C1550

[Venice] Contrasehtung der furnemen Statt Venedig/sampt den umbligenden Inseln..

Mapmaker:

Sebastian Munster (1488 - 1552)

Early famous woodcut view of Venice from the south.  English translation; ‘Calm shallow lagoon with the turbulent seas beyond the sand banks.’ From Sebastian Munster’s important geography, Cosmographia. Collections:British Museum: Museum number: 1850,1014.1009Australia (Not in any Australian institutional collections)

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S/N: MCOSM-EU-ITA-999–234606
(F34)
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Details

Full Title:

[Venice] Contrasehtung der furnemen Statt Venedig/sampt den umbligenden Inseln..

Date:

C1550

Mapmaker:

Sebastian Munster (1488 - 1552)

Condition:

In good condition, with centre fold as issued. Free of the usual soiling. Not seen a better example.

Technique:

Hand coloured woodcut.

Image Size: 

382mm 
x 243mm

Paper Size: 

403mm 
x 310mm
AUTHENTICITY
[Venice] Contrasehtung der furnemen Statt Venedig/sampt den umbligenden Inseln.. - Antique Map from 1550

Genuine antique
dated:

1550

Description:

Early famous woodcut view of Venice from the south. 

English translation; ‘Calm shallow lagoon with the turbulent seas beyond the sand banks.’

From Sebastian Munster’s important geography, Cosmographia.

Collections:
British MuseumMuseum number: 1850,1014.1009
Australia (Not in any Australian institutional collections)

Mapmaker:

Sebastian Munster (1488-1552) 

Munster was an important German cartographer, cosmographer and Hebrew scholar who is best known for his 1540 Latin translation and publication of Ptolemy’s ‘Cosmographia’. Prior to the introduction of the printing for books, works such as Ptolemy’s groundbreaking Cosmographia could only be copied by scribes, consequently this slow process inhibited the dessemination of geograpic knowledge to a wide audience. As information became available especially of the new world, Munster found that Ptolemy’s theories were contradicted by new discoveries that were related to him by ships captains and explorers. One such theory was a ‘land locked Indian Ocean’ which Ptolemy had shown in his Cosmographia and which was being disproved by the trading ships returning from China and the Spice Islands with their precious cargos.

As a result Munster began to add his own new maps tothe Geographica that reflected these new discoveries and made available to a wide audience this changing knowledge of the world.

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