Antwerpen – Antwerpia noblissimi…
Detail
Date on map: 1598
Date of the first state, first copperplate: 1581
Date of the first state, second copperplate: 1609
Date of this edition: 1612 (second state: bottom right “4”)
Dimensions (not including margins): 23,5 x 32,5 cm
Dimensions (including margins): 31 x 39,5 cm
Condition: Very good. Sharp copper engraving printed on paper. Old coloured. Centre fold as published. Wide margins. Tear in upper margin (centre fold), professionally repaired at back
Condition rating: A
Verso: blank
Map reference: Deys, Antwerpen 4.2
From: Beschryvinghe van alle de Nederlanden; (…)”, Lodovico Guicciardini, published by Willem Blaeu, 1612; Delen, #124; Fauser, #542.
In stock
Lodovico Guicciardini (1521-1589)
Lodovico Guicciardini, an Italian writer and merchant from Florence, arrived in Antwerp in 1541 and lived there until he died in 1589. His best-known work, the Descrittione di tutti I Paesi Bassi was published in 1567 by the Antwerp publisher Willem Silvius. It was an influential account of the history and the arts of the Low Countries, accompanied by city maps by various leading engravers. It was a great success right from the start, and many editions, translations, extracts and adaptations have been released to this day. Although he experienced relative prosperity during certain periods of his life, he ended his life in poverty.
In the first edition of the three original Italian publications of the Descrittione , Guicciardini describes the happy and prosperous Netherlands before the uprising against Spain. Only in the third Italian edition of 1588, published by Plantijn in Antwerp, does he show how the state of the country has gradually changed as a result of the war. This was the last edition published in Antwerp. In 1589 both Plantin and Guicciardini died. It would take until 1609 before a new edition was published in the northern Netherlands.
As new editions appeared, the number of illustrations increased, and several prints were replaced by new ones. The first four editions were mainly provided with woodcuts, the majority of which concerned the Southern Netherlands. In the later editions, only copper plates were used for an increasing number of engravings of cities and regions of the entire Netherlands. The work appeared in folio, oblong and duodecimo editions.
Full title: Antwerpiae Nobilissimi Totius Orbis Terraru Emporii Typus Anno M.D.XCVII
Related items
-
Gent – Gandavum
by Georg Braun and Frans HogenbergRare view of the city without any walls
-
Mechelen (Malines) – Machlinia
by Joan BlaeuPrice (without VAT, possibly to be added): €1 200,00 / $1 332,00 / £1 068,00ON HOLD -
Ypres – Ieper
by Georg Braun and Frans HogenbergPrice (without VAT, possibly to be added): €500,00 / $555,00 / £445,00Ypres, where poppies blow…
-
Brussels, 1593
by Georg Braun and Frans HogenbergPrice (without VAT, possibly to be added): €1 600,00 / $1 776,00 / £1 424,00An invitation to actively discover the city’s jewels