The Bishopricke of Tuscia

Riferimento: CO-620
Autore Gerard MERCATOR & Jodocus HONDIUS
Anno: 1635
Zona: Tuscia
Luogo di Stampa: Londra
Misure: 175 x 140 mm
300,00 €

Riferimento: CO-620
Autore Gerard MERCATOR & Jodocus HONDIUS
Anno: 1635
Zona: Tuscia
Luogo di Stampa: Londra
Misure: 175 x 140 mm
300,00 €

Descrizione

Mappa tratta dalla rara edizione inglese dell’Atlas minor Gerardi Mercatoris a I. Hondio plurimis aeneis tabulis auctus et illustratus, pubblicata nel Historia Mundi: or Mercator’s Atlas Containing his Cosmographicall Description of the Fabricke and Figure of the World, Londra 1635.

Apparso per la prima volta nel 1607, l'atlante Mercator-Hondius-Mercator fu un successo a livello europeo, con edizioni pubblicate sia in latino che in diverse altre lingue. Le varie edizioni furono curate da Jodocus Hondius e poi da Jan Janssonius, e contenevano un numero crescente di mappe.

"Shortly after the publication of the big folio-atlases the need was apparantly felt for a smaller-sized atlas, one that would be handier, and, above all, cheaper, so that a larger public might have access to the use of maps. The publication of the Atlas Minor appeared to be a great success for Hondius; the first Latin edition was in great demand. The copperplates of the first atlases minor were most almost certainly engraved by Jodocus Hondius himself. After 1621, the copperplates of the Atlas Minor were sold to a London editor. Firstly, they appeared in Purchas his Pilgrinies, printed in 1625 by William Stansby for Henry Featherstone. Next they were used for the translation of the Mercator-atlas, printed in small folio under the title Historia mundi, or Mercators atlas, by Thomas Cotes for Michael Sparke and Samuel Cartwight in 1635". (cf. Koeman II Me 191).

"As with the Theatrum of Abraham Ortelius, Jodocus Hondius planned a reduced size version of Gerard Mercator's folio atlas. Just one year after his first edition he published his Latin text Atlas Minor in collaboration with Jan Jansz. and Cormelis Claesz. The arrangement between these three is not understood clearly but Hondius is believed to have been the owner of the copperplates. Cartographically this is taken directly from the folio maps by Hondius in 1606 [..]. with the inevitable loss of detail due to the reduction” (cf. Burden, The Mapping of North America, 153). 

Incisione su rame, finemente colorata a mano, in buone condizioni.

Bibliografia

Cfr. Koeman II Me 191; cfr. Phillips 426; cfr. Burden 153.

Gerard MERCATOR & Jodocus HONDIUS

Gerard MERCATOR & Jodocus HONDIUS