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The steady growth of map making through the Renaissance
stimulated the collection of more detailed geographical
information about areas already mapped. When Abraham
Ortelius published the first modern atlas, in 1570, he
devoted just one map to Spain; he was however soon able to
acquire more detailed regional maps. The first of these was
Geronimo de Chaves's manuscript map of Andalusia,
which was first printed in the 1579 second supplement to
Ortelius's Theatrum orbis terrarum (24). |
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24. ABRAHAM ORTELIUS Dutch, 1527-1598 HISPALENSIS CONVENTVS DELINATIO Auctore Hieronÿmo Chiaues: ANDALVZIAE PARS From: THEATRVM ORBIS TERRARVM Antwerp, 1579 Engraving, hand colored, 34.3 x 45.6 cm. |
a b c d |
25. JODOCUS HONDIUS II Dutch, 1594-1629 a. DESCRIPTION D'ANDALVSIE. : ANDALUZIA b. DESCRIPTION D'ESTREMADVRE EN ESPAGNE. : ESTREMADURA c. DESCRIPTION DE VALENCE EN ESPAGNE. : VALENTIA d. DESCRIPTION D'ARRAGON ET CATALON. : CATALONIA et ARAGONIA From: TABVLARVM GEOGRAPHICARVM . . . 1616/1618 Amsterdam, 1618 (French edition) Engravings, ca. 9.6 x 13.6 cm. Nearly all the best selling atlases were, sooner or later,
reduced in size to fit the pocket and pocketbook of the
average reader. For example, over thirty reduced editions of
Ortelius's Theatrum orbis Terrarum (1570) were published
between 1577 and 1724. The small-size atlases were the
"Everyman's" versions of the works of famous map makers;
indeed, they were often engraved by the same craftsmen and
produced by the same publishers who printed the mammoth
volumes that only the wealthy could afford. These four
small regional maps are all from the 1618 French edition of
a pocket atlas, originally published in 1616 by Jodocus
Hondius II. The atlas text was by Petrus Bertius,
cosmographer to Louis XIII of France, from his Caert
Thresoor of 1600, but Hondius re-engraved all the maps. A
contemporary assessment of these engravings characterized
them as neat, clear, and elegant. |
| 26. WILLEM JANSZOON BLAEU Dutch, 1571-1638 ANDALVZIA continens SEVILLAM et CORDVBAM. 1635/1640 or later. From: Theatrvm orbis Terrarvm Amsterdam, JOAN BLAEU, 1640 or later. Engraving, hand colored, 38.7 x 49.8 cm. The steady growth of geographical information allowed
later publishers to devote more and more space to particular
regions. Thus, Joan Blaeu could devote no less than twenty-eight maps to Spain in his twelve-volume Atlas Maior
(1662); Blaeu's map of Andalusia was first published in his
father's 1635 expansion of Ortelius's atlas (26). | |
27 28 |
27. DOMENICO DE ROSSI Italian, 1647-1719 LIREGNI di GRANATA è D'ANDALVCIA Rome 1696 Engraving, 42.7 x 55.1 cm. (left half of a two-sheet map) 28. ANTONIO ZATTA After 1650, the developing European economy was increasingly able to support high quality craftsmen in several regional centers. As a result, the Dutch dominance of map publishing began to wane. Our final examples of regional maps both come from Italy; both were published for the local market. The first map, the left hand portion of a large and highly detailed map of Andalusia by the Roman publisher Domenico de Rossi, published late in the seventeenth century, is engraved in a rather coarse and uncertain manner (27). In contrast, Antonio Zatta, working some eighty years later, produced an elegant and concise design, complete with an intricate title cartouche showing Andalusia's agricultural products (28). |
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