IMCoS
     My Account      Basket      Purchase   
Quick Search
 
Advanced Search
Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter
 
Catalogue
ANTIQUE MAPS (1217) Atlases & Reference (18) The World (56) Britain & Ireland (229) Ptolemaic Maps (21) The Americas (143) Africa (63) Asia (131) Europe (323) Oceania & Australia (15) Near East & Arabia (64) City Plans (115) Sea Charts (39) . Recent Acquisitions (81) . Sale! (48) . Recent Sales (802)
Recent Acquisitions
Wales
Wales
£1,250.00
View by Cartographer
Basket
0 items
Currencies
My Account
E-Mail Address:

Password:
 
Information
About Us
How to Order
Shipping & Returns
Privacy Notice
Conditions of Use
Cartographers
Contact Us
London Map Fairs
Magini, Giovanni Antonio: Tabula Asiae IX

Price: £180.00

  • Date: 1597
  • Condition: AA
  • Colour: BW
  • Size (cm): 12.5 x 17.1 (excluding title)
Description

Title: Tabula Asiae IX. Publication: Geographiae universae tum veteris, tum novae absolutissimum opus... Auctore eodem Io. Anto. Magino Patavino..., Cologne 1597, Petrus Keschedt.
Engraver: Magini. G / Anon

A Ptolemaic map of ancient Provinces centered around present day Pakistan. Based on the 1561 Valgrisi edition. Text on verso.
The map comes from a scarce pirate edition published by Petrus Keschedt in Cologne one year after the publication of Magini's original work. Ortelius informed Magini in November 1597 about this and the publication was stopped till 1608 when a new edition was issued by Keschedt. Although the map is based on Magini's 1596 Geographiae it is in fact a new plate. The Magini's 1596 edition of Geographiae was the first reduced size version of Mercator's atlas. This is the second.

Claudius Ptolemaeus, better known as Ptolemy (born after 80 and died before 180 CE) made many important contributions to geography and spatial thought. He wrote on many topics, including geography, astrology, musical theory, optics, physics, and astronomy. Ptolemy collected, analyzed, and presented geographical knowledge so that it could be preserved and perfected by future generations. These ideas include expressing locations by longitude and latitude, representing a spherical earth on a flat surface, and developing the first equal area map projection. Although his Geography hasn't survived to this day it is thought that in the 13th century a Bizantine monk discovered his manuscripts and had them reproduced, including 27 maps of the then known world.

Stains in left and right margins well away from plate mark

Tabula Asiae IX
Click to enlarge