Description
Early woodcut map of Germany showing central Europe from Denmark to the Alps and from France to Poland. This 'modern' Ptolemaic map origin is the first so called Modern Atlas by Martin Waldseemuller since it is the first Ptolemy edition with twenty new regional maps beside the traditional twenty-seven Ptolemaic maps derived from the 1482 Ulm edition. The Atlas is titled GEOGRAPHIE OPUS NOVISSIMA TRADUCTIONE E GRECORUM ARCHETYPIS published by Johann Schott in Strassburg 1513 and is one of the most important edition of Ptolemy Atlases. In 1520 a second edition of the atlas was printed by Schott from the same woodcut blocks. It was reissued 1522 and 1525 by Laurent Fries and Johannes Gruninger with size reduced maps. The wood blocks of Fries found their way into the ownership of Melchior and Gaspar Trechsel in Lyon. This map is the third printing of the woodcut maps prepared by Lorenz Fries from the 1535 Lyon edition. The text on the verso of the maps is flanked by ornate woodblock designs, which are said to be the work of Hans Holbein the Younger and Urs Graf.
Condition
Some repairs in centrefold especially in lower margin, good conditions.
Cartographer
Laurent Fries was a French physician and mathematician born around 1485 in Mulhouse. He settled finally in Strassburg where he meat Peter Apian and the publisher Johannes Grüninger which made him interested in the Ptolemy Atlas of 1513 and 1520. Fries made new woodcut maps in reduced size. His Ptolemy Atlas was published first in 1522, reissued in 1525, 1535 and 1541. He died in 1532.
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Laurent Fries: [Tab. Mo. Germa.].
Antique woodcut map of Germany. Printed in Lyon by Melchior and Gaspar Trechsel in 1535.
Germany - Fries, Laurent - [Tab. Mo. Germa.]