Theatro Del Mondo Di Abrahamo Ortelio: Da lui poco inanzi la sua morte riveduto, & di tavole nuove, et commenti adorno, & arricchito con la vita dell'Autore. Traslato in Lingua Toscana dal Sigr. Filippo Pigafetta. In Anversa, Appresso Giovanni Bapta. Vrintio, M.DC.VIII. (with) Parergon, Cioe Fuor D'Opera, Et Giusta, Overo Alcune Tavole Dell'Antica Geographia. (with) Nomenclator Ptolemaicus; Omnia Locorum Vocabula Quae In Tota Ptolemaei Geographia
Description
Type of resource | cartographic |
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Form | cartographic material; map; unmediated; volume |
Extent | 1 atlas : 166 maps ; 51 x 32 cm |
Place | Netherlands |
Place | Antwerp |
Publisher | Jan Baptista Vrients |
Publication date | 1608; 1608 |
Issuance | monographic |
Language | Italian |
Map data | Scale Various. |
Creators/Contributors
Associated with | Ortelius, Abraham, 1527-1598. | |
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Associated with | Vrients, Jan Baptista. |
Subjects
Subject | Atlases > Early works to 1800 |
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Subject | World maps > Early works to 1800 |
Genre | Map |
Genre | Cartographic image |
Genre | World atlases. |
Genre | Maps. |
Genre | World maps. |
Genre | Early maps. |
Bibliographic information
Note | Koeman: "This the first edition ever printed with Italian text. The heirs of Abraham Ortelius sold a manuscript translation by Filippo Pigafetta to Vrients, which was then printed by him. In this translation, the Parergon and the Nomenclator were included. Apart from this, Vrients also added at the end, an Introduction to Cosmography, written by Michel Coignet. Several new maps appear here for the first time." Vrients added 8 new maps, making this combined Theatrum and Parergon edition the largest with 166 maps. 128 maps in the "Theatrum", with the "Parergon" having 38 maps, a portrait of Pope Clement VIII., dedications to Pope Clement VIII. and to Cardinal Aldobrandino, 1605. The Theatrum and Parergon plates are uncolored. The Parergon is Ortelius' atlas of ancient geography. Koeman: "This atlas of ancient geography must be regarded as a personal work of Ortelius. For this work he did not, as in the Theatrum, copy other people's maps but drew the originals himself which were later engraved by Jan Wierix i.a. He took many places and regions from the lands of classical civilization to illustrate and clarify their history, a subject very close to his heart... The maps and plates of the Parergon have to be evaluated as the most outstanding engravings depicting the wide-spread interest in classical geography in the 16th century." |
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Note | References: Koeman Ort 38; van der Krogt 31:651. See Dr. Marcel van den Broecke web site for excellent listing of all Ortelius maps http://orteliusmaps.com/ortindexnumber.html |
Note | World Atlas. |
Local note | Pub list no.: 10001.000. |
Location | https://purl.stanford.edu/ns280bq8125 |
Location | electronic resource |
Access conditions
- Use and reproduction
- Image from the David Rumsey Map Collection courtesy Stanford University Libraries. To obtain permission to publish or reproduce commercially, please contact the David Rumsey Map Center at rumseymapcenter@stanford.edu.
- Copyright
- Property rights reside with the repository, Copyright © Stanford University. Images may be reproduced or transmitted, but not for commercial use. For commercial use or commercial republication, contact rumseymapcenter@stanford.edu This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. By downloading any images from this site, you agree to the terms of that license.
- License
- This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC-SA).
Collection
David Rumsey Map Collection at Stanford University Libraries
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