Cassini, Giovanni Domenico (1625-1712).
"Table pour le moyenne Libration & les Pleines Lunes," facing p. 140 in: Keill, John. Institutions astronomiques. – Paris: Chez Hippolyte-Louis Guerin, & Jacques Guerin, 1746.
In 1679, Cassini, the director of the Paris Observatory, published an engraved lunar map that was twice as large as those of Hevelius and Riccioli--fully 21 inches across. Based on drawings by Sebastian Leclerc and Jean Patigny, it was markedly superior in detail to its predecessors. Unfortunately, it was only printed as a broadsheet and very soon became unobtainable. However, reduced versions quickly began to appear in various optical and astronomical treatises, replacing, especially in France, the Hevelius and Riccioli maps as the standard. The Library has six different reductions published between 1694 and 1792; the most faithful is this one, included in the first French edition of John Keill's popular treatise on astronomy.