Amber has 15 years experience documenting and cataloging fine art, textiles, historical collections and decorative arts for auction, museum, and library special collection departments. Amber's experience includes working with team members in the fields of Geoscience, Archaeology and Paleontology, and researching authenticity for cultural heritage and natural history institutions across North America. In addition to her work for Mearto, Amber also provides personal property and estate valuations in the Southwestern United States.
Have you recently inherited or purchased an old map and want to know its value? Mearto provides quick and affordable online appraisals of antique maps. All you have to do is click on the “Start Appraisal” button above and follow the steps to send us information about and images of your antique map. One of our qualified and experienced specialists will review and get back to you with a fair market and insurance value, typically within 48 hours.
Have questions about the valuation provided, or would you like some advice about selling your antique map? We are here to help! Our platform allows you to chat back and forth with a specialist to ensure that all of your questions are answered.
We often help our customers to find the value of their maps and cartography. Here are a few antique map appraisals that we have done:
Humans have been studying cartography, or map-making, for millennia. Some of the earliest examples of maps can be found in the Lascaux Caves in Southern France, where arrangements of small painted dots depict clusters of stars that could be used for navigation. The ancient Babylonians were the first to make maps portable, with engraved clay tablets that demonstrate well-developed surveying techniques and the knowledge of cardinal directions, and the Chinese were the first to refer to a ‘map’ in the 3rd Century BC.
The first printed maps appeared in Europe in the 1470s. Cartography became increasingly important over the next few centuries, as European explorers set out on expeditions to previously uncharted territories.
In 2010, the earliest known map of the United States to be printed in America (in 1784) sold at auction at Christie’s for $2 million, setting the record for the most expensive map ever sold. The full title of the map is “A New and Correct Map of the United States of North America Layd Down from the Latest Observations and Best Authorities Agreeable to the Peace of 1783. Humbly Inscribed to his Excellency the Governor and Company of the State of Connecticut By their Most Obedient and Very Humble Servant Abel Buell.”
While auction house giants like Christie’s and Sotheby’s do sell the occasional antique map, the majority of the trade is handled by smaller auction houses that specialize in works on paper, or even more specifically in maps, globes and atlases.
Though age is certainly an important factor, it is not the only consideration when determining the value of an antique map, globe or atlas.
As previously mentioned, the most expensive map ever sold was originally printed in 1784. Maps printed in the 1500s can be acquired for thousands or even hundreds of dollars. Other qualities to consider include: rarity, size, decoration, depiction, historical importance and condition.
Collector interests can shift over time and depend on the region in which the map is being sold. Demand is always high for world maps, but maps of specific locations typically appeal to collectors who are from or have a personal connection to that particular location. Collectors prefer large, elegant maps with a lot of scrollwork and fine decorative qualities when their aim is to frame and display the map. However, there are also many who prefer smaller maps because they are less expensive and much easier to store.
In general, one could say that the most important factor in appraising an old map is its historical value. However, this is also the most difficult quality to quantify. Maps that first depict a territory right after it was “discovered” by European explorers has significant appeal, as do depictions of major battle sites. Accuracy is typically favored. However, certain “imagined” geography, such as placing a holy city at the center of a map, or charting California as an island, also provides a unique window into the history and development of cartography and can result in high auction prices.
There are a few telltale signs that a map is actually a reproduction. The easiest cartography expert’s trick is to use a handheld magnifying glass to spot evidence of modern printing methods. If the ink appears to be lots of small dots sprayed over the paper, it was most likely produced with a modern inkjet printer. It would also lack the copper “plate mark” edge, indicative of older printing press methods, around the map’s image.
Further proof that a map is or is not a reproduction can be found by examining the paper itself. Is it one continuous sheet, or does it have a more woven appearance? If it has a fine cross-hatching pattern similar to a rug, it was created using a “hand-laid” method, popular prior to 1800. Older maps are also often folded down the middle, because they were originally printed as part of an atlas. If your map is missing a center crease, it could be a later reproduction.
I received a response and information regarding my items in less than 48 hours, which I appreciated. The appraiser was very knowledgable.
I received a quality appraisal in less than 48 hours. I also acquired a second opinion of an industry expert who concurred with Mearto's appraised value.