Jules Verne's Columbiad Projectile Approaching the Moon — 1870s Engraving — art by Édouard Riou — Around the Moon (De la Terre à la Lune / Autour de la Lune) — 1870s
96 views
Share:Save

Jules Verne's Columbiad Projectile Approaching the Moon — 1870s Engraving

Embodying the Victorian tradition of scientific romance illustration, this masterful steel engraving depicts Jules Verne's cylindro-conical space projectile — the Columbiad shell from 'Around the Moon' — drifting through the star-scattered void as a cratered lunar surface looms massive in the upper frame. The ship's segmented, artillery-shell architecture reflects 19th-century industrial imagination of space travel. A shooting star streaks past, adding cosmic drama. The fine cross-hatching creates luminous depth, hallmark of the Hetzel edition engravings.

Source: Wikimedia Commons
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 5/10

Restrained yet visionary, the image packs genuine wonder into a single compositional moment — the tiny vessel dwarfed by the immense Moon conveys the existential scale of Verne's premise with quiet elegance rather than bombast.

Public domain. This vintage illustration is free of known copyright restrictions — free to download, share, and reuse for any purpose.

More Book Illustration