This product is successfully added to your cart
Questions about this product? (#30272)

Authenticity Guarantee
All items are guaranteed authentic prints (woodcuts or engravings) or manuscripts made at or about (c.) the given date and in good condition unless stated otherwise. We don’t sell facsimiles or reproductions. We deliver every map with a Certificate of Authenticity containing all the details.

France, by Abraham Ortelius. 1584

Abraham Ortelius (1527-1598)

The maker of the 'first atlas', the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570), was born on 4 April 1527 into an old Antwerp family. He learned Latin and studied Greek and mathematics.
Abraham and his sisters Anne and Elizabeth took up map colouring. He was admitted to the Guild of St. Luke as an "illuminator of maps." Besides colouring maps, Ortelius was a dealer in antiques, coins, maps, and books, with the book and map trade gradually becoming his primary occupation.
Business went well because his means permitted him to start an extensive collection of medals, coins, antiques, and a library of many volumes. In addition, he travelled a lot and visited Italy and France, made contacts everywhere with scholars and editors, and maintained extensive correspondence with them.

In 1564 he published his first map, a large and ambitious world wall map. The inspiration for this map may well have been Gastaldi's large world map. In 1565 he published a map of Egypt and a map of the Holy Land, a large map of Asia followed.
In 1568 the production of individual maps for his atlas Theatrum Orbis Terrarum was already in full swing. He completed the atlas in 1569, and in May of 1570, the Theatrum was available for sale. It was one of the most expensive books ever published.
This first edition contained seventy maps on fifty-three sheets. Franciscus Hogenberg engraved the maps.
Later editions included Additamenta (additions), resulting in Ortelius' historical atlas, the Parergon, mostly bound together with the atlas. The Parergon can be called a truly original work of Ortelius, who drew the maps based on his research.

The importance of the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum for geographical knowledge in the last quarter of the sixteenth century is difficult to overemphasize. Nothing was like it until Mercator's atlas appeared twenty-five years later. Demand for the Theatrum was remarkable. Some 24 editions appeared during Ortelius's lifetime and another ten after his death in 1598. Editions were published in Dutch, German, French, Spanish, English, and Italian. The number of map sheets grew from 53 in 1570 to 167 in 1612 in the last edition.

In 1577, engraver Philip Galle and poet-translator Pieter Heyns published the first pocket-sized edition of the Theatrum, the Epitome. The work was trendy. Over thirty editions of this Epitome were published in different languages.

back

Galliae Regni Potentiss: Nova Descriptio, Ioanne Ioliveto Auctore.

€450  ($477 / £382.5)
add to cart
Buy now
questions?
PRINT

Item Number:  30272 Authenticity Guarantee

Category:  Antique maps > Europe > France

France, by Abraham Ortelius.

Title: Galliae Regni Potentiss: Nova Descriptio, Ioanne Ioliveto Auctore.

Cartographer: Jean Jolivet (Joannes Jolivetus).

Date of the first edition: 1570.
Date of this map: 1584.

Copper engraving, printed on paper.
Image size: 350 x 510mm (13.78 x 20.08 inches).
Sheet size: 420 x 560mm (16.54 x 22.05 inches).
Verso: Latin text.
Condition: Original coloured, lower centrefold split reinforced.
Condition Rating: A

From: Theatrum Orbis Terrarum. Antwerp, Christoffel Plantin, 1584. (Van der Krogt, 31:031)

Abraham Ortelius (1527-1598)

The maker of the 'first atlas', the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570), was born on 4 April 1527 into an old Antwerp family. He learned Latin and studied Greek and mathematics.
Abraham and his sisters Anne and Elizabeth took up map colouring. He was admitted to the Guild of St. Luke as an "illuminator of maps." Besides colouring maps, Ortelius was a dealer in antiques, coins, maps, and books, with the book and map trade gradually becoming his primary occupation.
Business went well because his means permitted him to start an extensive collection of medals, coins, antiques, and a library of many volumes. In addition, he travelled a lot and visited Italy and France, made contacts everywhere with scholars and editors, and maintained extensive correspondence with them.

In 1564 he published his first map, a large and ambitious world wall map. The inspiration for this map may well have been Gastaldi's large world map. In 1565 he published a map of Egypt and a map of the Holy Land, a large map of Asia followed.
In 1568 the production of individual maps for his atlas Theatrum Orbis Terrarum was already in full swing. He completed the atlas in 1569, and in May of 1570, the Theatrum was available for sale. It was one of the most expensive books ever published.
This first edition contained seventy maps on fifty-three sheets. Franciscus Hogenberg engraved the maps.
Later editions included Additamenta (additions), resulting in Ortelius' historical atlas, the Parergon, mostly bound together with the atlas. The Parergon can be called a truly original work of Ortelius, who drew the maps based on his research.

The importance of the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum for geographical knowledge in the last quarter of the sixteenth century is difficult to overemphasize. Nothing was like it until Mercator's atlas appeared twenty-five years later. Demand for the Theatrum was remarkable. Some 24 editions appeared during Ortelius's lifetime and another ten after his death in 1598. Editions were published in Dutch, German, French, Spanish, English, and Italian. The number of map sheets grew from 53 in 1570 to 167 in 1612 in the last edition.

In 1577, engraver Philip Galle and poet-translator Pieter Heyns published the first pocket-sized edition of the Theatrum, the Epitome. The work was trendy. Over thirty editions of this Epitome were published in different languages.

References: Van der Krogt 3 - 4000:31A; Van den Broecke - p. 161, #34; Karrow - p. 322, 44/5-4; Meurer (Ortelius) - p. 78, #9

Related items

Ancient France by Janssonius J.

Galliae Veteris Typus. - Amstelodami excudit Judocus Hondius. 1630
Ancient France by Janssonius J.
[Item number: 6911]

€260  ($275.6 / £221)
Ancient France by Hondius H. - Janssonius J

Gallia Vetus. Ca. 1650
Ancient France by Hondius H. - Janssonius J
[Item number: 8096]

€240  ($254.4 / £204)
France by Sebastian Münster.

Das gantz Franckreich, so vorzeiten Narbonensis, Lugdunensis, Belgica und Celtica ist genennt worden. 1588
France by Sebastian Münster.
[Item number: 14634]

€240  ($254.4 / £204)
France, by Visscher N. II.

Galliae seu Franciae Tabula, ... 1683-1696
France, by Visscher N. II.
[Item number: 15637]

€480  ($508.8 / £408)
France, by Gerard Mercator.

Gallia / Per Gerardum Mercatorem. 1609
France, by Gerard Mercator.
[Item number: 19119]

€380  ($402.8 / £323)
France, by Ortelius A.

Galliae Veteris. 1601
France, by Ortelius A.
[Item number: 21253]

€430  ($455.8 / £365.5)
France, by Gerard de Jode.

Galliae Amplissimi Regni Tabula. 1593
France, by Gerard de Jode.
[Item number: 26035]

€700  ($742 / £595)
France, by R. & I. Ottens.

Nieuwe Caarte van Vrankryk Met desselfs Conquesten en Limiten by de Ryswykse Vrede Vastgestelt, ... 1730-45
France, by R. & I. Ottens.
[Item number: 26251]

€400  ($424 / £340)
France, by Jodocus Hondius.

Gallia. 1619
France, by Jodocus Hondius.
[Item number: 28840]

€360  ($381.6 / £306)
Ancient France, by Willem Blaeu.

Typus Galliae Veteris. 1640
Ancient France, by Willem Blaeu.
[Item number: 28895]

€300  ($318 / £255)
France, by Vincenzo Coronelli.

La Francia Antica, e Moderna. 1696
France, by Vincenzo Coronelli.
[Item number: 29296]

€400  ($424 / £340)
Ancient France by Nicolas Sanson, published by Melchior Tavernier

Galliae Antiquae Descriptio Geograpfica. 1659
Ancient France by Nicolas Sanson, published by Melchior Tavernier
[Item number: 30031]

€220  ($233.2 / £187)
France by Nicolas Sanson.

Le Royaume de France et ses Acquisitions vers les Pays Bas, l'Allemagne, l'Italie et l'Espagne. 1665
France by Nicolas Sanson.
[Item number: 30082]

€280  ($296.8 / £238)