Parte della Toscana
Reference: | CO-578 |
Author | Leandro ALBERTI |
Year: | 1567 |
Zone: | Tuscia |
Printed: | Venice |
Measures: | 245 x 170 mm |
Reference: | CO-578 |
Author | Leandro ALBERTI |
Year: | 1567 |
Zone: | Tuscia |
Printed: | Venice |
Measures: | 245 x 170 mm |
Description
Map taken from the Descrittione di tutta Italia by Leandro Alberti, printed for the first time in 1561. The work offers numerous news of geographic-historical-ethnological character and is enriched by maps for the first time in 1568.
The book is the most important early modern travel guide to Italy, containing extensive information on chorography, history, ethnography and artistic culture, published without part 2 containing the Descrittione di tutte le isole and the added description of Venice. The two parts were issued together or separately.
Leandro Alberti (1479-1552) was a Dominican scholar from Bologna, acquainted with Achille Bocchi and Andrea Alciato. He wrote numerous histories, serving the Inquisition as censor and then official inquisitor from 1550 to his death. He was mostly known for his anti-witchcraft activity. The Descrittione summarised his long travels (1525-1528) across the length of the Italian peninsula with the Dominican Order s General Francesco Silvestro da Ferrara to visit Dominican convents and was later used as a model by the Dutch cartographers, such as Abraham Ortelius.
The account of the Southern provinces of Italy constitute a novelty since Alberti was one the first travellers who described the areas of Terra di Lavoro and Puglia, recording places name in dialects, nature and pilgrimage sites such as the Sanctuary of the Archangel Michael in the cave on Mount Gargano. The work was mainly inspired by Flavio Biondo s Italia illustrata but Alberti did not adhere to its pattern completely, collecting first-hand information and using new sources such as local histories and maps, as well as other early modern authors.
Woodcut, printed on contemporary laid paper, very good condition.
Leandro ALBERTI (Bologna 1479 - forse ivi 1552)
Leandro Alberti was an Italian Dominican historian. The fame of Alberti rests chiefly on his Descrizione d'Italia (Bologna, 1550) a book in which are found many valuable topographical and archaeological observations. Many of the heraldic and historical facts are useless, however, since Alberti followed closely the uncritical work written by Annius of Viterbo on the same subject. The work was translated into Latin in 1567, after having been three times enlarged in the Italian.
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Leandro ALBERTI (Bologna 1479 - forse ivi 1552)
Leandro Alberti was an Italian Dominican historian. The fame of Alberti rests chiefly on his Descrizione d'Italia (Bologna, 1550) a book in which are found many valuable topographical and archaeological observations. Many of the heraldic and historical facts are useless, however, since Alberti followed closely the uncritical work written by Annius of Viterbo on the same subject. The work was translated into Latin in 1567, after having been three times enlarged in the Italian.
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