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One aspect of the cultural ferment of the Renaissance was
the expansion of Western Europe's world view to
encompass Africa, Asia, and ultimately the New World.
With the breaking of the medieval cartographic framework,
geographers returned to a Classical model for constructing
maps using latitude and longitude, as described in detail by
Claudius Ptolemy in his Geographia (second century AD).
The Geographia was translated from Greek into Latin in
Rome in 1406 and thereafter was soon disseminated
throughout western Europe. Renaissance geographers
quickly applied the principles of the Geographia in their
mapping of the contemporary world, adding new
maps--tabulae modernae--to the Ptolemaic maps of the
Classical world. |
| 1. CLAUDIUS PTOLEMY Greek, ca. 90-168 DONNUS NICOLAUS GERMANUS German, fl. 1460-1475 SECVNDA EVROPE TABVLA 1482/1486 From: CLAVDIVS PTOLEMAEVS COSMOGRAPHIA . . . Ulm, JOHANN REGER, 1486 Woodcut, hand colored, 39.0 x 54.1 cm. The Benedictine monk Donnus Nicholas Germanus (fl.
1460-75) was particularly prolific in editing and expanding
the Geographia. His manuscripts later served as sources for
the early printed editions of the Geographia. Item 1 is the
printed version of one of Nicholas's Ptolemaic maps of
Spain; it was originally published in Ulm in 1482, in
Lienhart Holl's Geographia, the first edition of the book to
be produced north of the Alps. | |
| 2. DONNUS NICOLAUS GERMANUS German, fl. 1460-1475 TABVLA MODERNA HISPANIE From: CLAVDII PTHOLEMEI ALEXANDRINI PHILOSOPHI COSMOGRAPHIA Rome, BERNARDUS VENETUS de VITALIBUS, 1507 Engraving, 39.3 x 50.4 cm. Once published, maps obtain a certain authority and are
often copied and recopied. Thus, Nicholas Germanus's
tabulae modernae were printed in the 1482 and 1486 Ulm
editions of the Geographia. These maps were in turn copied
for the 1507 republication of the 1478 Rome edition. (The
first Rome edition had only classical Ptolemaic maps.) Item
2 is the tabula moderna of Spain from the second Rome
edition, of 1507. | |
| 3. MARTIN WALDSEEMÜLLER German, 1470-1521 TABVLA MODERNA ET NOVA HISPANIE From: Claudii Ptolemei viri Alexandrini . . . Geographiae opus nouissima . . . Strassburg, JOHANN SCHOTT, 1513 Woodcut, 38.2 x 53.4 cm. Working in the monastery of St Dié, in the Vosges
Mountains of eastern France, Martin Waldseemüller and
Mathias Ringman used the maps from the Ulm and Rome
editions of the Geographia as guides for their own maps.
Item 3 is one such map, printed in Strassburg in 1513.
Although items 2 and 3 "look" quite different, because they
were produced by different printing methods, they portray
very similar networks of mountain ranges. | |
| 4. BERNARDUS SYLVANUS Italian, fl.1490-1511 SECVNDA EVROPAE TABVLA From: CLAUDIUS PTOLEMAEUS GEOGRAPHIA . . . Venice, JACOBUS PENTIUS de LEUCHO, 1511 Woodcut, printed in two colors, 41.2 x 49.7 cm. In his edition of Ptolemy's Geographia, Bernardus Sylvanus created a unique hybrid of Classical and modern information. He fitted Ptolemy's list of provinces, towns, and other places as they existed in the Classical period to the modern geographical outline of the coasts, rivers, and mountains. That is, he produced "historical maps." (Compare the mountain ranges and rivers on item 4 with those in item 1.) Although Sylvanus sought to update Ptolemy's work without adding new maps, other map makers and publishers such as Abraham Ortelius (see 5) argued that Sylvanus had in fact subverted the intent of Ptolemy's work. Sylvanus's work is also notable as one of the very first to be printed in more than one color. While the towns and geographical features are in black, kingdoms, provinces, and seas are identified in red. All the other colored maps in this exhibition were printed in black and were then hand-colored by artists and guild craftsmen. | |
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Contact: Matthew H. Edney
© 1998 Osher Map Library, University of Southern Maine