1522 / 1541 Waldseemüller / Fries map of Central Asia and the Silk Road

TabulaSeptimaAsiae-fries-1522
$750.00
[Tabula Septima Asiae]. - Main View
Processing...

1522 / 1541 Waldseemüller / Fries map of Central Asia and the Silk Road

TabulaSeptimaAsiae-fries-1522

The Silk Road between the Caspian Sea and the Hindu Kush.
$750.00

Title


[Tabula Septima Asiae].
  1522 (undated)     11 x 17.75 in (27.94 x 45.085 cm)     1 : 10000000

Description


This is Laurent (Lorenz) Fries' 1522 map of central Asia and the Silk Road, among the earliest acquirable maps of Central Asia east of the Caspian Sea. Although presenting 2nd-century Ptolemaic geography, this map remained relevant as the best map of the region available. Additionally, Fries' iteration of this Ptolemaic map is distinct from any other in its incorporation of contemporary information about the denizens of the region - in this case, drawn from the texts on Waldseemüller's 1516 Carta Marina.
The Caspian Leg of the Silk Road
In the 1st and 2nd centuries CE, these territories were occupied by the Sogdiana, an ancient Iranian civilization that included parts of present-day Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Centrally, the lands of Sogdiana sat astride the historic Silk Route; the portion of the route depicted here reaches from the Caspian Sea to the Hindu Kush. The center of the map is dominated by the Satrapies of Margiana and Bactriana, as well as Sogdiana, the area of modern Turkmenistan. The map's greatest wealth of placenames and rivers is here, and it is this region that Silk Road travelers reaching the Roman Empire would have been most familiar with. The eastern limit of the map is the Imaum Mountains, a range that includes the Pamirs and the Hindu Kush. At about 43° N, this massive obstruction was passable. At this point, it was noted as a 'town of the Serians,' these being merchants from Sera, the legendary source of the precious silks found at the eastern terminus of the Silk Route.

Near this eastern limit of the map is Turris Lapidea mons, the 'Stone Tower mountains.' Many Ptolemaic maps rendered this as a literal stone tower; it may have referred to the city of Tashkent. This was among the most important landmarks along the central part of the Silk Road.
The Mongol Empire Revealed
Fries' Ptolemaic maps were, in virtually all respects, reduced copies of Martin Waldseemüller's maps from the 1513 Ptolemy. These ultimately derived from the same source as all but one of the early printed Ptolemies and, as such, could be expected to differ mainly typographically, their content largely identical. Therefore, it is remarkable to see that Fries' version of this map includes, along with the Ptolemaic placenames, several text blocks from more recent sources, updating the ancient map with newer knowledge of the denizens of the steppes beyond the Caspian Sea and to the north.

In the eastern part of the Caspian, a throned warrior is shown seated in a tent; the Latin text added next to him reads: 'Here rules and marches Baiotnoy prince of the Tartars and commander of 600 (thousand) armed men'. The image and the accompanying text is paraphrased from that which appears on Martin Waldseemüller's 1516 Carta Marina , which elaborates that Baiotnoy had brought under his control all of the countries, both Christian and Saracen, from the top of Persia to Syria. (Both the original text and the 1522 copy contain the same numerical error: ' sexingenta armatorum virorum' - six hundred armed men, an unthreatening number! But both the Library of Congress copy of the Carta Marina and the present example of the Fries contain manuscript correcting the number to a much more impressive six hundred thousand.) Waldseemüller cited Simon of Saint-Quentin (f. 1245 - 1248) as his source: this was a friar and diplomat who accompanied Ascelin of Lombardia on a papal embassy to the Mongols in 1245. Ascelin and Simon visited the camp of Baiotnoy and were evidently impressed.

The northern parts of Asia were entirely shrouded in legend, which is certainly the case here. Fries' added Latin text, also paraphrased from the Carta Marina , describes a legendary race of people known as the Parossites: having only very small mouths, of them it is written Here the people do not eat meat, but refresh themselves from smoke from the pot in which the meat is cooked. Waldseemüller's source for this was the medieval Italian diplomat and explorer Giovanni da Pian del Carpine (1185 - 1252), who was one of the first Europeans to enter the court of the Great Khan, and he wrote the earliest Western account of northern and central Asia.
Publication History and Census
This map was first issued in the 1522 Lorenz Fries Strasbourg edition of Ptolemy's Geographia. A subsequent edition was issued in that same city in 1525. Afterward, two further editions of 1535 and 1541 were published in Lyons and Vienne-in-the-Dauphane, respectively. The present example conforms typographically to the 1541 Vienne-in-the-Dauphane edition. Overall, the four editions of Fries' Ptolemy are well represented in institutional collections.

CartographerS


Martin Waldseemüller (September 11, 1470 - March 16, 1520) was a German cartographer, astronomer, and mathematician credited with creating, along with Matthias Ringmann, the first map to use the placename America. He was born in Wolfenweiler, near Freiburg im Breisgau. Waldseemüller studied at the University of Freiburg and, on April 25, 1507, became a member of the Gymnasium Vosagese at Saint-Dié. Martin Waldseemüller was a major proponent of theoretical or additive cartography. Unlike contemporary Portuguese and Spanish cartographers, who left maps blank where knowledge was lacking, Waldseemüller and his peers speculated based upon geographical theories to fill unknown parts of the map. He is best known for his Universalis Cosmographia a massive 12-part wall map of the world considered the first map to contain the name America, today dubbed as 'America's Birth Certificate'. This map also had significance on other levels, as it combined two previously unassociated geographical styles: Ptolemaic Cartography, based on an ancient Greek model, and the emergent 'carta marina', a type of map commonly used by European mariners in the late 15th and 16th centuries. It also extended the traditional Ptolemaic model westward to include the newly discovered continent of America, which Waldseemüller named after the person he considered most influential in its discovery, Amerigo Vespucci. When Waldseemüller died in 1520, he was a canon of the collegiate Church of Saint-Dié. In contemporary references his name is often Latinized as Martinus Ilacomylus, Ilacomilus, or Hylacomylus. More by this mapmaker...


Lorenz Fries (c. 1490 – 1531) was a German cartographer, cosmographer, astrologer, and physician based in Strasbourg. Little is known of Fries' early life. He may have studied in Padua, Piacenza, Montpellier and Vienna, but strong evidence of this is unfortunately lacking. The first recorded mention of Fries appeared on a 1513 Nuremberg broadside. Fries settled in Strasbourg in March 1519, where he developed a relationship with the St. Die scholars, including Walter Lud, Martin Ringmann and Martin Waldseemüller. There he also befriended the printer and publisher Johann Grüninger. Although his primary profession was as a doctor, from roughly 1520 to 1525 he worked closely with Grüninger as the geographic editor of various maps and atlases based upon the work of Martin Waldseemüller. Although his role is unclear, his first map seems to have been a 1520 reissue of Waldseemüller's world map of 1507. Around this time he also began working on Grüninger's reissue of Waldseemüller's 1513 edition of Ptolemy, Geographie Opus Novissima. That edition included three new maps by Fries based upon the Waldseemüller world map of 1507 – two of these, his maps of East Asia and Southeast Asia are quite significant as the first specific maps of these regions issued by a European publisher. In 1525 Fries decided to leave Strasbourg and surrendered his citizenship, relocating to Trier. In 1528 he moved to Basel. Afterwards he relocated to Metz where he most likely died. In addition to his cartographic work, Fries published tracts on medicine, religion, and astrology. 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


Fries, L., Claudii Ptolemaei Alexandrini Geographicae enarrationis libri octo, (Vienne in the Dauphane: Servetus) 1541.     The Geographie of Lorenz Fries, Johann Grüninger, and Johann Koberger is one of the most important editions of Claudius Ptolemy's Geographia. First published in 1522, the Fries Geographie is essentially a reduction of Waldseemüller's 1513 Geographie Opus Novissima, but with an important change, the incorporation of three new maps maps, one of the world on the Ptolemaic model, and two completely new maps focusing on East Asia and Southeast Asia. The first edition, 1522, appears to have been a commercial failure, possibly because of numerous textual errors, as is evidenced by its remarkable rarity today. Nonetheless, a subsequent edition appeared in 1825 with a text overhaul by Wilibald Pirkheimer based upon the comments of Johannes Regiomontanus. Grüninger died in 1531, but his son Christoph sold the map plates to Melchior and Gaspar Trechsel of Lyons who issued editions in 1535 and 1541.

Condition


Excellent. Few marginal spots, else fine.

References


OCLC 801704439 (1535) Rumsey 11325.046.