The history of cartography 3,1 Cartography in the European Renaissance ; pt. 1
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The history of cartography |n 3,1 |p Cartography in the European Renaissance ; pt. 1 |c ed. by J. B. Harley ... |
264 | 1 | |a Chicago, Ill. [u.a.] |b Univ. of Chicago Press |c 2007 | |
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adam_text | Contents
List of Illustrations xix
List of Abbreviations xxxvii
PART 1
Preface, David Woodward xxxix
Setting the Stage
1 Cartography and the Renaissance: Continuity and
Change, David Woodward 3
The “Renaissance” as a Concept 5
The Progressive Model and a Suggested Compromise 6
Continuities 7
Changes 11
Conclusion 23
2 The Role of Maps in Later Medieval Society:
Twelfth to Fourteenth Century,
Victoria Morse 25
The Roles of Maps in the Twelfth and Thirteenth
Centuries 28
The Fourteenth Century 44
Conclusion 51
The History of Renaissance Cartography:
Interpretive Essays
MAPS AND RENAISSANCE CULTURE
Cosmography and Celestial Mapping
3 Images of Renaissance Cosmography, 1450-1650,
Denis E. Cosgrove 55
Cosmography as a Renaissance Project 55
Definitions, Meanings, and Uses of a Changing
Cosmography 56
History and Geography of Renaissance
Cosmography 61
The Cosmographie Work: Map, Text, and
Illustration 76
Cosmographie Images 82
Conclusion 98
4 Renaissance Star Charts,
Anna Friedman Herlihy 99
Historiography 99
Medieval and Renaissance Star Knowledge and
Representation 101
Medieval Constellation Illuminations as Precursors
to the Renaissance 105
Advances in Two-Dimensional Mapping 106
Individual-Constellation Illustrations in the Early
Renaissance 109
Early Renaissance Printed Planispheres and Planisphere-
like Maps 110
Early Atlases 113
Trends and Changes Regarding Iconography and
Format 114
Bayer’s Uranometria: A Model for the Future 115
Specialized Star Charts 118
Concluding Remarks 122
5 Lunar, Solar, and Planetary Representations
to 1650, R. H. van Gent and
A. Van Helden 123
Pre-Telescopic Representations of Heavenly Bodies 123
Viewing the Heavens through the Telescope 125
Conclusion 134
6 Globes in Renaissance Europe, Elly Dekker 135
Introduction 135
The Legacy 136
The Cosmographer’s Globe 141
The Use of Globes 148
Renaissance Globes: Humanism Materialized 158
Charting
7 The Renaissance Chart Tradition in the
Mediterranean, Corradino Astengo 174
Introduction 174
Extant Works 177
Customers and Patrons 178
Materials 182
Manufacture 185
XI
Contents
Workshops, Individual Production, and Anonymous
Charts 189
Technical Features: Rhumbs, Wind Roses, Scale 191
The Axis of the Mediterranean 194
Ornamental Features 199
Place-names 203
Centers of Production 206
Conclusions 235
8 Isolarii, Fifteenth to Seventeenth Century,
George Tolias 263
Definitions and Origins 263
The Birth of the Genre: Florence, Fifteenth Century 265
The Golden Age: Venice, Sixteenth Century 268
A Second Heyday: The Low Countries and Venice,
Seventeenth Century 276
Function and Uses of the Isolarii 279
The Visual, Mathematical, and Textual Models
for Mapping in the Renaissance
9 The Reception of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the
Fourteenth to Beginning of the Sixteenth
Century), Patrick Gautier Dalché 285
From the Translation to the Construction of a Model
(End of the Fourteenth to Middle of the Fifteenth
Century) 287
The Geography as a Model for the Image of the
World 318
Toward a “Mathematical Cartography” 333
In-Depth Study and the Move beyond the Model
(End of the Fifteenth to Beginning of the Sixteenth
Century) 342
Conclusion 358
10 Map Projections in the Renaissance,
John P. Snyder 365
Projections for World Maps 365
Projections for Sea Charts 374
Projections for Regional Maps 378
Projections for Celestial Maps 378
Conclusion 380
11 The European Religious Worldview and
Its Influence on Mapping,
Pauline Moffitt Watts 382
Columbus 385
Protestant Bibles 387
Calvin and Luther 388
The Mappe-Monde Novveile Papistiqve 390
Ortelius 392
Celtis and Münster 393
Map։‘Mural Cycles 395
Contusions 399
Literature and Maps
12 Early Modern Literature and Cartography:
An Overview, Tom Conley 401
Experience and the Production of Space 401
Materialities: Text and Map as Landscape 403
Topography and Alterity 404
The Isolario and Literary Form 405
Cartography and Emotion 407
The Theatrum mundi as Text and Atlas 408
Allegory and Utopia 409
Conclusions 410
13 Literature and Mapping in Early Modern England,
1520-1688, Henry S. Turner 412
Poetry: Terms and Meanings 412
Poetry: New Developments 415
Donne 416
Milton 417
Drama 419
Poetics and Maps: Early Modern Social and Intellectual
Contexts 420
Conclusion: Toward an Analysis of Early Modern
Topographesis 423
14 Cartography and Literature in Early Modem
France, Nancy Bouzrara
and Tom Conley 427
The Cartographer as Writer 429
A Cosmographer for Three Kings: André Thevet 432
Circumstance and Text of the First French Atlas 433
The Writer as Cartographer 434
Three Styles and Moments 434
Conclusions 436
15 Literary Mapping in German-Speaking Europe,
Franz Reitinger 438
Utopian Fiction 438
Satire 440
Devotional Books 441
Illustrated Broadsheets 443
Emblem Books 446
New Beginnings 447
Conclusion 448
16 Maps and Literature in Renaissance Italy,
Theodore J. Cachey Jr. 450
17 Mapping Maritime Triumph and the Enchantment
of Empire: Portuguese Literature of the
Renaissance, Neil Safier and
Ilda Mendes dos Santos 461
The Journey There and Back Again: The Roteiro and the
Poetic Exaltation of Empire 462
Contents
The Epic Lyricism of Luis de Camocs
(1524P-1580) 463
Pilgrimages Large and Small, Far and Near 464
Conclusion 466
18 Literature and Cartography in Early Modern
Spain: Etymologies and Conjectures,
Simone Pinet 469
Etymologies: Metaphoric and Literal Uses 470
Conjectures 475
TECHNICAL PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
19 Land Surveys, Instruments, and Practitioners in
the Renaissance, Uta Lindgren 477
Introduction: The Situation in 1450 477
Land Surveys 479
Instrumentation Employed 489
How Surveyors or Mapmakers Obtained Their
Knowledge 500
Links between Surveying and Maps 505
Conclusion 508
20 Navigation Techniques and Practice in the
Renaissance, Eric H. Ash 509
The Medieval Craft of Pilotage 509
Oceanic Navigation 514
Navigational Training: Learning and Doing 522
Mathematical Navigation: Theory and Practice 525
Conclusion 527
21 Signs on Printed Topographical Maps, ca. 1470-
ca. 1640, Catherine Delano-Smith 528
The Absence of Standardization 531
Map Signs in the Older Literature 537
Analyzing Renaissance Printed Topographical
Maps 539
Signs on Printed Topographical Maps 541
Conclusion 579
22 Techniques of Map Engraving, Printing, and
Coloring in the European Renaissance,
David Woodward 591
General Technological Considerations 591
Changing Woodcut and Copperplate Styles and
Their Effect on Map Printing: Line, Lettering,
and Color 598
The Impact of Map Engraving and Printing 606
Afterword 610
23 Centers of Map Publishing in Europe, 1472-1600,
Robert Karrow 611
Sources of Data 611
Analysis of Map Production by Type of
Cartography 612
xiii
Analysis of Map Production by Printing Technique 613
Analysis of Map Production by Decades 614
Analysis of Map Production by Region 620
Conclusion 621
24 Maps as Educational Tools in the Renaissance,
Lesley B. Cormack 622
Introduction 622
Geography, Cosmography, and Maps 622
Early Modem Education 623
Theories of Education 625
Correspondence to Practice 628
Mathematical Practitioners and Maps 633
Ideological Implications of Maps in Education 635
Conclusion 636
25 Maps in Renaissance Libraries and Collections,
George Tolias 637
Maps as Memory Aids 637
Map Collecting and Arrangement 642
Functions and Uses of Cartographic Material 652
MAPS AND THEIR USES IN RENAISSANCE
GOVERNANCE
26 Maps and the Early Modern State: Official
Cartography, Richard L. Kagan and
Benjamin Schmidt 661
Introduction: Kings and Cartographers 661
States and Space 662
Mapping States 669
“Pleasure and Joy” 677
27 Portraying the City in Early Modern Europe:
Measurement, Representation,
and Planning, Hilary Ballon and
David Friedman 680
Measuring the City: Italy and the Culture of Survey 681
Representing the City 687
Planning the City: The Italian Evidence 696
28 Maps and Rural Land Management in Early
Modern Europe, Roger J. P. Kain 705
Maps and Property Disputes 706
Property Maps and Colonial Settlement 708
Cadastral Maps in Taxation Reform and the Evaluation
of State Land Resources 710
Property Maps and Agrarian Improvement 712
Property Maps: A Response to the Increasing Fiscal and
Symbolic Value of Land 716
29 Warfare and Cartography, ca. 1450 to ca. 1640,
John Hale 719
XIV
Conte։
30 Maps and Exploration in the Sixteenth and Early 35
Seventeenth Centuries, Felipe Fernândez-
Armesto 73 S
introduction 738
Explorers’ Use of Maps 740
Explorers as Mapmakers 746
Collation of Explorers’ Information 754
Exploration and the World Image 757
State Contexts of Renaissance Mapping
ITALIAN STATES
31 The Italian Map Trade, 1480-1650,
David Woodward 773
Florence 773
Rome 775
Venice 779
The Map Trade in Northern Italy after 1576 791
Conclusions 794
32 Cycles of Painted Maps in the Renaissance,
Francesca Fiorani 804
The Ancient Pedigree 804
Wall Maps 805
Cycles of Painted Maps 806
The Dominion 808
Beyond the Dominion 813
The World Map 813
The Continents 814
The Regions of the World 816
The Holy Land 820
Italy 821
City Views 825
Conclusion 827
33 Cartography in the Duchy of Savoy during the
Renaissance, Paola Sereno 831
The Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries 831
The Seventeenth Century: From the Theatrum Sabaudiae
to Borgonio’s Carta generale 847
34 Cartographic Activities in the Republic of Genoa,
Corsica, and Sardinia in the Renaissance,
Massimo Quaini 854
Difficulties in Constructing a Map of the Genoese
State 859
The Development of a Local Topographic
Cartography 864
Corsica under Genoese Rule: An Early Case
of “Colonial” Cartography? 865
A Comparative Case: Sardinia 870
Conclusions 872
State, Cartography, and Territory in Renaissance
Veneto and Lombardy, Emanuela
Casti 874
States and Cartography 876
Maps and the Various Magistratures in Venice 877
Administrative Cartography in the Management
and Control of Territorial Resources 880
Political-Military Cartography and Territorial
Defense 892
The Role of Descriptive Regional Cartography in
the Provision of Territorial Information and the
Celebration of Power 900
Pastoral Visits Cartography and Eccesiastical Power
in Lombardy 904
Conclusion 907
36 Cartography in the Central Italian States from 1481
to 1680, Leonardo Rombai 909
Maps for General Administration (Regional
Chorographies) 909
Special-Purpose Maps 915
Agrarian Cadastral Cartography 927
Urban Maps and Views 931
37 Cartography in the Kingdom of Naples during
the Early Modern Period, Vladimiro
Valerio 940
Astronomy and Geodesy at the Aragonese Court
of Naples 941
The Enigma of the Aragonese Parchments (Pergamene
Aragonesi) 945
The Map of the Borders of the Kingdom and the Last
Cartographic Works of the Period of Aragonese
Rule 951
City Plans of Naples: Production and Aims 954
The Printed Maps Dating from before the New Survey
of Stigliola 960
Official Surveys: Maps of the Kingdom Compiled by
Nicola Antonio Stigliola and Mario Cartaro 962
The Map by Giovanni Battista Nicolosi 970
Conclusion 973
PORTUGAL
38 Portuguese Cartography in the Renaissance, Maria
Fernanda Alegria, Suzanne Daveau, Jodo
Carlos Garcia, Francesc Relaho 975
Introduction 975
Early Nautical Cartography 977
Chartmakers and Charts: The Practitioners 987
The Charts 990
Institutions and Political Policies 1002
Contents
XV
Portuguese Cartography of Its Overseas Routes and
Territories 1010
Terrestrial Cartography in Portugal 1034
Printed Cartography in Portugal 1059
SPAIN
39 Spanish Peninsular Cartography, 1500-1700,
David Buisseret 1069
Introduction 1069
The Medieval Traditions 1070
The Sixteenth-Century Scientific Milieu 1072
Decline and Revival in the Natural Sciences,
1550-1700 1079
The Mapping Sense among Spain’s Rulers 1081
Royal Mapping on the Peninsula 1083
Regional Cartography 1085
Conclusion 1091
40 Spanish Nautical Cartography in the Renaissance,
Alison Sandman 1095
Introduction: Nautical Cartography in the Sixteenth
Century 1096
Sea Charts as Part of the Nautical Bureaucracy 1103
The Padrón Real 1107
Selling Charts to Pilots 1130
Conclusions 1138
41 Spanish Colonial Cartography, 1450-1700,
David Buisseret 1143
The Various Groups of Cartographers Working on Maps
of Spain’s Overseas Territories 1144
The Main Areas of Spanish Colonial Cartography 1148
Conclusion 1.171
PART 2
GERMAN LANDS
42 Cartography in the German Lands, 1450-1650,
Peter H. Meurer 1172
Introduction 1172
The Dawn of Early Modern Cartography 1177
An Italian Interlude 1182
Cartography in the Heyday of German
Humanism 1189
German Cartography in the Reformation Period 1207
The Period of the First Surveys 1221
Influences of the Flemish School in the German
Area 1228
German Cartography in Late Humanism:
An OverView 1236
Conclusions * 1245
LOW COUNTRIES
43 Surveying and Official Mapping in the Low
Countries, 1500-ca. 1670, Cornells
Koeman and Marco van Egmond 1246
Early Mapping of the Low Countries and the
Historical-Political Background of Cartographic
Development 1246
From Picture to Map: The Birth of a Modern
Cartography 1249
Regional Topographical Mapping of the Low
Countries 1257
Military Mapping of the Low Countries
(to ca. 1648) 1271
Summary Remarks 1290
44 Commercial Cartography and Map Production
in the Low Countries, 1500-ca. 1672,
Cornells Koeman, Günter Schilder,
Marco van Egmond, and Peter van der
Krogt 1296
Louvain: Center of Learning 1296
The Rise of Commercial Cartography in the Low
Countries (to ca. 1672) 1298
Atlases from the Low Countries (to ca. 1680) 1318
Wall Maps Published in the Netherlands 1341
Globes from the Low Countries (to ca. 1680) 1356
Summary Remarks 1374
45 Maritime Cartography in the Low Countries during
the Renaissance, Günter Schilder and
Marco van Egmond 1384
Dutch Pilot Guides and Sea Atlases 1385
Single-Sheet Charts: Printed and Manuscript Traditions
up to 1630 1404
Summary Remarks 1428
46 Mapping the Dutch World Overseas in
the Seventeenth Century, Kees
Zandvliet 1433
The Historical Background of VOC and WIC
Mapmaking 1434
The Education and Status of Oceanic Navigators, Land
Surveyors, and Military Engineers 1434
The Dutch East India Company 1436
The West India Company 1449
The Rhetorical Role of Company Maps 1458
Conclusion 1460
FRANCE
47 Maps and Descriptions of the World in Sixteenth-
Century France, Frank Lestringant and
Monique Pelletier 1463
Oronce Fine and the Ptolemaic Tradition 1464
XVI
Contents
André Thevet and Nicolas de Nicolay: Cosmographes
du roi 1467
Contacts with Italy and Flanders 1474
Conclusion 1479
48 National and Regional Mapping in France to
About 1650, Monique Pelletier 1480
National Mapmaking from Oronce Fine to Guillaume
Postel (1525-1570): Fine, Jolivet, Nicolay, and
Postel 1480
Regional Mapmaking and the First Atlas of France,
1539-1594, Edited by Maurice Bouguereau 1489
New Trends in National Mapmaking: François de
La Guillotière and Christophe Tassin 1493
The Administrative Mapmaking of Nicolas Sanson
(1600-1667) 1497
The Itinerary and the Map (1515-1645) 1500
Conclusion 1502
49 French Cartography: The ingénieurs du roi,
1500-1650, David Buisseret 1504
Introduction: The Sixteenth Century 1504
The Engineers of Henri IV (1589-1610) 1505
The ingénieurs du roi during the Reign of Louis XIII
(1610-1643) 1514
Conclusion 1519
50 Representations of Territory by Painters, Engineers,
and Land Surveyors in France during the
Renaissance, Monique Pelletier 1522
Maps and Plans Relating to Disputes 1522
The Birth of Estate Maps 1525
The Role of Maps in Regional and National
Development 1530
Representations of Cities: Panoramas, Perspective Views,
and Profiles 1532
Conclusion 1537
51 The Mapping of Samuel de Champlain, 1603-
1635, Conrad E. Heidenreich 1538
Exploration and Mapping 1539
Data Gathering for Maps 1542
Conclusions 1547
52 Marine Cartography and Navigation in Renaissance
France, Sarah Toulouse 1550
Renaissance Normandy: A Seaward-Looking
Province 1550
Neighboring Brittany and Distant Marseilles 1554
The Influences on Cartographers 1555
Projection: Rhumbs and Loxodromes 1556
Magnetic Declination 1557
The Production of Charts 1557
The Use of Charts: Plotting Position 1559
The Uses of Norman Charts 1561
Charts That Remained Manuscript Works 1562
53 Publishing and the Map Trade in France, 1470-
1670, Catherine Hofmann 1569
A Century of Trial and Error, 1480-1580 1569
The Influence of the Low Countries, 1580-1630 1575
The Age of Independence, 1630-1670 1578
BRITISH ISLES
54 Mapmaking in England, ca. 1470-1650,
Peter Barber 1589
The English Heritage to 1525 1589
Foreign Influences to 1525 1595
Change, 1526-1550 1598
Consolidation, 1550-1611: An Overview 1608
Mapping the Country, 1550-1611 1620
Mapping the Countryside, 1550-1611 1637
Mapping the Towns, 1550-1611 1648
Icons, Emblems, and Decoration, 1550-1611 1657
Mapmaking in Early Stuart England, 1612-1650 1666
Conclusion 1668
55 Colonial Cartography in a European Setting:
The Case of Tudor Ireland,
J. H. Andrews 1670
The Political Background 1671
Maps and the Administrator 1671
Ireland’s Cartographic Personality 1672
The Earliest Official Maps 1673
An Early Elizabethan Consensus 1675
The First Measured Survey 1677
Provincial Cartography: The West and South 1678
Provincial Cartography: The North 1681
The Empire of Great Britain 1682
56 The Kingdom of Scotland: Cartography in an
Age of Confidence, Jeffrey Stone 1684
First Steps toward a Scottish Cartography 1685
The Emergence of a Scottish Cartography: The Role
of Timothy Pont 1686
57 The London Map Trade to 1640,
Laurence Worms 1693
Imports and Importers 1694
Maps Published in England 1695
The Engravers 1712
Regulation and Control 1714
Finance and Patronage 1717
Marketing and Distribution 1718
Conclusion 1720
Contents
XVII
58 Chartmaking in England and Its Context, 1500-
1660, Sarah Tyacke 1722
Introduction 1722
The Early Period (to 1560) 1725
English-Made Overseas Charts and Their Survival Rates
(1560-1660) 1731
English Chartmakers, 1560-1660 1737
Conclusion 1746
59 Colonial Cartography under the Tudor and Early
Stuart Monarchies, ca. 1480-ca. 1640,
Robert C. D. Baldwin 1754
Introduction 1754
Maps and the Promotion of Overseas Ventures under
the Early Tudor Monarchs 1755
The “Paper Empire” of Elizabeth I
(r. 1558-1603) 1757
Colonization and Cartography under the Early
Stuarts 1767
Conclusions 1779
SCANDINAVIA
60 Scandinavian Renaissance Cartography,
William R. Mead 1781
The Setting 1781
Pioneering in Nordic Cartography 1782
A Gothic Vision of the North 1786
“An Embryonic School of Cartography” 1788
Cartography and Territorial Claims 1792
The Contribution of the Fortification Engineers 1796
The Birth of the Swedish Land Survey 1800
Charting the Sea 1804
On the Threshold of a New Age 1805
Antique and Medieval Traditions: Ptolemy and Portolan
Charts 1810
The Mathematical-Astronomical Tradition 1811
The Local Context: Beginnings of Local
Mapmaking 1813
The New Paradigm: Regional Cartography in
East-Central Europe 1816
The First Printed Map of Hungary 1820
A Transylvanian Humanist: Johannes Honter 1828
Later Printed Maps of East-Central Europe 1833
The Local Use of Foreign Maps 1837
Military Maps of the Eastern Frontiers 1839
In Defense of Europe: Military Mapping during the
Turkish Wars 1842
Conclusions 1851
RUSSIA
62 Russian Cartography to ca. 1700,
L. A. Goldenberg 1852
Reconstructions of General Maps of Russia from
Western European Maps 1856
The Beginnings of Russian Cartography and
Geography 1858
Local, Regional, and General Maps in Russia 1860
Russian Geographical Discoveries and Mapping of
the Asiatic Part of Russia 1873
Semyon Ulianovich Remezov and the Mapping of Siberia:
The First Russian Geographical Atlases 1884
Conclusions 1902
Editor and Authors 1905
Bibliographical Index 1907
General Index, Margie Towery 2059
EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE
61 Renaissance Cartography in East-Central Europe,
ca. 1450-1650, Zsolt G. Török 1806
The Study of Early Maps in East-Central Europe:
Historiographic Overview 1808
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Illustrations xix
List of Abbreviations xxxvii
PART 1
Preface, David Woodward xxxix
Setting the Stage
1 Cartography and the Renaissance: Continuity and
Change, David Woodward 3
The “Renaissance” as a Concept 5
The Progressive Model and a Suggested Compromise 6
Continuities 7
Changes 11
Conclusion 23
2 The Role of Maps in Later Medieval Society:
Twelfth to Fourteenth Century,
Victoria Morse 25
The Roles of Maps in the Twelfth and Thirteenth
Centuries 28
The Fourteenth Century 44
Conclusion 51
The History of Renaissance Cartography:
Interpretive Essays
MAPS AND RENAISSANCE CULTURE
Cosmography and Celestial Mapping
3 Images of Renaissance Cosmography, 1450-1650,
Denis E. Cosgrove 55
Cosmography as a Renaissance Project 55
Definitions, Meanings, and Uses of a Changing
Cosmography 56
History and Geography of Renaissance
Cosmography 61
The Cosmographie Work: Map, Text, and
Illustration 76
Cosmographie Images 82
Conclusion 98
4 Renaissance Star Charts,
Anna Friedman Herlihy 99
Historiography 99
Medieval and Renaissance Star Knowledge and
Representation 101
Medieval Constellation Illuminations as Precursors
to the Renaissance 105
Advances in Two-Dimensional Mapping 106
Individual-Constellation Illustrations in the Early
Renaissance 109
Early Renaissance Printed Planispheres and Planisphere-
like Maps 110
Early Atlases 113
Trends and Changes Regarding Iconography and
Format 114
Bayer’s Uranometria: A Model for the Future 115
Specialized Star Charts 118
Concluding Remarks 122
5 Lunar, Solar, and Planetary Representations
to 1650, R. H. van Gent and
A. Van Helden 123
Pre-Telescopic Representations of Heavenly Bodies 123
Viewing the Heavens through the Telescope 125
Conclusion 134
6 Globes in Renaissance Europe, Elly Dekker 135
Introduction 135
The Legacy 136
The Cosmographer’s Globe 141
The Use of Globes 148
Renaissance Globes: Humanism Materialized 158
Charting
7 The Renaissance Chart Tradition in the
Mediterranean, Corradino Astengo 174
Introduction 174
Extant Works 177
Customers and Patrons 178
Materials 182
Manufacture 185
XI
Contents
Workshops, Individual Production, and Anonymous
Charts 189
Technical Features: Rhumbs, Wind Roses, Scale 191
The Axis of the Mediterranean 194
Ornamental Features 199
Place-names 203
Centers of Production 206
Conclusions 235
8 Isolarii, Fifteenth to Seventeenth Century,
George Tolias 263
Definitions and Origins 263
The Birth of the Genre: Florence, Fifteenth Century 265
The Golden Age: Venice, Sixteenth Century 268
A Second Heyday: The Low Countries and Venice,
Seventeenth Century 276
Function and Uses of the Isolarii 279
The Visual, Mathematical, and Textual Models
for Mapping in the Renaissance
9 The Reception of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the
Fourteenth to Beginning of the Sixteenth
Century), Patrick Gautier Dalché 285
From the Translation to the Construction of a Model
(End of the Fourteenth to Middle of the Fifteenth
Century) 287
The Geography as a Model for the Image of the
World 318
Toward a “Mathematical Cartography” 333
In-Depth Study and the Move beyond the Model
(End of the Fifteenth to Beginning of the Sixteenth
Century) 342
Conclusion 358
10 Map Projections in the Renaissance,
John P. Snyder 365
Projections for World Maps 365
Projections for Sea Charts 374
Projections for Regional Maps 378
Projections for Celestial Maps 378
Conclusion 380
11 The European Religious Worldview and
Its Influence on Mapping,
Pauline Moffitt Watts 382
Columbus 385
Protestant Bibles 387
Calvin and Luther 388
The Mappe-Monde Novveile Papistiqve 390
Ortelius 392
Celtis and Münster 393
Map։‘Mural Cycles 395
Contusions 399
Literature and Maps
12 Early Modern Literature and Cartography:
An Overview, Tom Conley 401
Experience and the Production of Space 401
Materialities: Text and Map as Landscape 403
Topography and Alterity 404
The Isolario and Literary Form 405
Cartography and Emotion 407
The Theatrum mundi as Text and Atlas 408
Allegory and Utopia 409
Conclusions 410
13 Literature and Mapping in Early Modern England,
1520-1688, Henry S. Turner 412
Poetry: Terms and Meanings 412
Poetry: New Developments 415
Donne 416
Milton 417
Drama 419
Poetics and Maps: Early Modern Social and Intellectual
Contexts 420
Conclusion: Toward an Analysis of Early Modern
Topographesis 423
14 Cartography and Literature in Early Modem
France, Nancy Bouzrara
and Tom Conley 427
The Cartographer as Writer 429
A Cosmographer for Three Kings: André Thevet 432
Circumstance and Text of the First French Atlas 433
The Writer as Cartographer 434
Three Styles and Moments 434
Conclusions 436
15 Literary Mapping in German-Speaking Europe,
Franz Reitinger 438
Utopian Fiction 438
Satire 440
Devotional Books 441
Illustrated Broadsheets 443
Emblem Books 446
New Beginnings 447
Conclusion 448
16 Maps and Literature in Renaissance Italy,
Theodore J. Cachey Jr. 450
17 Mapping Maritime Triumph and the Enchantment
of Empire: Portuguese Literature of the
Renaissance, Neil Safier and
Ilda Mendes dos Santos 461
The Journey There and Back Again: The Roteiro and the
Poetic Exaltation of Empire 462
Contents
The Epic Lyricism of Luis de Camocs
(1524P-1580) 463
Pilgrimages Large and Small, Far and Near 464
Conclusion 466
18 Literature and Cartography in Early Modern
Spain: Etymologies and Conjectures,
Simone Pinet 469
Etymologies: Metaphoric and Literal Uses 470
Conjectures 475
TECHNICAL PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
19 Land Surveys, Instruments, and Practitioners in
the Renaissance, Uta Lindgren 477
Introduction: The Situation in 1450 477
Land Surveys 479
Instrumentation Employed 489
How Surveyors or Mapmakers Obtained Their
Knowledge 500
Links between Surveying and Maps 505
Conclusion 508
20 Navigation Techniques and Practice in the
Renaissance, Eric H. Ash 509
The Medieval Craft of Pilotage 509
Oceanic Navigation 514
Navigational Training: Learning and Doing 522
Mathematical Navigation: Theory and Practice 525
Conclusion 527
21 Signs on Printed Topographical Maps, ca. 1470-
ca. 1640, Catherine Delano-Smith 528
The Absence of Standardization 531
Map Signs in the Older Literature 537
Analyzing Renaissance Printed Topographical
Maps 539
Signs on Printed Topographical Maps 541
Conclusion 579
22 Techniques of Map Engraving, Printing, and
Coloring in the European Renaissance,
David Woodward 591
General Technological Considerations 591
Changing Woodcut and Copperplate Styles and
Their Effect on Map Printing: Line, Lettering,
and Color 598
The Impact of Map Engraving and Printing 606
Afterword 610
23 Centers of Map Publishing in Europe, 1472-1600,
Robert Karrow 611
Sources of Data 611
Analysis of Map Production by Type of
Cartography 612
xiii
Analysis of Map Production by Printing Technique 613
Analysis of Map Production by Decades 614
Analysis of Map Production by Region 620
Conclusion 621
24 Maps as Educational Tools in the Renaissance,
Lesley B. Cormack 622
Introduction 622
Geography, Cosmography, and Maps 622
Early Modem Education 623
Theories of Education 625
Correspondence to Practice 628
Mathematical Practitioners and Maps 633
Ideological Implications of Maps in Education 635
Conclusion 636
25 Maps in Renaissance Libraries and Collections,
George Tolias 637
Maps as Memory Aids 637
Map Collecting and Arrangement 642
Functions and Uses of Cartographic Material 652
MAPS AND THEIR USES IN RENAISSANCE
GOVERNANCE
26 Maps and the Early Modern State: Official
Cartography, Richard L. Kagan and
Benjamin Schmidt 661
Introduction: Kings and Cartographers 661
States and Space 662
Mapping States 669
“Pleasure and Joy” 677
27 Portraying the City in Early Modern Europe:
Measurement, Representation,
and Planning, Hilary Ballon and
David Friedman 680
Measuring the City: Italy and the Culture of Survey 681
Representing the City 687
Planning the City: The Italian Evidence 696
28 Maps and Rural Land Management in Early
Modern Europe, Roger J. P. Kain 705
Maps and Property Disputes 706
Property Maps and Colonial Settlement 708
Cadastral Maps in Taxation Reform and the Evaluation
of State Land Resources 710
Property Maps and Agrarian Improvement 712
Property Maps: A Response to the Increasing Fiscal and
Symbolic Value of Land 716
29 Warfare and Cartography, ca. 1450 to ca. 1640,
John Hale 719
XIV
Conte։
30 Maps and Exploration in the Sixteenth and Early 35
Seventeenth Centuries, Felipe Fernândez-
Armesto 73 S
introduction 738
Explorers’ Use of Maps 740
Explorers as Mapmakers 746
Collation of Explorers’ Information 754
Exploration and the World Image 757
State Contexts of Renaissance Mapping
ITALIAN STATES
31 The Italian Map Trade, 1480-1650,
David Woodward 773
Florence 773
Rome 775
Venice 779
The Map Trade in Northern Italy after 1576 791
Conclusions 794
32 Cycles of Painted Maps in the Renaissance,
Francesca Fiorani 804
The Ancient Pedigree 804
Wall Maps 805
Cycles of Painted Maps 806
The Dominion 808
Beyond the Dominion 813
The World Map 813
The Continents 814
The Regions of the World 816
The Holy Land 820
Italy 821
City Views 825
Conclusion 827
33 Cartography in the Duchy of Savoy during the
Renaissance, Paola Sereno 831
The Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries 831
The Seventeenth Century: From the Theatrum Sabaudiae
to Borgonio’s Carta generale 847
34 Cartographic Activities in the Republic of Genoa,
Corsica, and Sardinia in the Renaissance,
Massimo Quaini 854
Difficulties in Constructing a Map of the Genoese
State 859
The Development of a Local Topographic
Cartography 864
Corsica under Genoese Rule: An Early Case
of “Colonial” Cartography? 865
A Comparative Case: Sardinia 870
Conclusions 872
State, Cartography, and Territory in Renaissance
Veneto and Lombardy, Emanuela
Casti 874
States and Cartography 876
Maps and the Various Magistratures in Venice 877
Administrative Cartography in the Management
and Control of Territorial Resources 880
Political-Military Cartography and Territorial
Defense 892
The Role of Descriptive Regional Cartography in
the Provision of Territorial Information and the
Celebration of Power 900
Pastoral Visits Cartography and Eccesiastical Power
in Lombardy 904
Conclusion 907
36 Cartography in the Central Italian States from 1481
to 1680, Leonardo Rombai 909
Maps for General Administration (Regional
Chorographies) 909
Special-Purpose Maps 915
Agrarian Cadastral Cartography 927
Urban Maps and Views 931
37 Cartography in the Kingdom of Naples during
the Early Modern Period, Vladimiro
Valerio 940
Astronomy and Geodesy at the Aragonese Court
of Naples 941
The Enigma of the Aragonese Parchments (Pergamene
Aragonesi) 945
The Map of the Borders of the Kingdom and the Last
Cartographic Works of the Period of Aragonese
Rule 951
City Plans of Naples: Production and Aims 954
The Printed Maps Dating from before the New Survey
of Stigliola 960
Official Surveys: Maps of the Kingdom Compiled by
Nicola Antonio Stigliola and Mario Cartaro 962
The Map by Giovanni Battista Nicolosi 970
Conclusion 973
PORTUGAL
38 Portuguese Cartography in the Renaissance, Maria
Fernanda Alegria, Suzanne Daveau, Jodo
Carlos Garcia, Francesc Relaho 975
Introduction 975
Early Nautical Cartography 977
Chartmakers and Charts: The Practitioners 987
The Charts 990
Institutions and Political Policies 1002
Contents
XV
Portuguese Cartography of Its Overseas Routes and
Territories 1010
Terrestrial Cartography in Portugal 1034
Printed Cartography in Portugal 1059
SPAIN
39 Spanish Peninsular Cartography, 1500-1700,
David Buisseret 1069
Introduction 1069
The Medieval Traditions 1070
The Sixteenth-Century Scientific Milieu 1072
Decline and Revival in the Natural Sciences,
1550-1700 1079
The Mapping Sense among Spain’s Rulers 1081
Royal Mapping on the Peninsula 1083
Regional Cartography 1085
Conclusion 1091
40 Spanish Nautical Cartography in the Renaissance,
Alison Sandman 1095
Introduction: Nautical Cartography in the Sixteenth
Century 1096
Sea Charts as Part of the Nautical Bureaucracy 1103
The Padrón Real 1107
Selling Charts to Pilots 1130
Conclusions 1138
41 Spanish Colonial Cartography, 1450-1700,
David Buisseret 1143
The Various Groups of Cartographers Working on Maps
of Spain’s Overseas Territories 1144
The Main Areas of Spanish Colonial Cartography 1148
Conclusion 1.171
PART 2
GERMAN LANDS
42 Cartography in the German Lands, 1450-1650,
Peter H. Meurer 1172
Introduction 1172
The Dawn of Early Modern Cartography 1177
An Italian Interlude 1182
Cartography in the Heyday of German
Humanism 1189
German Cartography in the Reformation Period 1207
The Period of the First Surveys 1221
Influences of the Flemish School in the German
Area 1228
German Cartography in Late Humanism:
An OverView 1236
Conclusions * 1245
LOW COUNTRIES
43 Surveying and Official Mapping in the Low
Countries, 1500-ca. 1670, Cornells
Koeman and Marco van Egmond 1246
Early Mapping of the Low Countries and the
Historical-Political Background of Cartographic
Development 1246
From Picture to Map: The Birth of a Modern
Cartography 1249
Regional Topographical Mapping of the Low
Countries 1257
Military Mapping of the Low Countries
(to ca. 1648) 1271
Summary Remarks 1290
44 Commercial Cartography and Map Production
in the Low Countries, 1500-ca. 1672,
Cornells Koeman, Günter Schilder,
Marco van Egmond, and Peter van der
Krogt 1296
Louvain: Center of Learning 1296
The Rise of Commercial Cartography in the Low
Countries (to ca. 1672) 1298
Atlases from the Low Countries (to ca. 1680) 1318
Wall Maps Published in the Netherlands 1341
Globes from the Low Countries (to ca. 1680) '1356
Summary Remarks 1374
45 Maritime Cartography in the Low Countries during
the Renaissance, Günter Schilder and
Marco van Egmond 1384
Dutch Pilot Guides and Sea Atlases 1385
Single-Sheet Charts: Printed and Manuscript Traditions
up to 1630 1404
Summary Remarks 1428
46 Mapping the Dutch World Overseas in
the Seventeenth Century, Kees
Zandvliet 1433
The Historical Background of VOC and WIC
Mapmaking 1434
The Education and Status of Oceanic Navigators, Land
Surveyors, and Military Engineers 1434
The Dutch East India Company 1436
The West India Company 1449
The Rhetorical Role of Company Maps 1458
Conclusion 1460
FRANCE
47 Maps and Descriptions of the World in Sixteenth-
Century France, Frank Lestringant and
Monique Pelletier 1463
Oronce Fine and the Ptolemaic Tradition 1464
XVI
Contents
André Thevet and Nicolas de Nicolay: Cosmographes
du roi 1467
Contacts with Italy and Flanders 1474
Conclusion 1479
48 National and Regional Mapping in France to
About 1650, Monique Pelletier 1480
National Mapmaking from Oronce Fine to Guillaume
Postel (1525-1570): Fine, Jolivet, Nicolay, and
Postel 1480
Regional Mapmaking and the First Atlas of France,
1539-1594, Edited by Maurice Bouguereau 1489
New Trends in National Mapmaking: François de
La Guillotière and Christophe Tassin 1493
The Administrative Mapmaking of Nicolas Sanson
(1600-1667) 1497
The Itinerary and the Map (1515-1645) 1500
Conclusion 1502
49 French Cartography: The ingénieurs du roi,
1500-1650, David Buisseret 1504
Introduction: The Sixteenth Century 1504
The Engineers of Henri IV (1589-1610) 1505
The ingénieurs du roi during the Reign of Louis XIII
(1610-1643) 1514
Conclusion 1519
50 Representations of Territory by Painters, Engineers,
and Land Surveyors in France during the
Renaissance, Monique Pelletier 1522
Maps and Plans Relating to Disputes 1522
The Birth of Estate Maps 1525
The Role of Maps in Regional and National
Development 1530
Representations of Cities: Panoramas, Perspective Views,
and Profiles 1532
Conclusion 1537
51 The Mapping of Samuel de Champlain, 1603-
1635, Conrad E. Heidenreich 1538
Exploration and Mapping 1539
Data Gathering for Maps 1542
Conclusions 1547
52 Marine Cartography and Navigation in Renaissance
France, Sarah Toulouse 1550
Renaissance Normandy: A Seaward-Looking
Province 1550
Neighboring Brittany and Distant Marseilles 1554
The Influences on Cartographers 1555
Projection: Rhumbs and Loxodromes 1556
Magnetic Declination 1557
The Production of Charts 1557
The Use of Charts: Plotting Position 1559
The Uses of Norman Charts 1561
Charts That Remained Manuscript Works 1562
53 Publishing and the Map Trade in France, 1470-
1670, Catherine Hofmann 1569
A Century of Trial and Error, 1480-1580 1569
The Influence of the Low Countries, 1580-1630 1575
The Age of Independence, 1630-1670 1578
BRITISH ISLES
54 Mapmaking in England, ca. 1470-1650,
Peter Barber 1589
The English Heritage to 1525 1589
Foreign Influences to 1525 1595
Change, 1526-1550 1598
Consolidation, 1550-1611: An Overview 1608
Mapping the Country, 1550-1611 1620
Mapping the Countryside, 1550-1611 1637
Mapping the Towns, 1550-1611 1648
Icons, Emblems, and Decoration, 1550-1611 1657
Mapmaking in Early Stuart England, 1612-1650 1666
Conclusion 1668
55 Colonial Cartography in a European Setting:
The Case of Tudor Ireland,
J. H. Andrews 1670
The Political Background 1671
Maps and the Administrator 1671
Ireland’s Cartographic Personality 1672
The Earliest Official Maps 1673
An Early Elizabethan Consensus 1675
The First Measured Survey 1677
Provincial Cartography: The West and South 1678
Provincial Cartography: The North 1681
The Empire of Great Britain 1682
56 The Kingdom of Scotland: Cartography in an
Age of Confidence, Jeffrey Stone 1684
First Steps toward a Scottish Cartography 1685
The Emergence of a Scottish Cartography: The Role
of Timothy Pont 1686
57 The London Map Trade to 1640,
Laurence Worms 1693
Imports and Importers 1694
Maps Published in England 1695
The Engravers 1712
Regulation and Control 1714
Finance and Patronage 1717
Marketing and Distribution 1718
Conclusion 1720
Contents
XVII
58 Chartmaking in England and Its Context, 1500-
1660, Sarah Tyacke 1722
Introduction 1722
The Early Period (to 1560) 1725
English-Made Overseas Charts and Their Survival Rates
(1560-1660) 1731
English Chartmakers, 1560-1660 1737
Conclusion 1746
59 Colonial Cartography under the Tudor and Early
Stuart Monarchies, ca. 1480-ca. 1640,
Robert C. D. Baldwin 1754
Introduction 1754
Maps and the Promotion of Overseas Ventures under
the Early Tudor Monarchs 1755
The “Paper Empire” of Elizabeth I
(r. 1558-1603) 1757
Colonization and Cartography under the Early
Stuarts 1767
Conclusions 1779
SCANDINAVIA
60 Scandinavian Renaissance Cartography,
William R. Mead 1781
The Setting 1781
Pioneering in Nordic Cartography 1782
A Gothic Vision of the North 1786
“An Embryonic School of Cartography” 1788
Cartography and Territorial Claims 1792
The Contribution of the Fortification Engineers 1796
The Birth of the Swedish Land Survey 1800
Charting the Sea 1804
On the Threshold of a New Age 1805
Antique and Medieval Traditions: Ptolemy and Portolan
Charts 1810
The Mathematical-Astronomical Tradition 1811
The Local Context: Beginnings of Local
Mapmaking 1813
The New Paradigm: Regional Cartography in
East-Central Europe 1816
The First Printed Map of Hungary 1820
A Transylvanian Humanist: Johannes Honter 1828
Later Printed Maps of East-Central Europe 1833
The Local Use of Foreign Maps 1837
Military Maps of the Eastern Frontiers 1839
In Defense of Europe: Military Mapping during the
Turkish Wars 1842
Conclusions 1851
RUSSIA
62 Russian Cartography to ca. 1700,
L. A. Goldenberg 1852
Reconstructions of General Maps of Russia from
Western European Maps 1856
The Beginnings of Russian Cartography and
Geography 1858
Local, Regional, and General Maps in Russia 1860
Russian Geographical Discoveries and Mapping of
the Asiatic Part of Russia 1873
Semyon Ulianovich Remezov and the Mapping of Siberia:
The First Russian Geographical Atlases 1884
Conclusions 1902
Editor and Authors 1905
Bibliographical Index 1907
General Index, Margie Towery 2059
EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE
61 Renaissance Cartography in East-Central Europe,
ca. 1450-1650, Zsolt G. Török 1806
The Study of Early Maps in East-Central Europe:
Historiographic Overview 1808 |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV022936113 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-09-19T15:27:00Z |
indexdate | 2024-09-27T16:20:28Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780226907338 9780226907321 0226907333 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016140853 |
oclc_num | 645591514 |
open_access_boolean | 1 |
owner | DE-210 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-70 DE-703 DE-706 DE-154 DE-634 DE-11 DE-188 DE-Y3 DE-Y2 DE-Y7 DE-824 DE-255 |
owner_facet | DE-210 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-70 DE-703 DE-706 DE-154 DE-634 DE-11 DE-188 DE-Y3 DE-Y2 DE-Y7 DE-824 DE-255 |
physical | XLII, 1171, 40 S. zahlr. Ill. und Kt. |
psigel | ebook DHB_JDG_ISBN_1 gbd_8 |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Univ. of Chicago Press |
record_format | marc |
spellingShingle | The history of cartography Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 gnd Karte (DE-588)4029783-4 gnd Renaissance (DE-588)4049450-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4029823-1 (DE-588)4029783-4 (DE-588)4049450-0 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | The history of cartography |
title_auth | The history of cartography |
title_exact_search | The history of cartography |
title_exact_search_txtP | The history of cartography |
title_full | The history of cartography 3,1 Cartography in the European Renaissance ; pt. 1 ed. by J. B. Harley ... |
title_fullStr | The history of cartography 3,1 Cartography in the European Renaissance ; pt. 1 ed. by J. B. Harley ... |
title_full_unstemmed | The history of cartography 3,1 Cartography in the European Renaissance ; pt. 1 ed. by J. B. Harley ... |
title_short | The history of cartography |
title_sort | the history of cartography cartography in the european renaissance pt 1 |
topic | Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 gnd Karte (DE-588)4029783-4 gnd Renaissance (DE-588)4049450-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Kartografie Karte Renaissance Aufsatzsammlung |
url | https://www.press.uchicago.edu/books/HOC/HOC_V3_Pt1/Volume3_Part1.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016140853&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000758279 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT woodwarddavid thehistoryofcartography31 AT harleyjb thehistoryofcartography31 |