1700 / 1710 Homann Map of Denmark

RegniDaniae-homann-1702
$550.00
Regni Daniae in quo sunt Ducatus Holsatia et Slesvicum, Insulae Danicae Provinciae Iutia Scania Blekingia etc. Nova Tabula edita á Io. Baptista Homanno Noribergae. - Main View
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1700 / 1710 Homann Map of Denmark

RegniDaniae-homann-1702

Superb Original Color.
$550.00

Title


Regni Daniae in quo sunt Ducatus Holsatia et Slesvicum, Insulae Danicae Provinciae Iutia Scania Blekingia etc. Nova Tabula edita á Io. Baptista Homanno Noribergae.
  1702 (undated)     19.25 x 22 in (48.895 x 55.88 cm)     1 : 1100000

Description


A beautiful, original color example of Johann Baptist Homann's 1702 map of Denmark. One of Homann's earliest works, this was probably engraved by the Johann Baptist Homann himself during his brief apprenticeship under David Funcke. It is a bold and elegant engraving typical of the elder Homann.
A Closer Look
The map depicts both peninsular and insular Denmark, including the kingdom's territories in what is now Sweden. The lower extent of the map depicts coastal Germany and Pomerania. The map notes cities, towns, and villages (visually suggesting the relative sizes of the cities). Forests and mountains are indicated pictorially. A beautiful cartouche graces the map's upper right, centrally presenting the royal arms of Christian IV, King of Denmark and Norway. The two cudgel-bearing wild men (bearded, naked but for oak-leaf loincloths) flanking the arms are not decorative elements but are part of the Danish Royal heraldry. These fierce guardians are themselves flanked by an array of docile, healthy-looking livestock. Homann appears to have sourced both the geography and the themes of the cartouche from Frederic De Wit's Dania Regnum, which appears to derive from a different, unnamed source that had informed the earlier works of Blaeu and Visscher.
Publication History and Census
This is the first plate of this map, probably engraved by Homann himself, as early as 1700 for inclusion in his planned 1702 Neuer Atlas. This first plate remained in the Homann atlas until 1716 at the latest, by which point a completely re-engraved second plate began to appear. It is easily distinguishable by the very different engraving of the cartouche, with additional long hachure added to the left and right; also, the engraver of the second plate did not exhibit as much skill at rendering faces as the engraver of the first plate. There are many other changes in decorative detail, but we observe no changes in the geography. A third plate appears in the vicinity of 1730, which included the text 'et aucta secundum Geographiam novissimam Johann Hubneri' (and increased according to the latest geography of John Hubner) despite differing geographically in a single Baltic placename, 'Christiansoe.' We see this third plate appearing unchanged in 1752 and 1788 Homann Heirs atlases. The present first-plate example is from a 1710 edition of the Neuer Atlas. In its various editions, the map is well-represented in institutional collections, and versions of the map occasionally appear on the market. However, there is no complete census of individual states and plates, so the dating of these pieces is difficult to determine without examination of the maps themselves.

CartographerS


Johann Baptist Homann (March 20, 1664 - July 1, 1724) was the most prominent and prolific map publisher of the 18th century. Homann was born in Oberkammlach, a small town near Kammlach, Bavaria, Germany. As a young man, Homann studied in a Jesuit school and nursed ambitions of becoming a Dominican priest. Nonetheless, he converted to Protestantism in 1687, when he was 23. It is not clear where he mastered engraving, but we believe it may have been in Amsterdam. Homann's earliest work we have identified is about 1689, and already exhibits a high degree of mastery. Around 1691, Homann moved to Nuremberg and registered as a notary. By this time, he was already making maps, and very good ones at that. He produced a map of the environs of Nürnberg in 1691/92, which suggests he was already a master engraver. Around 1693, Homann briefly relocated to Vienna, where he lived and studied printing and copper plate engraving until 1695. Until 1702, he worked in Nuremberg in the map trade under Jacob von Sandrart (1630 - 1708) and then David Funck (1642 - 1709). Afterward, he returned to Nuremberg, where, in 1702, he founded the commercial publishing firm that would bear his name. In the next five years, Homann produced hundreds of maps and developed a distinctive style characterized by heavy, detailed engraving, elaborate allegorical cartouche work, and vivid hand color. Due to the lower cost of printing in Germany, the Homann firm could undercut the dominant French and Dutch publishing houses while matching their diversity and quality. Despite copious output, Homann did not release his first major atlas until the 33-map Neuer Atlas of 1707, followed by a 60-map edition of 1710. By 1715, Homann's rising star caught the attention of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI, who appointed him Imperial Cartographer. In the same year, he was also appointed a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin. Homann's prestigious title came with several significant advantages, including access to the most up-to-date cartographic information as well as the 'Privilege'. The Privilege was a type of early copyright offered to very few by the Holy Roman Emperor. Though less sophisticated than modern copyright legislation, the Privilege offered limited protection for several years. Most all J. B. Homann maps printed between 1715 and 1730 bear the inscription 'Cum Priviligio' or some variation. Following Homann's death in 1724, the firm's map plates and management passed to his son, Johann Christoph Homann (1703 - 1730). J. C. Homann, perhaps realizing that he would not long survive his father, stipulated in his will that the company would be inherited by his two head managers, Johann Georg Ebersberger (1695 - 1760) and Johann Michael Franz (1700 - 1761), and that it would publish only under the name 'Homann Heirs'. This designation, in various forms (Homannsche Heirs, Heritiers de Homann, Lat Homannianos Herod, Homannschen Erben, etc.) appears on maps from about 1731 onwards. The firm continued to publish maps in ever-diminishing quantities until the death of its last owner, Christoph Franz Fembo (1781 - 1848). More by this mapmaker...


Frederik de Wit (1629 - 1706) was a Dutch Golden Age cartographer active in the second half of the 17th and the early 18th centuries. De Wit was born of middle class Protestant stock in the western Netherlandish town of Gouda. He relocated to Amsterdam sometime before 1648, where he worked under Willem Blaeu. His first attributed engraved map, a plan of Haarlem for Antonius Sanderus' Flandria Illustrata, was issued around this time. He struck out on his own in 1654. The first chart that De Wit personally both drew and engraved was most likely his 1659 map of Denmark, REGNI DANIÆ Accuratissima delineatio Perfeckte Kaerte van ‘t CONJNCKRYCK DENEMARCKEN. His great wall map of the world and most famous work, Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Tabula appeared one year later. Following the publication of his wall map De Wit quickly rose in prominence as a both cartographer and engraver. He married Maria van der Way in 1661 and through her became a citizen of Amsterdam in 1662. Around this time he also published his first major atlas, a composite production ranging in size from 17 to over 150 maps and charts. Other atlases and individual maps followed. In 1689 De Wit was granted a 15 year Privilege by the Dutch States General. (An early copyright that protected the recipient's rights to print and publish.) He was recognized with the honorific 'Good Citizen' in 1694. De Wit died in 1706 after which his wife Maria continued publishing his maps until about 1710. De Wit's son, Franciscus, had no interest in the map trade, instead choosing to prosper as a stockfish merchant. On her own retirement, Maria sold most De Wit maps and plates at a public auction. Most were acquired by Pieter Mortier and laid the groundwork for the 1721 rise of Covens and Mortier, the largest Dutch cartographic publishing house of the 18th century. Learn More...

Source


Homann, J. B., Neuer Atlas bestehend in einig curieusen Astronomischen Kuppren und vielen auserlesenen accuratensten Land-Charten über die Gantze Welt, (Nuremberg: Homann) 1710.     Homann's Neuer Atlas bestehend in einig curieusen Astronomischen Kuppren und vielen auserlesenen accuratensten Land-Charten über die Gantze Welt was first publihsed in 1707 with 33 maps. A second edition followed in 1710 with 60 maps. Subsequent editions followed until about 1730. The title page notes proudly that the atlas features measurements based on the 'Copernican principle of the moving sky', a truly state-of-the-art innovation for the period. Regardless of editions, collations of the atlas are inconsistent, with some examples having less, while others have more maps - a consequence of the fact that the map sheets were delivered loose, to be bound at the buyer's discretion, and so some buyers chose to omit maps they did not consider relevant, or add others they did. Between editions, the constituent maps, particularly of European regions, were regularly updated to reflect the most recent political events. The atlas continued to be published by Homann's son, J. C. Homann (1703 - 1730), and then by Homann Heirs. Most examples also feature a fine allegorical frontispiece with the title Atlas Novus Terrarum Orbis Imperia, regna et Status, which was used for multiple Homann atlases, including the Neuer Atlas and the Atlas Minor.

Condition


Very good. Old mounting on thick paper for binding; attractive original hand color. Some marginal soiling, else excellent.

References


OCLC 1196263697. cf Rumsey 12499.174 (1716 Plate 2) 12138.031 (1752 Plate 3).