Secunda Asiae Tbula

  • Translation

Article ID EUO3039

Title

Secunda Asiae Tbula

Description

Map shows trapezoid the former area of Sarmatia, Russia and Ukrain with the Peninsula Krim and the black sea with the neighbouring countries. Rivers and mountains are roughly shown in the country on the side the climatically zones.

Year

ca. 1478

Artist

Ptolemy/Conrad Sweynheym

Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweinheim were two printers of the 15th century. Pannartz died about 1476, Sweinheim in 1477. Pannartz was, perhaps, a native of Prague, and Sweinheim of Eltville near Mainz. Zedler believes (Gutenberg-Forschungen, 1901) that Sweinheim worked at Eltville with Gutenberg in 1461-1464. Whether Pannartz had been connected with Sweinheim in Germany is not known. It is certain that the two brought Gutenberg's invention to Italy. The Benedictine abbey of Subiaco was the cradle of Italian printing. Probably Cardinal Giovanni of Turrecremata, who was Abbot in commendam of Subiaco, summoned the two printers there. They came in 1464. The first book that they printed at Subiaco was a Donatus; it has not, however, been preserved. The first book printed in Italy that is extant was a Cicero, De oratore (now in the Buchgewerbehaus at Leipzig), issued in September, 1465. It was followed by Lactantius, De divinis institutionibus, in October, 1465, and Augustine's De civitate Dei (1467). These four impressions from Subiaco are of particular importance, because they abandon the Blackletter of the early German books. In Italy, Roman characters were demanded. Pannartz and Sweinheim, however, did not produce a pure but only a ""half Roman"" type with Blackletter-like characteristics. n 1467, the two printers left Subiaco and settled at Rome, where the brothers Pietro and Francesco Massimo placed a house at their disposal. The same year, they published an edition of Cicero's letters that gave its name to the cicero, the Continental equivalent of the pica. Their proof and manuscript reader was Giovan de' Bussi, since 1469 Bishop of Aleria in Corsica. In 1472, they applied to Pope Sixtus IV for Church benefices. From this we know that both were ecclesiastics: Pannartz of Cologne and Sweinheim of Mainz. The pope had a reversion drawn up for them, a proof of his great interest in printing. In 1474, Sweinheim was made a canon at St. Victor at Mainz. It is not known whether Pannartz also obtained benefice. Perhaps the pope also aided them, at any rate, they printed eighteen more works in 1472 and 1473. After this they separated. Pannartz printed by himself thirteen further volumes. Sweinheim took up engraving on metal and executed the fine maps for the Cosmography of Ptolemy (arround 100- 160 a.C.), the first work of this kind, but died before he had finished his task. Claudius Ptolemy Geographia, gives a list of geographic coordinates of spherical longitude and latitude of almost ten thousand point locations on the earth surface, as they were known at his times. The list is organized in Tabulae which cor- respond to specific regions of the three known continents at that time, Africa, Asia and Europe. Research on Ptolemy’s Geographia has started at the University of Thessaloniki, Greece, in the eighties, focused mainly, but not exclusively, on data re- lated to territories which are now under the sovereignty of the modern Greek state. The World of Ptolemy is classified in Regions, since each Chapter is referred to one of them, giving by this way the concept of Atlas as it is understood today.

Historical Description

Sarmatia or Sarmatia was the name given by Greeks, Romans and Byzantines, especially in late antiquity, to a large area between the rivers Vistula in the west and Volga in the east and between the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea, part of which bears the geographical name Sarmatian Plain (in Galicia). At that time, this region was inhabited mainly by Sarmatian peoples. According to Greek belief, since Alexander the Great, Sarmatia was divided by the river Tanais (Don) into a "European" and an "Asian" half. In cartography, the so-called two Sarmatia can be found, among others, in the Cosmography of Claudius Ptolemy (printed in 1467). In contemporary historiography, the two Sarmatias are also taken up, as shown by an anonymous print of 1518, written by the Polish chronicler Matthias von Miechow. According to this, the European Sarmatia lies between the Vistula and Don rivers and is inhabited by Ruthenians, Lithuanians and Muscovites. Asian Sarmatia, according to the chronicler's conception, reaches from the Don to the Caspian Sea and is populated by various branches of the Tartars.

Place of Publication Rome
Dimensions (cm)35,5 x 50
ConditionPerfectly restored tear on lower margin, printed on two sheets joned together
Coloringoriginal colored
TechniqueWoodcut

Reproduction:

1,185.00 €

( A reproduction can be ordered individually on request. )