Carta Maritima che contiene la Costa Settentrionale di Negroponte…/ Carta Maritima del Mare Arcipelago…
Reference: | s8681 |
Author | Francesco Maria LEVANTO |
Year: | 1664 |
Zone: | Aegean Sea |
Printed: | Genua |
Measures: | 520 x 405 mm |
€450.00
Reference: | s8681 |
Author | Francesco Maria LEVANTO |
Year: | 1664 |
Zone: | Aegean Sea |
Printed: | Genua |
Measures: | 520 x 405 mm |
€450.00
Description
Two sea charts of the Cyclades Island in one sheet, included for the firts time in the "Specchio del Mare del Levanto".
This edition is a reprint from Vincenzo Maria Coronelli's "Isolario", printed in Venice in 1698.
Copperplate, in excellent condition. Rare.
Literature
Zacharakis 1355.
|
Francesco Maria LEVANTO (Attivo intorno al 1664)
Following the footmark treaced by the colonial conquests and inside the great chart production the West India Company promoted, a lot very specific Atlases for sailors have been realized in Holland; some of them described the North Sea, or the Atlantic Sea or the whole world (H. Doncker, De Zee-Atlas, 1659; P. Goos, De Zee-Spiegel, 1650), few of them were about the Mediterranean Sea ( J.A. Colom, Colom de la Mer Mediterrannée, 1644). At the same time, in Italy, some publishers started to print Italian sea charts (Robert Dudley, Dell'arcano del mare, 1647). We have then to consider Levanto’s work inside this contest, for it was a very accurate and detailed one. To better understand the effort he put in this work, we must read the dedication “Al lettore” (To the reader), where it is said that the author has a great "prattica di passa 20 anni di navigatione" (20 years experience as a sailor) which he wants now to share with others through the moaning of the press. Apart from being the first Italian sea Atlas, entirely dedicated to the Mediterranean Sea, this is also a typographical masterpiece, due to all the xylographies and engraved big-size charts. In the XVI century, in fact, Italy was characterized by the realization of refined maps, apart from literary works or scientific branches of learning, which of course were enhanced by the clearness of the iconographic adornment, made up by the beautiful sea charts.
1664 First part of the Specchio del Mare
|
Literature
Zacharakis 1355.
|
Francesco Maria LEVANTO (Attivo intorno al 1664)
Following the footmark treaced by the colonial conquests and inside the great chart production the West India Company promoted, a lot very specific Atlases for sailors have been realized in Holland; some of them described the North Sea, or the Atlantic Sea or the whole world (H. Doncker, De Zee-Atlas, 1659; P. Goos, De Zee-Spiegel, 1650), few of them were about the Mediterranean Sea ( J.A. Colom, Colom de la Mer Mediterrannée, 1644). At the same time, in Italy, some publishers started to print Italian sea charts (Robert Dudley, Dell'arcano del mare, 1647). We have then to consider Levanto’s work inside this contest, for it was a very accurate and detailed one. To better understand the effort he put in this work, we must read the dedication “Al lettore” (To the reader), where it is said that the author has a great "prattica di passa 20 anni di navigatione" (20 years experience as a sailor) which he wants now to share with others through the moaning of the press. Apart from being the first Italian sea Atlas, entirely dedicated to the Mediterranean Sea, this is also a typographical masterpiece, due to all the xylographies and engraved big-size charts. In the XVI century, in fact, Italy was characterized by the realization of refined maps, apart from literary works or scientific branches of learning, which of course were enhanced by the clearness of the iconographic adornment, made up by the beautiful sea charts.
1664 First part of the Specchio del Mare
|