Pedemontanvs Principatus
Reference: | s25018 |
Author | Jan MATAL [METELLUS] |
Year: | 1579 ca. |
Zone: | Piedmont |
Printed: | Cologne |
Measures: | 205 x 155 mm |
Reference: | s25018 |
Author | Jan MATAL [METELLUS] |
Year: | 1579 ca. |
Zone: | Piedmont |
Printed: | Cologne |
Measures: | 205 x 155 mm |
Description
Map taken from the very rare Itinerarium Europae Provinciae published in Cologne between 1579 and 1588.
First state example, ahead of number.
Also known as Itinerarium Orbis Christiani, this atlas was published anonymously because of the political and religious problems that characterized the historical period, as was often the case at the time to escape Catholic persecution against Protestants.
The work is part of the atlases published by the so-called Cartographic School of Cologne, which lasted for about half a century (c. 1570-1610), and consisted mainly of Flemish and Dutch refugees, among them Matthaeus Quad himself and Frans Hogenberg, who was its founder.
The maps are attributed some to Jan Matal and others to Michael von Eitzing.
Jan Matal or Metellus, French by birth and active in Louvaine and Cologne, where he took refuge precisely to escape persecution by Catholic rulers and where he died in 1597. He was among the leading cartographers of the time and, along with Quad and Hogenberg himself, the leading exponent of the Cologne school. Some of Matal's maps are later included in later posthumous publications and bear the text on the verso.
Cartographically, the maps are a derivation of and based on maps first published in Antwerp by Abraham Ortelius in 1570; the engravings of the maps, however, are attributed to Frans Hogenberg. The great rarity of the works published in Cologne, contributes to the appeal of this important map, a cornerstone of every cartographic collection. Each Atlas turns out to be different from the other, as extensively documented in Peter H. Meurer's essay, Atlantes Colonienses, Die Kolner Schule der Atlaskartographie 1570-1610. Our example corresponds to the collection described as IOC 8.
Copperplate engraving, magnificent contemporary coloring, in good condition.
Bibliografia
Peter H. Meurer, Atlantes Colonienses, Die Kolner Schule der Atlaskartographie 1570-1610, pp. 138-139, IOC 8.
Jan MATAL [METELLUS] (Poligny 1510 - 1597 ca.)
Jan Matal, or Metellus, was born in France and worked in Louvaine and Cologne, where he fled to escape the Catholic persecution and where he died in 1597. He was considered one of the greatest cartographers of his time and one of the most important artists of the school of Cologne, together with Quad and Hogenberg.
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Jan MATAL [METELLUS] (Poligny 1510 - 1597 ca.)
Jan Matal, or Metellus, was born in France and worked in Louvaine and Cologne, where he fled to escape the Catholic persecution and where he died in 1597. He was considered one of the greatest cartographers of his time and one of the most important artists of the school of Cologne, together with Quad and Hogenberg.
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