Subject: Ancient World
Period: 1548 (dated)
Publication:
Color: Black & White
Size:
4.4 x 6.9 inches
11.2 x 17.5 cm
This work is a commentary on Cicero's Dream of Scipio. It features a rare woodcut map of the world (3.1 x 3.1") illustrating Cicero's interesting theories. This diagrammatic map shows two distinct regions of the earth. The inhabited Afro-Eurasian continent at top is balanced by an unknown, and relatively equal, landmass (Temperata Antipodumnobis Incognita) on the other side of an impassable torrid zone (Perusta) and a great boiling sea (Alveus Oceani). It was this notion of antipodean balance and landmass equivalence that continued to attract Renaissance minds to the otherwise outmoded geographical ideas of Macrobius. Distinguished cartographers like Mercator and Ortelius would later incorporate Macrobius' model into an immense southern continent (Australis Incongita) to balance the known lands of the world, and the division of the world into climactic zones is still in use today.
Macrobius was a 5th century Roman neoplatonic philosopher. His commentary on Cicero’s Somnium Sciponis was of great influence in the Middle Ages and gained popularity with the advent of printing. First published in Brescia in 1483, numerous editions appeared throughout the 16th century. His commentary includes several chapters dealing with his own conception of the world and the universe. It also contains references to many facets of the scientific knowledge of his time, including references to physics, astronomy, and mathematics. Title page, 567 pp. (map at p. 144, erroneously marked as p. 154), and extensive index. Hardbound in full vellum.
References: Shirley #13; King (2nd ed.) pp. 34 & 193-4; Moecker (MapForum #4), pp. 26-30.
Condition: B+
Contents are very good with some faint dampstaining, including the page with the small map. There are occasional manuscript notations primarily in the first 70 pages as well as the title page. Pages are misnumbered from 131-150 but the text is in the correct order. Binding has some light wear and minor staining.