CHAPPE D'AUTEROCHE, JEAN-BAPTISTE (1728-1769) Voyage en Siberie, fait par ordre du Roi en 1761 contenant les moeurs, les usages des Russes, et l'etat actuel de cette puis-sance; la description geographique & le nivellement de la route de Paris a Tobolsk, l'histoire naturelle de la meme route, des observations astronomiques etc., enrichi de cartes geogra-phiques, de plans, de profils du terrain; de gravures qui repre-sentent les usages des russes, leurs moeurs, leurs habille-ments, les divinites des Kalmouks et plusieurs morceaux d'his-toire naturelle. Par l'abbe Chappe d'Auteroche. Illustr. after Moreau le Jeune and Le Prince. Paris, chez Debure, 1768. First edition. A genuine bibliographic rarity. In French.
Lotto 940
6 0008 000
Vol. 1. 347 pp.: ill., 28 ill. sheets; Vol. 1. Part 2. 677 pp.: ill., 34 ill. sheets. Vol. 2. 627 pp.: ill., 17 ill. sheets; 32.1 x 23.8 cm. Atlas. [1768]. - frontispiece, 33 sheets of plans and maps; 32.4 x 24.1 cm. Two volumes in three books and an Atlas. The first volume is divided into two parts, the second contains a translation of S.P. Krasheninnikov's work ‘Description of the Land of Kam-chatka’ .
The illustrations are copperplate engravings after drawings by Jean-Baptiste Le Prince, who accompanied the scientist on his journey. In con-temporary full leather (morocco) bindings with rich gold embossing. Endpa-pers with ‘peacock feather’ pattern and engraved bookplates. In good con-dition. Some wear. The engraved bookplates depicting a griffin's head under a stylised Russian crown on the endpapers are the mark of ownership of Baron Thomas Dimsdale (1712–1800).
First edition. A genuine bibliographic rarity.
Provenance: Baron Thomas Dimsdale (1712-1800) was an English physician who was sum-moned from London in 1768 to introduce smallpox vaccinations in Russia. Empress Cathe-rine II, aware of the danger of smallpox infection, ordered that she and Grand Duke Paul Pe-trovich be vaccinated. The upcoming event was kept strictly secret. The Empress travelled to Tsarskoye Selo, where Dimsdale vaccinated her. The recovery of the Empress and her son was a significant event in the life of the Russian court.
In 1761, Jean-Baptiste Chappe d'Auteroche travelled to Tobolsk to observe a rare astronom-ical phenomenon, stayed in Russia for about a year, and in 1768 published a luxurious book in Paris on exquisite paper with magnificent illustrations. The abbot was accompanied on his journey by Boucher's pupil, the artist Jean-Baptiste Le Prince, who was working in Rus-sia at the time. Le Prince, ‘translated’ his sketches into etchings and engravings, illustrating the abbot's work and turning the traveller's book into a true masterpiece of Rococo art. The fifty-six engravings by Le Prince, that adorned the folios became a lasting historical docu-ment, testifying to the most diverse aspects of Russian life in the 18th century.
In Russia, a detailed critique of the book was published. Four years before the publication of ‘Travels in Siberia,’ M.V. Lomonosov called the abbot ‘an ill-wisher of Russia,’ as if antici-pating the content. The abbot's narrative caused the greatest outrage among the Russian empress herself. Catherine II, who had ruled since 1762, believed that the description of Russia seven years earlier would cast a shadow on all her reforms, and published (anony-mously) the book Antidote (Antidote), which contained a detailed analysis and refutation of Chappe's biased opinions about Russia, with the subtitle ‘An analysis of a bad but beau-tifully printed book...’.
Jean Chappe d'Auteroche was a French astronomer and traveller. He pioneered a new liter-ary genre — travel notes — which would enjoy incredible popularity in the 19th century.