Les environs de Rome, pour l'intelligence de l'Histoire romaine de Rollin par d'Anville

Reference: CO-193
Author Jean Baptiste Bourguignon D'Anville
Year: 1750 ca.
Zone: Lazio
Printed: Paris
Measures: 360 x 340 mm
€200.00

Reference: CO-193
Author Jean Baptiste Bourguignon D'Anville
Year: 1750 ca.
Zone: Lazio
Printed: Paris
Measures: 360 x 340 mm
€200.00

Description

Map taken from the Atlas Dresse pour l'Intelligence de l'Histoire Romaine de Rollin by D’Anville, Paris, 1750 circa.

This atlas was created to accompany Rollin's history on the Roman Empire, and is comprised of 12 maps: Les Environs de Rome; Plan de Rome Ancienne; L'Italie; Carte de l'Italie; Carte pour l'Expedition d'Ennibal et sur Laquelle son Passage en Italie; La Sicile; L'Espagne; La Grece; La Gaule Cisalpine; La Numidie; Carte de la Province Romaine dans la Gaule; La Gaule. 

Copperplate with original colouring, good condition.

Jean Baptiste Bourguignon D'Anville (1697-1782)

Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville was perhaps the most important and prolific cartographer of the 18th century. D'Anville's passion for cartography manifested during his school years when he amused himself by composing maps for Latin texts. There is a preserved manuscript dating to 1712, Graecia Vetus, which may be his earliest surviving map - he was only 15 when he drew it. He would retain an interest in the cartography of antiquity throughout his long career and published numerous atlases to focusing on the ancient world. At twenty-two D'Anville, sponsored by the Duke of Orleans, was appointed Geographer to the King of France. As both a cartographer and a geographer, he instituted a reform in the general practice of cartography. Unlike most period cartographers, D'Anville did not rely exclusively on earlier maps to inform his work, rather he based his maps on intense study and research. His maps were thus the most accurate and comprehensive of his period - truly the first modern maps.

Jean Baptiste Bourguignon D'Anville (1697-1782)

Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville was perhaps the most important and prolific cartographer of the 18th century. D'Anville's passion for cartography manifested during his school years when he amused himself by composing maps for Latin texts. There is a preserved manuscript dating to 1712, Graecia Vetus, which may be his earliest surviving map - he was only 15 when he drew it. He would retain an interest in the cartography of antiquity throughout his long career and published numerous atlases to focusing on the ancient world. At twenty-two D'Anville, sponsored by the Duke of Orleans, was appointed Geographer to the King of France. As both a cartographer and a geographer, he instituted a reform in the general practice of cartography. Unlike most period cartographers, D'Anville did not rely exclusively on earlier maps to inform his work, rather he based his maps on intense study and research. His maps were thus the most accurate and comprehensive of his period - truly the first modern maps.