Atlas maior of 1665 : "the greatest and finest atlas ever published"

Bibliographic Information

Atlas maior of 1665 : "the greatest and finest atlas ever published"

Joan Blaeu ; introduction and texts by Peter van der Krogt ; with a selection of original texts by Joan Blaeu ; directed and produced by Benedikt Taschen

Taschen, c2017

Cartographic Material(Map)

Other Title

Geographia, quæ est cosmographiæ Blavianæ pars prima, qua orbis terræ tabulis ante oculos ponitur, et descriptionibus illustratur

Der grösste und prachtvollste Atlas, der jemals veröffentlicht wurde

L'atlas le plus grand et le plus admirable jamais publié

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

"Based on the copy in the/Nach dem Original aus der/D'après l'original de la Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna."

Bibliography: p. 511

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Superlatives tend to fail in describing Joan Blaeu's Atlas Maior-that being said, it stands as one of the most extravagant feats in the history of mapmaking. The original Latin edition, completed in 1665, was the largest and most expensive book to be published during the 17th century. Its 594 maps appearing across 11 volumes spanned Arctica, Africa, Asia, Europe, and America. Ambitious in scale and artistry, it is included in the Canon of Dutch History, an official survey of 50 individuals, creations, or events that chart the most important historical developments of the Netherlands. TASCHEN's meticulous reprint brings this luxurious Baroque wonder into the hands of modern readers. In an age of digitized cartography and global connectivity, it celebrates the steadfast beauty of quality printing and restores the wonder of an exploratory age, in which Blaeu's native Amsterdam was a center of international trade and discovery. True to TASCHEN's optimum reproduction standards, this edition is based on the Austrian National Library's complete colored and gold-heightened copy of Atlas Maior, assuring the finest detail and quality. University of Amsterdam's Peter van der Krogt introduces the historical and cultural significance of the atlas while providing detailed descriptions for individual maps, revealing the full scale and ambition of Blaeu's masterwork.

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