1596 Giovanni Antonio Magini / Ptolemy Arabian Peninsula (first edition)

Arabia-magini-1596
$650.00
Tabula Asiae VI. - Main View
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1596 Giovanni Antonio Magini / Ptolemy Arabian Peninsula (first edition)

Arabia-magini-1596

Magini's First Latin Edition.
$650.00

Title


Tabula Asiae VI.
  1596 (undated)     5.25 x 6.75 in (13.335 x 17.145 cm)

Description


This is Giovanni Antonio Magini's Ptolemaic map of Arabia, appearing in his first 1596 edition of Ptolemy's Geographia. This new translation, engraved by Girolamo Porro, was the most attractively executed small-format edition of the ancient geographic text.
A Closer Look
The map's detail derives from the knowledge available in Alexandria in the second century; thus, the place names change dramatically. The island of 'Icara' appears - now understood to be the island of Kharj. In the interior, near the 'Climax Mountains' in the southwestern part of the peninsula, can be found Myrrifera Regio and Myrrifera Exterior - the Myrrh-producing regions. (The term 'Myrrifera' also identifies Magini's immediate source for his Ptolemy. Most early versions use the Greek 'Smyrnophora' or 'Smyrnophorus,' but Sebastian Münster's 1540 map uses the term 'Myrrifera.' No other precursor does so.)
The Importance of Ancient Geography
European exploration in the late 15th and early 16th centuries resulted in a massive expansion of their known world, far superseding Ptolemy's second-century geographical knowledge. And yet, mapmakers continued to publish editions of Ptolemy - often simultaneously with modern maps. This was because, despite his antiquated data, Ptolemy's methodology remained essential and authoritative. By employing his great innovation - laying out a grid and assigning coordinates to real-world locations - one could produce a mathematical representation of the world, clearly showing the distances between known features. Every geographer of the Age of Discovery embraced Ptolemy's methodologies to absorb and reconcile new discoveries. Before developing new work, any geographer needed to understand the Ptolemaic foundations of their discipline. Consequently, editions of Ptolemy would continue to be printed well into the 18th century.
Publication History and Census
This map was engraved, probably by Girolamo Porro, for inclusion in Magini's 1596 edition of Ptolemy's Geography. The same plate appeared in his 1598 and 1621 Italian editions, which shared a recto with Italian text, while the 1596 Latin edition included no recto text. It can be distinguished from the plagiarized 1597 and 1608 Keschedt editions and the 1617 Jansson by the absence of catchwords or letters on the verso. Typographical differences exist on the map itself, most notably the long 'Z' appearing on the placename 'Zenobij' on the plagiarized editions. Two separate examples of this edition appear in OCLC. Magini's Ptolemy is well represented. Many examples of the plagiarized editions appear on the market.

CartographerS


Giovanni Antonio Magini (June 13, 1555 - February 11, 1617) was an Italian astronomer, astrologer, cartographer, and mathematician. Born in Padua, he completed his studies in philosophy in Bologna in 1579. In 1588 he was chosen over Galileo Galilei as the chair of mathematics at the University of Bologna after the death of Egnatio Danti. Magini was a prolific writer, putting forth theories of celestial motion (he was a supporter of a geocentric solar system), the use of quadrants in surveying and astronomy, and trigonometry. In 1608, Magini produced the first map of Italy to improve on that of Gastaldi: his meticulously researched and beautifully engraved 8-sheet Italia Nuova was hugely influential: upon its publication, Blaeu promptly copied it to produce his own wall map of Italy; the rest of the mapmaking establishment swiftly followed suit. Consequently, virtually every 17th century map of Italy can be identified as a derivative of Magini's monumental achievement. His atlas, Atlante geografico d’Italia, was published posthumously by his son in 1620. This work was intended to include maps of every Italian region with exact nomenclature and historical notes. He also served as court astrologer for the Duke of Mantua. More by this mapmaker...


Girolamo Porro (1520 - 1604) was an Venetian engraver, humanist, illustrator, map maker, and publisher. Porro was born in Padua but lived most of his life in Venice. Porro worked with a number of important Venetian humanists including Camillo Camilli, Scipione Barbuo, Porcacchi, Ruscelli, and Ariosto. Cartographically Porro has produced only a few works, but these include such important works as the maps for Porcacchi's 1572 Isole piu Famose del Mondo (including the first obtainable specific map of North America), and the maps included with Ruscelli's 1574 Italian translation of Ptolemy's Geographia. Learn More...


Claudius Ptolemy (83 - 161 AD) is considered to be the father of cartography. A native of Alexandria living at the height of the Roman Empire, Ptolemy was renowned as a student of Astronomy and Geography. His work as an astronomer, as published in his Almagest, held considerable influence over western thought until Isaac Newton. His cartographic influence remains to this day. Ptolemy was the first to introduce projection techniques and to publish an atlas, the Geographiae. Ptolemy based his geographical and historical information on the "Geographiae" of Strabo, the cartographic materials assembled by Marinus of Tyre, and contemporary accounts provided by the many traders and navigators passing through Alexandria. Ptolemy's Geographiae was a groundbreaking achievement far in advance of any known pre-existent cartography, not for any accuracy in its data, but in his method. His projection of a conic portion of the globe on a grid, and his meticulous tabulation of the known cities and geographical features of his world, allowed scholars for the first time to produce a mathematical model of the world's surface. In this, Ptolemy's work provided the foundation for all mapmaking to follow. His errors in the estimation of the size of the globe (more than twenty percent too small) resulted in Columbus's fateful expedition to India in 1492.

Ptolemy's text was lost to Western Europe in the middle ages, but survived in the Arab world and was passed along to the Greek world. Although the original text almost certainly did not include maps, the instructions contained in the text of Ptolemy's Geographiae allowed the execution of such maps. When vellum and paper books became available, manuscript examples of Ptolemy began to include maps. The earliest known manuscript Geographias survive from the fourteenth century; of Ptolemies that have come down to us today are based upon the manuscript editions produced in the mid 15th century by Donnus Nicolaus Germanus, who provided the basis for all but one of the printed fifteenth century editions of the work. Learn More...

Source


Magini, G., Geographiae Universae Tum Veteris Tum Novae Absolutissimum Opus, (Venice: Galignani) 1596.    

Condition


Very good. Few marginal stains, else excellent.

References


OCLC 837637712.