La Dalmazia Veneta

Reference: S46657
Author Antonio ZATTA
Year: 1784
Zone: Croatia
Printed: Venice
Measures: 325 x 420 mm
Not Available

Reference: S46657
Author Antonio ZATTA
Year: 1784
Zone: Croatia
Printed: Venice
Measures: 325 x 420 mm
Not Available

Description

This map of Dalmatia was published in the atlas of Antonio Zatta. It shows Venetian possessions in Dalmatia within the borders established by the Treaty of Požarevac concluded in 1718 between the Venetian Republic and the Ottoman Empire. By this treaty were established the northern borders of Dalmatia stayed almost the same as nowadays. The borders of the Republic of Dubrovnik are also shown as well as Turkish cordons at Klek and Sutorina. The title is in the upper right corner of the map. A mileage scale is expressed in common Italian miles (Miglia communi d'Italia).

Giovanni Valle, a Venetian editor and cartographer. He worked during the second half of the 18th century. His cartographic works were published at Antonio Zatta’s printing-house in Venice. 

Map from the Atlante novissimo, illustrato ed accresciuto sulle osservazioni e scoperte fatte dai più celebri e più recenti geografi. Printed in four volumes by Antonio Zatta between 1779 and 1785. 

Atlas among the most beautiful and complete ever published in Italy in the eighteenth century, the most famous work of Zatta.

The Atlante Novissimo, as also specified in the title, is “increased on the observations made by the most famous and most recent geographers”. Among the most significant innovations there is the appearance of the new islands discovered in the Pacific Ocean by James Cook and the first Italian map of New Zealand. The illustrations were designed and drawn by his collaborators Giovanni Marco Pitteri, Anton Friedrich Busching, Pietro Antonio Novelli and engraved by Giuliano Zuliani.

The first volume of the atlas is introduced by a brief essay of general geography where the author defines in a concise and precise way the elements that make up the ecliptic and equatorial grids used in the tables. Interesting is the section where he pauses to describe the phenomenon of precession of the equinoxes and the cyclical variation of the obliquity of the ecliptic.

Etching, printed on contemporary laid paper, contemporary outline coloring, in good condition.

Antonio ZATTA (Venezia 1722 - 1804)

Antonio Zatta (1775-1797) was the most prominent Italian map publisher of the late 18th and early 19th century. His firm, based in Venice, produced maps that mark an important transition from 18th to 19th century cartographic styles. He updates and redefines the traditional title cartouche by replacing the mythic elements common to the 17th and 18th century with more representative images of Venice. His most important work is the four volume Atlante novissimo published from 1775 to 1789.

Antonio ZATTA (Venezia 1722 - 1804)

Antonio Zatta (1775-1797) was the most prominent Italian map publisher of the late 18th and early 19th century. His firm, based in Venice, produced maps that mark an important transition from 18th to 19th century cartographic styles. He updates and redefines the traditional title cartouche by replacing the mythic elements common to the 17th and 18th century with more representative images of Venice. His most important work is the four volume Atlante novissimo published from 1775 to 1789.