Subject: Windsor, England
Period: 1638 (published)
Publication: Sciographia Cosmica
Color: Hand Color
Size:
6 x 4 inches
15.2 x 10.2 cm
A miniature panoramic view of Windsor Castle, decorated with three coats of arms. The Latin motto at top Propria Laus Sordet translates as "despise the praise of his own," and the verses in Latin and German below explain that self-praise is not thought of highly, and will earn neither glory nor virtue.
Meisner's emblem book, containing over 800 pictorial-poetic compositions, was enormously popular throughout Europe in the 17th century. The plan views were based on the work of De Bry, Braun & Hogenberg, Merian and others with the addition of emblematic figures or scenes in the foreground, juxtaposed with moralizing and edifying verses beneath the image and a Latin motto at top. It was originally issued with 52 plates as the Thesaurus philo-politicus in 1623-24. After Meisner's death in 1625, Eberhard Kieser, with assistance from Johann L. Gottfried, completed the work and published it until 1631. The plates then appeared in the eight parts of Sciographia Cosmica published by Paulus Furst between 1637-78. The plates for these editions were renumbered alphanumerically in the upper right corners - A-H (identifying the 8 parts) and 1-100 (plate number). They were finally issued in 1700 and 1704 in Rudolf J. Helmer's Politica-politica.
References:
Condition: A
Watermarked paper with slightly uneven toning.