Messina in Sicilien

  • Translation

Article ID EUI958

Title

Messina in Sicilien

Description

Map shows the Sicilian city of Messina as a bird's eye view with legend.

Year

ca. 1725

Artist

Bodenehr (1631-1704)

Gabriel Bodenehr the Elder (1664-1758) was a German publisher, cartographer and engraver in Augsburg, who created city views of numerous German cities. His most famous work is the Atlas Curieux, first published in 1704. Around 1710, Bodenehr published the first engraved ground plan of the city of Passau, entitled Grundriss der Stätte Passau, Innstatt und Ilzstatt von Johann Stridbeck dem Jüngeren. He came from the Bodenehr family of engravers. His father Johann Georg Bodenehr (1631-1704) was already an engraver and publisher; his brothers Moritz (1665-1749) and Georg Conrad (1673-1710) and his son Gabriel Bodenehr the Younger (1705-1792) were also engravers.

Historical Description

Messina was founded in the 8th century BC. Because of its favorable location, it was settled by Ionian colonists after Thucydides from Kyme, followed shortly afterwards by other settlers from Kyme, Chalkis and other places in Evia. At the end of the First Punic War, Messina was a free city that was allied with Rome. It soon became part of the Province of Sicily. Until the 9th century, the city experienced an economic boom as an important trading center. In 843 the city was conquered by the Arabs, in 1061 by the Normans. In 1232 the city was the center of an unsuccessful uprising against Emperor Friedrich II. After the rule of the Staufer and Anjous, Messina became the capital of the Regno di Sicilia under the rule of Aragon. It was not until the 16th century that Palermo became the preferred seat of kings and viceroys. In 1783, an earthquake measuring 7.2 on the Richter scale hit the city. Much of the buildings, including the cathedral and palaces of the Palazzata, were destroyed by the quake and the subsequent tidal wave. The reconstruction was based on a regular city map with wide streets and spacious squares. The Palazzata was rebuilt in the classicist style from 1808 under the direction of Giacomo Minutoli.

Place of Publication Augsburg
Dimensions (cm)13 x 25 cm
ConditionVery good
Coloringcolored
TechniqueCopper print

Reproduction:

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