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Kaart der Nederlandsche bezittingen in Oostindien = Possessions hollanaises aux Indes Orientales
1840
Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore
Map of Dutch colonial territory in Southeast Asia, including the administrative areas of Java and Madura. Two maritime routes are marked from Batavia to the Maluku Islands: of the brig ‘Douga’ in 1825, and by Baron Godert van der Capellen in 1824.
Kaart der Nederlandsche bezittingen in Oostindien = Possessions hollanaises aux Indes Orientales
1840
Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore
Map of Dutch colonial territory in Southeast Asia, including the administrative areas of Java and Madura. Two maritime routes are marked from Batavia to the Maluku Islands: of the brig ‘Douga’ in 1825, and by Baron Godert van der Capellen in 1824.
Carte des possessions et etablissemens du Roi des Pays-Bas aux Indes Orientales
1839
Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore
Map of the Dutch East Indies featuring maritime routes from the Sunda Strait and Batavia (Jakarta) to the Maluku or Spice Islands (Ambon, Ternate etc.). There is an eastern route (taken from October to March) and a return route (December to March).
Carte des possessions et etablissemens du Roi des Pays-Bas aux Indes Orientales
1839
Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore
Map of the Dutch East Indies featuring maritime routes from the Sunda Strait and Batavia (Jakarta) to the Maluku or Spice Islands (Ambon, Ternate etc.). There is an eastern route (taken from October to March) and a return route (December to March).
The continent and islands of Asia: with all the latest discoveries
1809
Vietnam, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Malaysia, Laos, Indonesia, East Timor, Cambodia, Brunei
Southeast Asia is on the last sheet of this map of Asia. The South China Sea is labelled ‘Malayan Sea’. Small islands, shoals and reefs are shown. A label in Cochin China (Vietnam) reads ‘mountains inhabited by the uncivilized people called Kemoys’.
The Eastern Hemisphere
1801
Myanmar, Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Southeast Asia, Singapore, Philippines
Published by the English cartographer John Cary (c.1754–1835), this map is marked with the routes taken from Europe to Asia by the British Royal Navy captains James Cook, John Gore, and George Vancouver, as well as the French explorer Lapérouse.
A new chart of the Oriental Seas and Islands... from the Isle of Ceylon to Amoye in China
1790
Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Vietnam
A late 18th century maritime map of Southeast Asia, marked with expedition routes including the return of Captain Cook’s HMS Endeavour from Australia in 1770, and Captain Philip Carteret’s circumnavigation expedition in 1768.
- [remove]Indonesia8
- Brunei7
- East Timor7
- Malaysia7
- Singapore7
- Cambodia3
- Laos3
- Myanmar3
- Philippines3
- Southeast Asia3
- Thailand3
- Vietnam3
- more Simple Location »
- Borneo8
- [remove]Celebes8
- Java8
- [remove]Sulawesi8
- [remove]Sunda Islands8
- Malay Peninsula7
- Maluku Islands7
- South China Sea7
- Sumatra7
- Western New Guinea5
- Celebes Sea4
- East Indies4
- more Detailed Location »
- Chez Binet2
- Etablissement Géographique de F. Desterbecq2
- Charles Wilson1
- J.W. Norie & Wilson1
- James Whittle1
- John Cary1
- Laurie & Whittle1
- Robert Laurie1
- more Printer/Publisher »