Subject: Turkey
Period: 1540 (published)
Publication: Geographia
Color: Black & White
Size:
13.5 x 9.9 inches
34.3 x 25.1 cm
Sebastian Munster (1489 - 1552) was one of the three most renowned cartographers of the sixteenth century, along with Mercator and Ortelius. Munster's Geographia and Cosmographia Universalis were two of the most widely read and influential books of the period. His editions of Ptolemy's Geographia, published between 1540 and 1552, were illustrated with 48 woodcut maps, the standard 27 Ptolemaic maps supplemented by 21 new maps. These new maps included a separate map of each of the known continents and marked the development of regional cartography in Central Europe. The antique geography was a prelude to Munster's major work, the Cosmographia, which was published in nearly 30 editions in six languages between 1544 and 1578 and then was revised and reissued by Sebastian Petri from 1588 to 1628. The Cosmographia was a geographical as well as historical and ethnographic description of the world. It contained the maps from the Geographia plus additional regional maps and city views with nearly 500 illustrations which made it one of the most popular pictorial encyclopedias of the sixteen century.
This Ptolemaic map of Turkey is presented in a trapezoidal projection. The Black Sea (Pontus Euxinus) at the top is filled with block of descriptive Latin text.. The Bosporus Strait and Constantinople (or Istanbul) are at the left. Part of Crete appears at the lower left and the Euphrates River flows south along the east side of the map. Mountains and cities are shown in profile. Woodcut with Latin text on verso marked page 17.
References: Mickwitz & Miekkavaara #210-17.
Condition: A
A nice impression on a bright sheet with a few faint spots of foxing and minor dampstains along the top edge of the sheet.