The first atlas printed in Venice, the first wholly printed in colours, incorporating the first map to indicate Japan, the second map in a Ptolemaic atlas to show America.

£150,000

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Liber geographiae

cum tabulis et universali figura et cum additione locorum quae a recentiorbus reperta sunt.

PTOLEMAEUS, Claudius; Bernardus SYLVANUS
Venice,
Jacobus Pentius de Lencho,
1511
Folio atlas (425 by 295mm), bookplate to verso of initial blank leaf, title in red with manuscript ownership inscription, poem on verso printed in red and black, 6pp preliminary text printed in red and black, 115pp text printed in red and black with four woodcut and letterpress diagrammatic illustrations, manuscript notes throughout in margins of text in same hand as ownership inscription, small area of abrasion damage to colophon, infilled with ink facsimile, 28 woodcut maps printed in red and black (each double-page with all but the final world map in two sections on facing pages); sixteenth century red vellum, remnants of old ties, japp fore-edges.

Collation: [4]; A8, B-H6 (first leaf of G unsigned), I8 (first leaf unsigned), 28 maps.
12892

To scale:

notes:

notes:

A very fine example of the Venetian edition of Ptolemy's 'Geographia'. This is the first illustrated edition of Ptolemy's work in which an attempt was made to update the information given on the maps based on new knowledge, via recent firsthand accounts and the only Italian edition of Ptolemy to feature woodcut maps.

It is also one of the earliest examples of two-colour printing in cartography, with the major regional names printed in red, others in black, using ...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Brotton; Gautier Dalche; Nordenskiรถld Collection, 2:204; Phillips [Atlases], 358; Sabin, 66477; Shirley [World], 32; Woodward [Techniques].

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance:

1. Manuscript ownership inscription of Francisci de Chiapanis [Francisco Chiappano?], dated in Venice in 1736. The owner has signed himself "sacerdotis Bass", presumably a priest at the church of San Basso.

2. Bookplate of J.H. van der Veen. The bookplate artist, Anton Pieck (1895-1987) was active in the Netherlands in the twentieth century. The owner may have been Johan Herman van der Veen (1926-2006), a Dutch politician and lawyer.