Αρ. 83551599

Δεν είναι πλέον διαθέσιμο
Υδρόγειος - J. Felkl & Sohn, Ροστόκ κοντά στην Πράγα, 1885 - γερμανική γλώσσα
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Υδρόγειος - J. Felkl & Sohn, Ροστόκ κοντά στην Πράγα, 1885 - γερμανική γλώσσα

Terrestrial Globe by Jan Felkl & Sohn, Rostok near Prague c. 1885. "ERDGLOBUS", by J. Felkl & Sohn / Rostok near Prague, lithographed and coloured paper segments on papier-mache and plaster, brass half-meridian ring and turned ebany base. The globe is well preserved, the patina is very beautiful! The colors are bright and the cartography is legible, there are signs of aging and Pacific Ocean area slightly damaged with maps NOT missing. dm: c. 32 cm, height: c. 56 cm German language --------------------------------------- Jan Felkl (1817-1887) was born in Bohemia but moved to Prague in early adulthood where he worked in the postal office. In 1850 he acquired the Vaclav Merklas globe manufactory in Prague and in 1854 started globe-production under his own name. The cartography for these globes had been developed by Felkl himself, in collaboration with Professor Otto Delitsch of Leipzig University. He soon became the largest producer of globes in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, with spheres of diameter 6.2, 8.6, 11.4, 15.8, 21.9, 31.9 and 47.5cm. diameter, in any of 17 different languages. He also produced telluria, lunaria and other planetaria as well as wall maps for schools and offices. His proficiency and and productivity were in part a result of a law that decreed that all schools throughout the Austro-Hungarian had to have a globe. Most of these were supplied by Felkl. By 1855 the company had produced 800 globes; in 1873 alone they produced 15,000. In 1870, due to the poor state of Jan's wife's health, the company moved location to Roztoky near Prague, and it was there that Jan's son Christoph Siegmund (1855-1894) was made a partner in the firm in 1875, at the age of 20. Christoph Siegmund was the fifth of Felkl's nine offspring and his youngest son. Siegmund, as he was known, was regarded as an eccentric character, and none too popular with his employees; he is recorded as having kept a human skeleton standing by his bedside holding a candlestick, and a human skull on his desk as a repository for his pens. Following Siegmund's unexpected death on a business trip in Munich in 1894, the company was run by Jan's second child and second eldest son Ferdinand (1846-1925). He was reportedly more popular than his brother, and ran the factory with greater efficiency. The firm stopped work for seven years during the First World War until starting up again in 1921 at the instigation of Czech economist Professor Albin Bráf; until the enforced hiatus they had been supplying mainly to Vienna, the Netherlands, Russian Poland and Russia, and had won awards at exhibitions in Prague in 1895 and 1908. But they would never again reach again the heights of commercial success they enjoyed in the second half of the nineteenth century and the company ceased production in 1954, going into liquidation two years later.

Αρ. 83551599

Δεν είναι πλέον διαθέσιμο
Υδρόγειος - J. Felkl & Sohn, Ροστόκ κοντά στην Πράγα, 1885 - γερμανική γλώσσα

Υδρόγειος - J. Felkl & Sohn, Ροστόκ κοντά στην Πράγα, 1885 - γερμανική γλώσσα

Terrestrial Globe by Jan Felkl & Sohn, Rostok near Prague c. 1885.

"ERDGLOBUS", by J. Felkl & Sohn / Rostok near Prague, lithographed and coloured paper segments on papier-mache and plaster, brass half-meridian ring and turned ebany base.
The globe is well preserved, the patina is very beautiful! The colors are bright and the cartography is legible, there are signs of aging and Pacific Ocean area slightly damaged with maps NOT missing.

dm: c. 32 cm,
height: c. 56 cm
German language

---------------------------------------
Jan Felkl (1817-1887) was born in Bohemia but moved to Prague in early adulthood where he worked in the postal office. In 1850 he acquired the Vaclav Merklas globe manufactory in Prague and in 1854 started globe-production under his own name. The cartography for these globes had been developed by Felkl himself, in collaboration with Professor Otto Delitsch of Leipzig University.
He soon became the largest producer of globes in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, with spheres of diameter 6.2, 8.6, 11.4, 15.8, 21.9, 31.9 and 47.5cm. diameter, in any of 17 different languages. He also produced telluria, lunaria and other planetaria as well as wall maps for schools and offices. His proficiency and and productivity were in part a result of a law that decreed that all schools throughout the Austro-Hungarian had to have a globe. Most of these were supplied by Felkl. By 1855 the company had produced 800 globes; in 1873 alone they produced 15,000.
In 1870, due to the poor state of Jan's wife's health, the company moved location to Roztoky near Prague, and it was there that Jan's son Christoph Siegmund (1855-1894) was made a partner in the firm in 1875, at the age of 20. Christoph Siegmund was the fifth of Felkl's nine offspring and his youngest son. Siegmund, as he was known, was regarded as an eccentric character, and none too popular with his employees; he is recorded as having kept a human skeleton standing by his bedside holding a candlestick, and a human skull on his desk as a repository for his pens.
Following Siegmund's unexpected death on a business trip in Munich in 1894, the company was run by Jan's second child and second eldest son Ferdinand (1846-1925). He was reportedly more popular than his brother, and ran the factory with greater efficiency. The firm stopped work for seven years during the First World War until starting up again in 1921 at the instigation of Czech economist Professor Albin Bráf; until the enforced hiatus they had been supplying mainly to Vienna, the Netherlands, Russian Poland and Russia, and had won awards at exhibitions in Prague in 1895 and 1908. But they would never again reach again the heights of commercial success they enjoyed in the second half of the nineteenth century and the company ceased production in 1954, going into liquidation two years later.

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