Calicut, India, 1572
The first volume of the Civitates Orbis Terrarum was published in Cologne in 1572.
The sixth and the final volume appeared in 1617.
This great city atlas, edited by
Georg Braun and largely engraved by Franz Hogenberg, eventually
contained 546 prospects, bird-eye views and map views of cities from all
over the world. Braun (1541-1622), a cleric of Cologne, was the
principal editor of the work, and was greatly assisted in his project by
the close, and continued interest of Abraham Ortelius, whose Theatrum
Orbis Terrarum of 1570 was, as a systematic and comprehensive collection
of maps of uniform style, the first true atlas.
The Civitates, indeed, was intended
as a companion for the Theatrum, as indicated by the similarity in the
titles and by contemporary references regarding the complementary nature
of two works. Nevertheless, the Civitates was designs to be more
popular in approach, no doubt because the novelty of a collection of
city plans and views represented a more hazardous commercial undertaking
than a world atlas, for which there had been a number of successful
precedents.
Franz Hogenberg (1535-1590) was the son of a Munich engraves who settled
in Malines. He engraved most of the plates for Ortelius's Theatrum and
the majority of those in the Civitates, and may have been responsible
for originating the project.
Over a hundred of different artists
and cartographers, the most significant of whom was Antwerp artist Georg
(Joris) Hoefnagel (1542-1600), engraved the cooper-plates of the
Civitates from drawings. He not only contributed most of the original
material for the Spanish and Italian towns but also reworked and
modified those of other contributors. After Hoefnagel's death his son
Jakob continued the
work for the Civitates. A large number of Jacob van Deventer
(1505-1575), also known as Jacob Roelofszof, unpublished works, plans of
towns of the Netherlands were copied, as were Stumpf's woodcuts from
the Schweizer Chronik of 1548, and Munster's German views from the 1550
and 1572 editions of his Cosmographia. Another important source for maps
was the Danish cartographer Heinrich van Rantzau (1526-1599), beter
known under his Latin name Rantzovius, who provided maps of Northern
Europe, specially of Danish cities. The Civitates provided a uniquely
comprehensive view of urban life at the turn of the sixteenth century.
Other sources were the
maps of Sebastian Munster from around 1550 and , and of.
Braun added to the maps figures in
local dress. This feature was anticipated in Hans Lautensack's etched
view of Nuremberg, 1552, those groups of citizens in the rural
foreground add further authenticity to the highly accurate topographical
details of what was effectively Germany's cultural capital at that
time. Braun's motives for adding figures to the views, however, went
further: as stated in his introduction to book 1, he believed, perhaps
optimistically, that his plans would not in consequence be scrutinized
for military secrets by the Turks, as their religion forbade them from
looking on representations of the human form.
The plans, each accompanies by
Braun's printed account of the town's history, situation and commerce,
form an armchair traveler's compendium, which the scholar Robert Burton
in The Anatomy of Melancholy of 1621 asserted would not only provide
instructions but would uplift the spirit as well.
http://historic-cities.huji.ac.il/mapmakers/braun_hogenberg.html
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