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Stampe

JANSSONIUS Johannes

Brescia Episcopatus Mediolanum Ducatus

1628

125,00 €

Antiquarius Libreria

(Roma, Italia)

Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

Anno di pubblicazione
1628
Luogo di stampa
Amsterdam
Formato
190 X 145
Incisori
JANSSONIUS Johannes

Descrizione

Mappa in miniatura tratta dall’Atlas minor, Das ist: Eine kurtze, jedoch gründliche Beschreibung der gantzen Weldt. ' Incisa da Abraham Goos o Pieter van den Keere, venne pubblicata per la prima volta da Johannes Janssonius nel 1628. L'Atlas Minor ' di Gerard Mercator fu concepito da Jodocus Hondius nel 1607 come edizione ridotta del popolare ' Atlas ' di Mercator in folio. L'Atlas Minor ' doveva essere più grande di un atlante tascabile, ma più piccolo di un atlante in folio, e aveva un prezzo adeguato a raggiungere una diversa clientela. Ci furono tre diverse edizioni dell'Atlas Minor ' pubblicate da autori diversi, ognuna con una nuova serie di mappe incise in rame. Jodocus Hondius pubblicò la prima edizione tra il 1607 e il 1621, e successivamente vendette le tavole in rame ad editori inglesi; tra il 1635-39 fu pubblicata un'edizione inglese dell’opera utilizzando molte delle tavole originali. Johannes Janssonius volle competere anche nel mercato dei “piccoli” atlanti e fece incidere nuove lastre di rame da Pieter van den Keere e Abraham Goos per la propria edizione dell’Atlas Minor, pubblicata in più lingue tra il 1628 e il 1651 La terza e ultima versione fu pubblicata da Jan Evertsz. Cloppenburch (o Cloppenburg) tra il 1630 e il 1734, con nuove mappe incise principalmente sempre da Pieter van den Keere. "Shortly after the publication of the big folio-atlases the need was apparantly felt for a smaller-sized atlas, one that would be handier, and, above all, cheaper, so that a larger public might have access to the use of maps. The publication of the ' Atlas Minor ' appeared to be a great success for Hondius; the first Latin edition was in great demand. The copperplates of the first atlases minor were most almost certainly engraved by Jodocus Hondius himself. After 1621, the copperplates of the ' Atlas Minor ' were sold to a London editor. Firstly, they appeared in ' Purchas his Pilgrinies, printed in 1625 by William Stansby for Henry Featherstone. Next they were used for the translation of the Mercator-atlas, printed in small folio under the title ' Historia mundi, or Mercators atlas, ' by Thomas Cotes for Michael Sparke and Samuel Cartwight in 1635". (cf. Koeman II Me 191). "As with the ' Theatrum ' of Abraham Ortelius, Jodocus Hondius planned a reduced size version of Gerard Mercator's folio atlas. Just one year after his first edition he published his Latin text ' Atlas Minor ' in collaboration with Jan Jansz. and Cormelis Claesz. The arrangement between these three is not understood clearly but Hondius is believed to have been the owner of the copperplates. Cartographically this is taken directly from the folio maps by Hondius in 1606 [.]. with the inevitable loss of detail due to the reduction” (cf. Burden, ' The Mapping of North America, 153). ' Johannes Janssonius (1588-1664) era figlio di un omonimo tipografo, editore e libraio di Arnhem. Nel 1612 sposò Elisabetta Hondius, figlia di Jodocus Hondius I, e nello stesso anno fondò una propria casa editrice ad Amsterdam. Alla morte di Jodocus I, nello stesso anno, iniziò ad aiutare la vedova di Hondius a continuare la pubblicazione dell'atlante di Mercatore e Hondius. Sia la vedova di Hondius, Colette, sia il figlio maggiore di Hondius, Jodocus II, morirono nel 1629; Janssonius unì quindi le forze con il figlio minore di Hondius, Henricus, per una revisione dell'Atlas Novus, a partire dal 1638. Acquaforte, in ottimo stato di conservazione. Dall’edizione tedesca dell’Atlas Minor, stampata ad Amsterdam nel 1648. Bibliografia Koeman IIIB, 352:33. A miniature map taken from ' Atlas minor, Das ist: Eine kurtze, jedoch gründliche Beschreibung der gantzen Weldt. ' Engraved by Abraham Goos or Pieter van den Keere, first issued by Johannes Janssonius in 1628. Mercator's ' Atlas Minor ' was conceived by Jodocus Hondius in 1607 as a reduced-sized edition of the popular folio-sized Mercator Atlas. The ' Atlas Minor ' was intended to be larger than a pocket atlas, yet smaller than the folio atlas, and were priced accordingly to reach a new market. There were three different editions of the ' Atlas Minor ' published by different authors, each with a new set of copperplates. Jodocus Hondius published the first edition from 1607-1621, and subsequently sold the copperplates to parties in England between 1621-1625, after which an English edition was published using many of the original plates in 1635-39. Johannes Jansson wanted to compete in the small atlas market as well, and had new copperplates engraved by Pieter van den Keere and Abraham Goos for his own edition published in multiple languages between 1628-51. The third and final edition was published by Jan Evertsz. Cloppenburch (or Cloppenburg) between 1630-1734 (some without text), with new maps engraved primarily by Pieter van den Keere. "Shortly after the publication of the big folio-atlases the need was apparantly felt for a smaller-sized atlas, one that would be handier, and, above all, cheaper, so that a larger public might have access to the use of maps. The publication of the ' Atlas Minor ' appeared to be a great success for Hondius; the first Latin edition was in great demand. The copperplates of the first atlases minor were most almost certainly engraved by Jodocus Hondius himself. After 1621, the copperplates of the ' Atlas Minor ' were sold to a London editor. Firstly, they appeared in ' Purchas his Pilgrinies, printed in 1625 by William Stansby for Henry Featherstone. Next they were used for the translation of the Mercator-atlas, printed in small folio under the title ' Historia mundi, or Mercators atlas, ' by Thomas Cotes for Michael Sparke and Samuel Cartwight in 1635". (cf. Koeman II Me 191). "As with the ' Theatrum ' of Abraham Ortelius, Jodocus Hondius planned a reduced size version of Gerard Mercator's folio atlas. Just one year after his first edition he published his Latin text ' Atlas Minor ' in collaboration with Jan Jansz. and Cormelis Claesz. The arrangement between these three is not understood clearly but Hondius is believed to have been the owner of the copperplates. Cartographically this is taken directly from the folio maps by Hondius in 1606 [.]. with the inevitable loss of detail due to the reduction” (cf. Burden, ' The Mapping of North America, 153). ' Johannes Janssonius (1588-1664) was the son of a printer, publisher and bookseller from Arnhem with the same name. In 1612 he married Elizabeth Hondius, daughter of Jodocus Hondius I, and in the same year set up his own publishing house in Amsterdam. When Jodocus I died that same year he began helping Hondius’ widow with the continued publication of the Mercator – Hondius atlas. Both Hondius’ widow, Colette, as well as Hondius’ eldest son, Jodocus II, died in 1629; Janssonius therefore joined forces with Hondius’ younger son, Henricus, to revise the Mercator-Hondius atlas, the ‘Atlas Novus’, from 1638. ' Copperlate, very good condition. From the German edition of ' Atlas minor, printed in Amsterdam 1648. Bibliografia Koeman IIIB, 352:33. Cfr.
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