Subject: Africa
Period: 1570 (dated)
Publication: Theatrum Orbis Terrarum
Color: Hand Color
Size:
19.8 x 14.7 inches
50.3 x 37.3 cm
This striking map is one of the cornerstone maps of Africa and remained the standard map of Africa well into the seventeenth century. It was designed by Ortelius from elements of contemporary maps by Gastaldi, Mercator, and Forlani and used several recent sources: Ramusio in Navigationi et Viaggi (1550), Joao de Barros in Decadas da Asia (1552), and Leo Africanus in Historiale description de l'Afrique (1556). The majority of the nomenclature is taken from Gastaldi. The Nile is based on the Ptolemaic concept, originating from two large lakes south of the equator. Curiously Ortelius did not represent the Mountains of the Moon (a prominent feature on most prior maps), and the twin lakes are not named. Ortelius introduced two important changes to the shape of the continent on this map; the Cape of Good Hope is more pointed, and the eastward extension of the continent was reduced significantly. The map is decorated with a strapwork title cartouche, a grand sea battle (copied from Diego Gutierez' wall map of the Americas), and sea monsters. This beautiful map was engraved by Frans Hogenberg who engraved many of the maps for the Theatrum. This is the second state of the map, with Latin text on verso, published in 1570.
References: Betz #12.2; Norwich #10; Van den Broecke #8.
Condition: B+
Contemporary color on a sheet with the crossed arrows watermark commonly found on Ortelius maps. There is light soiling, a couple of small abrasions in the title cartouche, and an archivally repaired centerfold separation at bottom. Minor remnants of paper tape in the top corners of the sheet on verso.