Detailed map of Brescia showing also the Crema’s area from Atlas Novus by H. Hondius published at Amsterdam in 1636. Orientated with north on the left it is based on Magini map of 1620.
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Detailed map of Brescia showing also the Crema’s area from Atlas Novus by H. Hondius published at Amsterdam in 1636. Orientated with north on the left it is based on Magini map of 1620.
€ 800,00
Detailed map of Brescia showing also the Crema’s area from Atlas Novus by H. Hondius published at Amsterdam in 1636. Orientated with north on the left it is based on Magini map of 1620.
Very fine etching showing the battle of Chiari near Brescia from Dumont’s “Histoire militaire du Prince Eugne de Savoye” published in 1729. [cod.1029/15]
Scarce map of Brescia from “Atlas Universel” by Francesco e Paolo Santini published in Venice at Remondini in 1777.
Nice view of Brescia from “L’Italie de nos Jours” by Edmund Roche and published in Paris in 1843. [cod.994/15]
Very fine prospect view of Mantova from Topographiae Italiae published by Merian in Franckfurt in 1688. Mattheus Merian was a notable Swiss engraver, born in Basle in 1593, who subsequently studied in Zurich and then moved to Frankfurt where he met Theodore de Bry, whose daughter he married in 1617. They had numerous children together, including a daughter, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, born in 1647. She became a pioneering naturalist and illustrator. Two of their sons followed Merian into publishing. In Frankfurt Mattheus Merian spent most of his working life and with Martin Zeiller (1589-1661), a German Geographer, and later with his own son, he produced a series of Topographia consisting of 21 volumes including a very large number of town plans as well as maps of most countries. He also took over and completed the later parts and editions of the Grand Voyages and Petits Voyages originally started by De Bry in 1590.