Subject: Turkey, Istanbul
Period: 1675 (circa)
Publication: Icones praecipuarum urbium totius Europae
Color: Hand Color
Size:
20 x 12 inches
50.8 x 30.5 cm
This is a very rare view of Istanbul from De Jonghe's atlas of city views. Drawn from Matthaus Merian's famous view of the city in a slightly different format, it shows the city skyline along with quaint scenes of every-day life, including hunters with their dogs in the near foreground. The title is engraved on a ribbon in the sky, with an additional title (Constantinopolitanae Urbis Effigies ad Vivum Expressa) in top margin. Tri-lingual poetry lauding the city (Latin, Dutch and French) and a key to the engraving are below the view. Clement de Jonghe (1624-1677) was an Amsterdam map publisher and illuminator, with a shop on the Calverstraat at the sign of the Gekroonde Kornstkaert, or Crowned Embellished Map. De Jonghe also compiled and sold atlases, only a few of which have survived.
References:
Condition: A
Dark impression. There are a couple old brown paper repairs on marginal tears that do not affect the image.