Search

Search Results

Situatie kaart van een gedeelte der stad Batavia

event1874

location_onIndonesia

Map of the coastline of the bay of Batavia (Jakarta) showing the extension of the port’s pier (in red, labelled CD), the sand and mud bank and bathymetry (sea depth) in the bay, and notes regarding changes in tide levels over the years.

Schets van een gedeelte van het Haven-kanaal te Batavia

event1871

location_onIndonesia

A hand-drawn plan of part of the ‘Haven Kanaal [Harbour Canal]’ port in Batavia (Jakarta), showing warehouses and other buildings, including a fortified artillery battery. There are two profile drawings of parts of the port’s retaining wall.

Nederlandsch Oost-Indie

event1867

location_onBrunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand

Map of the Dutch East Indies, divided into administrative regions with coloured borders. There is an inset map of the important port city of Batavia (Jakarta) and its surroundings.

Nederlandsch Oost-Indie

event1867

location_onBrunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand

Map of the Dutch East Indies, divided into administrative regions with coloured borders. There is an inset map of the important port city of Batavia (Jakarta) and its surroundings.

Western part of the Java Sea : from Lucipara I. to Sunda Strait and Batavia

event1866

location_onIndonesia

Designed to aid navigation around the western Java Sea, this map features bathymetry (sea depth), current and tide data, and is marked with shoals, reefs and other hazards. Written notes add details at specific locations (e.g. ‘heavy tide rips’).

Plattegrond der stad Batavia

event1866

location_onIndonesia

A mid-19th century map of the important port of Batavia (Jakarta), with its pier, commercial centre and residential streets. However, the city is also surrounded by villages (kampongs), fields and plantations. An inset map shows Batavia Castle.

Nederlandsch Oost-Indië

event1865

location_onBrunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Vietnam, Thailand, Southeast Asia, Singapore, Philippines, Papua New Guinea

This detailed map of the Dutch East Indies in the mid-19th century contains a great deal of information: topographical details, settlements and administrative areas, roads, railways and maritime routes, telegraph lines, inset maps etc.

Kaart van Batavia omstreeks honderdvÿfentwintigjaren geleden overgebragt in het jaar 1864

event1864

location_onIndonesia

Although published in the mid-19th century, this map is based on Batavia (Jakarta) in c.1740. It focuses on the city’s castle and streets (in red), but also shows the fields of crops and the wetlands surrounding the city (in blue).

Situatie-teekening van het Haven-kanaal

event1864

location_onIndonesia

Plan of the pier at the port of Batavia (Jakarta). Lines indicate the changing position of the beach and the sandbank over the years, and numbers show the water depth (red numbers=measured in the year 1823, blue=1831 and black=1864).

Situatie-teekening van de havendammen te Batavia

event1864

location_onIndonesia

Plan of the pier at the port of Batavia (Jakarta). Lines indicate the changing position of the beach and the sandbank over the years, and numbers show the water depth (red numbers=measured in the year 1823, blue=1831 and black=1864).

Teekening van de wooning van den aspirant lichtopzigter bij den vuurtoren te Batavia

event1863

location_onIndonesia

An architectural drawing of modifications to be made to a house at the lighthouse in Batavia, consisting of two elevations and a floor plan. The original building is in black, with the new construction in red. It is dated 5th October 1863.

Zee- en landkaart waarop de dagelijksche vorderingen eener zeereis van Nederland naar N.O. Indië door een deskundig passagier naauwkeurig aangeteekend

eventc.1860

location_onBrunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Vietnam

Map of the Eastern Hemisphere featuring a maritime route from the Netherlands to the port of Batavia (Jakarta) in the East Indies, with each day’s progress marked. Other routes around the region and back to Europe via the Suez Canal are also shown.

close