C1597

Latium, seu Terrtorium Romae.

Very finely engraved C.16th Ptolemaic map of  Rome and its environs by Girolamo Porro, printed in Cologne by Petrus Keschedt and translated from Latin into Italian by Leonardo Cernoti, published by Giovanni Antonio Magini, Padua. From, Giovanni Antonio Magini, Geografia … Read Full Description

$A 325

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S/N: PTOL-1597-MAGINI-081-EU-ITA–393497
(C016)
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Details

Full Title:

Latium, seu Terrtorium Romae.

Date:

C1597

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Copper engraving.

Image Size: 

172mm 
x 125mm

Paper Size: 

200mm 
x 296mm
AUTHENTICITY
Latium, seu Terrtorium Romae. - Antique Map from 1597

Genuine antique
dated:

1597

Description:

Very finely engraved C.16th Ptolemaic map of  Rome and its environs by Girolamo Porro, printed in Cologne by Petrus Keschedt and translated from Latin into Italian by Leonardo Cernoti, published by Giovanni Antonio Magini, Padua.

From, Giovanni Antonio Magini, Geografia cioè descrittione universale della terra. Padua

 

References:
Stevens, H. Ptolemy's Geography. London 1973 :: p.55.
Phillips, P. A List of Geographical Atlases in the Library of Congress. Washington 1973 :: 405.
Shirley, R. The Mapping of the World Early Printed World Maps 1472-1700. London 1987 :: 201.
Shirley, R. Printed Maps of the British Isles 1650-1750. Tring 1988 :: T.PTOL-12b, Vol.I, p.835.
Mickwitz & Miekkavaara, The A.E. Nordenskiold Collection of Maps up to 1800 Helsinki 1979-1995 :: 226.


Girolamo Porro (1530 - 1585)

Poro was an Italian engraver born at Padua and spent most of his working career in Venice.

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Claudius Ptolemy (100 - 170)

Ptolemy was a mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, geographer, astrologer and author of the Geography, also known by its Latin names as the Geographia and the Cosmographia, a gazetteer, an atlas, and a treatise on cartography, which comprised the geographical knowledge of the 2nd-century Roman Empire written c. AD 150. It was a revision of a lost atlas by Marinus the Greek, a geographer, cartographer and mathematician from the Roman province of Tyre using additional Roman and Persian gazetteers and new principles. Its translation into Arabic in the 9th century and Latin in 1406 was highly influential on the geographical knowledge and cartographic knowledge of the medieval Caliphate and Renaissance Europe. No Greek manuscript of the Geography survives from earlier than the late 13th century (c.1295), the earliest is in the Vatican library. A letter written by the Byzantine monk Maximus Planudes records that he searched for one in the Chora Monastery in the summer of 1295 and the earliest surviving manuscript may have been one of those he then assembled. The three earliest surviving manuscript versions with maps are those from Constantinople (Istanbul) based on Planudes's work. The first Latin translation from these was made in 1406 or 1407 by Jacobus Angelus in Florence, Italy, under the name Geographia Claudii Ptolemaei and first printed in Venice 1475 by Hermanus Levilapis (Herman Lichtensein of Cologne) without maps. This was followed in 1478 by a Roman edition with twenty seven maps printed by Arnoldus Buckinck. In 1482 the famous Ulm edition was translated by Leonardus Hol with 32 woodcut maps, 5 of which were new modern maps. In 1513 one of the most important editions was issued by Martin Waldseemuller with 47 woodcut maps of which 20 were new modern maps including one devoted to the new world. In 1540 a new and important edition, titled Cosmographia was revised and edited by Sebastian Munster and printed by Henricus Petri at Basle. Munster redesigned the maps and added a geographical appendix. The Geography continued to be issued by various publishers who included new geographical information to the maps.

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