“THE FIRST SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT OF THOSE REGIONS”: 1764 HISTORY OF KAMCHATKA, WITH EARLY REFERENCE TO THE WEST COAST OF AMERICA, WITH ENGRAVED MAPS AND PLATES
KRASHENINNIKOV, Stephan. The History of Kamtschatka, and the Kurilski Islands, with the Countries Adjacent, illustrated with Maps and Cuts… Translated into English by James Grieve. Gloucester: Printed by R. Raike's for T. Jefferys, 1764. Quarto, contemporary full speckled calf gilt, rebacked, raised bands, red morocco label.
First edition in English of “the first scientific account” of Kamchatka, with an early reference to the west coast of America, illustrated with two engraved folding maps and five engraved plates (two folding).
"Kamchatka played an important role in the exploration of the Pacific Ocean" (Hill, 166). In 1733 Krasheninnikov, a student at the Imperial Academy of Sciences in Moscow, was dispatched on the second expedition to easternmost Siberia led by Vitus Bering. From 1736 to 1740 he explored the little-known peninsula of Kamchatka and the nearby Kurile Islands. "It is to Krasheninnikov that we owe the first scientific account of the country" (Cox I, 351). Chapter four of the first part offers a brief, early account of the geography and people of the northwest coast of America. Krasheninnikov was accompanied for part of his travels by George Wilhelm Steller, who died before he could return to Moscow and prepare his report. Krasheninnikov wrote a report based on his own and Steller's observations, though he too died while it was in press. The Russian original was published at St. Petersburg in 1754; James Grieve, the translator and editor, was a doctor from Edinburgh. Woodcut initials, head- and tailpieces. Arctic Bibliography, 9264. Howes K265. Sabin 38301. Engraved armorial bookplate of Samuel Wegg, an early director of the Hudson Bay Company; author's name written in ink on front free endpaper.
Small marginal closed tear to Aa1. Occasional light embrowning but generally quite clean, binding handsome. A very nice copy.