Original etching in plano, uncut, extracted from the so-called "Imperial" edition of the Description de l'Égypte ou Recueil des observations et recherches faites en Égypte pendant l'expédition française, publié par les ordres de Sa Majesté l'Empereur Napoléon le Grand.
Produced between February 1802 and 1829 by order of Napoleon Bonaparte and published from 1809 [actually 1810], it was printed in 1000 copies on watermarked laid paper "Égypte ancienne et moderne" and offered to institutions.
Light marginal foxing not affecting the engraving, otherwise very fine condition and preservation.
Volume NATURAL HISTORY, botany:
These engravings show the scientific genius of French scholars at work on Egyptian soil, preparing it to become a French colony. This colonial project in gestation since the reign of Louis XIV was accompanied by Bonaparte's arrival with an in-depth study of fauna and flora through the works of the greatest naturalists, mineralogists, and entomologists of the time. The Description de l'Egypte reveals the entirety of this immense scientific enterprise through its engravings, based on drawings by members of the Academy of Sciences including Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hillaire, Alire Raffenau-Delile, and Henri-Joseph Redouté. According to Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire's words: "We have gathered materials for the most beautiful work that a nation could undertake. While deploring the fate of so many brave warriors, who after so many glorious exploits succumbed in Egypt, one is consoled by the existence of such precious works."
THE DESCRIPTION DE L'EGYPTE, IMPERIAL edition (1809-1829):
The Description de l'Egypte is one of the masterpieces of French publishing and the starting point of a new science: Egyptology. A titanic exposition of Egypt at the time of Bonaparte's conquests between 1798 and 1799, it is divided into 23 volumes including 13 volumes of engravings gathering nearly 1000 black plates and 72 in color. The 6 volumes of plates titled Antiquités are devoted to the splendors of Pharaonic Egypt. Natural History is divided into 3 volumes of engravings. One volume is devoted to Geographic and topographic maps while the 3 volumes : Modern State present a striking portrait of Coptic and Islamic Egypt as it was seen by Bonaparte's Army of the Orient.
The "Egyptian campaign," a military disaster, reveals through the engravings of the Description de l'Egypte the scientific success it became, thanks to the some 167 scholars members of the Commission of Sciences and Arts of the Institute of Egypt who followed Napoleon's army. The Institute brought together in Egypt the mathematician Monge, the chemist Berthollet, the naturalist Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, as well as numerous artists, engineers, architects, physicians... They were charged with rediscovering modern and ancient Egypt, showing its natural riches, and the know-how of its inhabitants.
The first edition, called "Imperial," of the Description de l'Egypte was produced in four large formats, two of them specially created for it and named "Medium-Egypt" and "Grand-Egypt" formats. A specific press was built for its printing, which stretched over twenty years, between 1809 and 1829. The Imperial edition proved so popular that a second edition in 37 volumes entirely in black and without the watermark "Égypte ancienne et moderne," called the "Panckoucke" edition, was published from 1821 by the C.-L.-F. Panckoucke printing house (Paris).
The realization of this monument of erudition owes much to Baron Dominique Vivant Denon, illustrator, diplomat, collector and subsequently director of the Napoleon Museum of the Louvre who accompanied Napoleon to Egypt with many other scholars but decided alone to venture into the South of the country, while the other invited scientists remained confined to the Cairo region. The fabulous sketches brought back by Denon during his romantic ride gave Bonaparte the idea to send the other members of the Institute there and thus draw a faithful and complete portrait of the territory. Following Denon, it was therefore the greatest French scientists and artists who ventured along the Nile up to Nubia. Among them, the painter at the natural history museum H.J. Redouté (brother of Pierre-Joseph Redouté, author of the Roses), the mineralogist Dolomieu, the draftsman Joly, and the engineers Fourier and Costaz, charged with the scientific study of the ancient vestiges of Upper Egypt.
Undoubtedly for the first time assembled in such an expedition, the French scientific and artistic elite, composed of more than 160 "scholars" including nearly 50 artists, methodically studied Egypt for three years. They then carried out, under the aegis and to the glory of Napoleon, the most vast historical, geographical, scientific, economic and ethnological analysis ever conducted on a country. But it is perhaps the engravings that constituted the major technical challenge of this Description de l'Egypte, as testified by Yves Laissus, commissioner of the exhibition organized in 2009 by the RMN and the Army Museum at Les Invalides:
"The illustration, 836 plates including about sixty in color, engraved with etching and burin in hitherto unused formats (the largest covers nearly one square meter), required the construction of new forms and vats for papermaking, justified the invention, by Nicolas Conté, of a machine designed to lighten the burden of engravers, and required the creation of new presses capable of printing these immense images. Some of them required two years of work. Nearly 200 engravers reproduced on copper the works of 62 draftsmen of whom 46 participated in the expedition."
Rare and superb original engraving of exceptional craftsmanship and graphic quality, testimony to one of the most ambitious French editorial adventures.