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Are you going to include the Lafreri atlases? When?  AM

 

Alfred Moldovan, MD

444 Central Park West

New York, NY 10025

Tel. 212.865.2828

Fax: 212.865.3111

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Vladimiro Valerio
Sent: Sunday, September 06, 2009 8:55 PM
To: Discussion group for map history
Subject: [MapHist] Mapandimages

 

Dear all,

 

the site ( http://www.mapsandimages.it/ ) now host 613 images and may be
placed among the "Large General Sites", according to Tony's definition in
Maphistory.

The images are all digitized with Metis instruments (italian makers), among
the best instruments nowadays on the market in the world, and the site has
been settled and worked by Hyperborea (Pisa) and Mida (Bergamo) leaders in
the management and running of websites in Italy.

The site is far more than an Italian centered collection even if most of the
material has been published or produced in Italy. General Atlases represents
all the countries in the world and those by Benedetto Marzolla (one, just
one copy, is also in the Rumsey Collection) are particularly remarkable for
the quality of information, for the size, for the references and sources
always declared on the map and for the statistical and
historico-geographical description written on any map. Now we have in the
net the complete cartographical work of Marzolla. No other cartographer, but
Coronelli in Geoweb (Marciana Venice), has in the world his entire
production on the web, and Coronelli is not available (on the web) at a so
high resolution and quality as Marzolla is!  I have also recently published
a volume on Marzolla with a biography and a list of all his works: books,
atlases, loose sheets maps, manuscript and so on (Vladimiro Valerio,
Benedetto Marzolla. Brindisino, Geografo e Cartografo dell800 Europeo,
Manduria, Barbieri Selvaggi 2008, over 150 maps reproduced) which seems to
be the first printed complete cartobliography of a Mapmaker!

 

The same  we can say for the almost unknown Geographer and Engraver Giuseppe
Rodini. All his atlases with finely engraved maps are on the web.

 

In the window "atlases" you may also find the first italian regional atlas,
a manuscript attributed to Nicola Antonio Stigliola (ca 1595) and used by
Magini for his Italy (Bologna 1620). A true cartographical monument, the
primary "source" for the other five manuscript copies so far known (Paris
BN, Vatican Library, Naples NL, Bari NL, Malta NL) all executed in the XVII
century and missing the great amount of information kept in the original by
Stigliola (routes, distance in miles, post, Low Court, ports with depth,
fortresses and castles, inhabitated centers with "fuochi" for taxation,
index of placenames with geometrical coordinates and so on).

 

Among the atlases is a very rare Portulano delle coste della Spagna, an
italian edition published in Naples in 1824-25 (partially in lithography) of
a portulano published in Cadiz, with 63 charts of spanish harbours and ports
and bays.

I also started to put in the site an impressive collection of 270 charts
published by the Direccion de Hidrografia in Madrid from the end of the
XVIII century to 1866. The maps are bound in five volumes the first of which
contains 53 charts of North America from Terranova to Florida, the Caribbean
and Central America and has been digitized and put on the web. The charts
are in the impressive format of 100x70 cm and 50x70 the smaller and are in
mint condition for bound in atlas form and never used.

It is the most important collection of Spanish Charts in the world apart
from the one in the Museo Naval in Madrid. Anyway, I gave two images to
Martin Miras when she published her volume on the Direccion Hydrografica as
she could not find copies of those two charts anywhere. The other four
volumes are related to: 2) Atlantic South America from Rio de le Amazoni to
Antarctica (26 charts); 3) Atlantic Europe from Holland to Cadiz (63
charts); 4) Africa from Gibraltar to Red Sea and Asia from Arabia to Malacca
(58 charts); 5) Asia from Malacca to Korea, with Indonesia and Philippines
(70 charts).

 

The window "key sheets" hosts multisheet maps. They are all italian but of
very great historical, scientific and artistical importance. My aim is to
have at disposal on the web all the geodetical maps of the late Italian
states (XVIII-XIX c.) and now we may dispose of Piedmont (around 1850-1865),
Tuscany (1806), Kingdom of Naples (1769 and 1788-1812), Padoan area (1780),
a military area in Lombardy-Venetian state published in Turin for war
purposes in 1859 (1:43 200!), Parma and Piacenza in two different states
(1828 and 1847), and an impressive chart of the Adriatic Sea in 20 sheets
(1:175 000) published by Austrian Army in Milan in 1822-24.

I have ready digitized two small atlases by Rizzi Zannoni  (Paris 1762) and
Remondini (Venice 1800), the second volume of Spanish charts devoted to
Atlantic South America (with among the others, a striking map of Falkland,
100x70) and an edition of Stieler's Hand-Atlas (1848).

 

Any map has a short but precise descritpion, made following a card adopted
by me in any of my studies on maps in the last 25 years, just adapting the
general scheme to the local situation (manuscript, prints, items from
archives, pursposes to be achieved etc.).  I hate images abandoned in the
web avoiding any kind of description and information. The card I suggested
to, and well accepted by, my associates-friends has also two measures in mm
(copperplate and printed frame), scales (registered from the map and natural
scale), and I also decided to give the projection. In the case of map in
Mercator Projection I give the dimension of the degree of longitude, which
is necessary and sufficient to calculate the crescent scales (at the
latitudes of the map), colours, orientation, notes, toponyms and . . .
bibliographical reference, apart from date, publisher, place of production,
way of reproduction and other basic information. 

 

The next stop will be the possibility to acquire high resolution files for
any use. As declared in the home page, we also intend to host other relevant
public or private collections, with thesamestandard of digitization and
description.

 

I know you may well appreciate my intention and any suggestion for
improvements is welcome.

Sorry for the lenght, but I do hope it will be of some help for the general
discusion on how to create map website and use them.

 

Ciao.

vladimiro

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