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1644 Merian Bird's Eye View of Salzburg

Salzburg-merian-1644
$150.00
Salzburg. - Main View
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1644 Merian Bird's Eye View of Salzburg

Salzburg-merian-1644

An Attractive 16th Century Bird's Eye View of Salzburg, Austria

Title


Salzburg.
  1644 (undated)     11 x 14 in (27.94 x 35.56 cm)

Description


This is Merian’s 1644 bird’s eye view of Salzburg, Austria. The beautifully engraved southern-oriented view centers upon the city’s cover bridge across the Salzach (the present Staatsbrücke is the tenth bridge to occupy the same location) linking the two pats of Salzburg's Altstadt, then the entirety of the walled city. Twenty four major structures - monasteries, fortifications, churches, and palaces - are marked with letters and linked to a key. The Cathedral (Thum Kirch) is noted and recognizable. The northern (east bank) of the river is dominated by the forested Kapuzinerberg hill - today, the city's main green space. Though the fortress walls of the northern part of he old city shown here can now only be guessed at by the route of the Franz-Josef Strasse, the gardens of the Schloss Mirabell and the University Mozarteum can be easily found on the plan.
Publication History and Census
Merian’s work was engraved in 1644 for inclusion in his city atlas of Bavaria. The separate plan appears in seven institutional collections.

Cartographer


Matthäus Merian (September 22, 1593 - June 19, 1650), sometimes referred to as 'the Elder' to distinguish from his son, was an important Swiss engraver and cartographer active in the early to mid 17th century. Merian was born in Basel and studied engraving in the centers of Zurich, Strasbourg, Nancy and Paris. In time Merian was drawn to the publishing mecca of Frankfurt, where he met Johann Theodor de Bry, son of the famed publisher Theodor de Bry (1528 - 1598) . Merian and De Bry produced a number of important joint works and, in 1617, Merian married De Bry's daughter Maria Magdalena. In 1623 De Bry died and Merian inherited the family firm. Merian continued to publish under the De Bry's name until 1626. Around this time, Merian became a citizen of Frankfurt as such could legally work as an independent publisher. The De Bry name is therefore dropped from all of Merian's subsequent work. Of this corpus, which is substantial, Merian is best known for his finely engraved and highly detailed town plans and city views. Merian is considered one of the grand masters of the city view and a pioneer of the axonometric projection. Merian died in 1650 following several years of illness. He was succeeded in the publishing business by his two sons, Matthäus (1621 - 1687) and Caspar (1627 - 1686), who published his great works, the Topographia and Theatrum Europeaum, under the designation Merian Erben (Merian Heirs). Merian's daughter, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, became an important naturalist and illustrator. Today the German Travel Magazine Merian is named after the famous engraver. More by this mapmaker...

Source


Merian, M. Topographia Bavariae das ist Beschreib: und Aigentliche Abbildung der Vornembsten Stätt und Orth, in Ober und NiederBeyern, Der ObernPfaltz, Und andern, Zum Hochlöblichen Bayrischen Craiße gehörigen, Landschafften (Zeiler, Frankfurt) 1644.    

Condition


Good condition. Few marginal mends and centerfold repairs with no loss.

References


OCLC 163496182.