part of the Grand Tour genre, the work appealed to European elites and is notable for its cosmopolitan blend of Dutch, English, and Italian perspectives. Earlier editions were slimmer, but this third edition is significantly expanded with more text and illustrations. Written in French, printed in The Hague, and dedicated to an Anglo-Irish noble, it reflects the international circulation of travel literature at the close of the 17th century. The epistolary format made it more engaging and intimate than conventional travelogues.

The three engravings sold in this lot are more difficult to date with certainty: they could be contemporary with the book, or produced later to avoid penalties for counterfeiting. It is also possible that both the book’s plates and these loose engravings derive from a third source, perhaps another travel book. In fact, it was not uncommon for engravers and publishers to reproduce well-known views without the effort of reinventing the subject. To a trained eye, the hand here appears simpler and less refined than the book's one: certain small details are missing, and the shading is flatter. These features suggest a derivative intent, a more economical copy intended to emulate the original - whichever it was.

Why La Fenice chose it

If the book itself is yet another Grand Tour account, La Fenice managed to add a sprinkle of mystery for the most tenacious print-history lovers: three almost identical, yet mirrored plates. Are we holding in our hands an act of piracy? Ai posteri l’ardua sentenza, as Manzoni said (to posterity the difficult judgment): but in the meantime, we’ve thoroughly enjoyed gazing at Venice as if through the looking glass.

Condition Report

Pp. [24] incl. illustrated frontispiece, 334, [18], 29 plates.

Contemporary full leather binding with five raised bands on the spine, gilt decorations and title, red sprinkled edges, and marbled endpapers (free endpapers missing). Occasional dampstaining, generally along the lower and outer margins throughout the volume, varying in intensity. Plate between pp. 74–75 (Heidelberg?) cut in half. Worming at the upper right corner beginning around p. 190, worsened by browning, reaching into the text with occasional minor losses (also affecting some plates bound in this second part of the volume). Plates inserted at p. 303 particularly damaged.
The 3 separate engravings in the lot are in perfect conditions.
The book includes 29 plates (some folded), plus the illustrated frontispiece. Some otehr copies are recorded with 27 or 28 plates, making this volume particularly rich.
Although this volume has seen better days, it remains complete. The lot, enriched by the three additional prints, makes for an intriguing and charming curiosity.

Dimensions (inches): 16.5 x 12 x 3

About the author

Maximilien Misson (1650–1722), French Huguenot exile and travel writer.

You may also like