IMCoS
     My Account      Basket      Purchase   
Quick Search
 
Advanced Search
Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter
 
Catalogue
ANTIQUE MAPS (1339) Atlases & Reference (17) The World (57) Britain & Ireland (224) Ptolemaic Maps (20) The Americas (144) Africa (65) Asia (134) Europe (413) Oceania & Australia (13) Near East & Arabia (65) City Plans (150) City Views: Britain (14) City Views: North America (4) City Views: Central America (1) City Views: South America (1) City Views: Africa (2) City Views: Asia (2) City Views: Middle East (5) City Views: France (13) City Views: Germany & Austria (29) City Views: Greece City Views: Italy & Sicily (20) City Views: Low Countries (17) City Views: Mediterranean (4) City Views: Scandinavia (4) City Views: Spain & Portugal (13) City Views: Turkey (5) City Views: Eastern Europe (15) City Views: Russia (1) Sea Charts (37) . Recent Acquisitions (155) . Christmas Sale! (58) . Recent Sales (860)
Recent Acquisitions
Patavium
Patavium
£300.00
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
Braun & Hogenberg: Bardum Pomeraniae

Price: £350.00

  • Date: 1598
  • Condition: AAA
  • Colour: BW
  • Size (cm): approx. sheet size 42 cm x 56 cm
Description

Title: Bardum Pomeraniae

Publication: Civitates Orbis Terrarum 1598

Barth is a town in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany. It is situated in a lagoon of the Baltic Sea the opposite the Darß peninsula. The first generally accepted record is of 1255, when the prince of Rügen acknowledged the town. The last prince of Rügen, Witzlaw III, erected a castle at the place in 1315. He often resided in Barth, until he died and the town became a part of Pomerania.
"...Georg Braun & Franz Hogenberg’s Civitates Orbis Terrarum, stands as one of the greatest monuments of late 16th and early 17th Century European cartography. Published in Cologne, Germany in a series of six volumes between 1572 and 1617/8, and, when finally completed, comprising nearly 550 City views and plans, the Civitates is also one of the most valuable sources for the study of Renaissance urban cartography. " - Roderick M Barron.

Folds as given.

Bardum Pomeraniae
Click to enlarge