Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio

"Fine example of the 1540 edition of Oronce Fine's (Orontius Finaeus) double cordiform map of the World, first published in 1531. Oronce Fine's double cordiform map of the world is one of the most striking and influential maps of the World published in the 16th Century. First issued i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fine, Oronce
Format: Map
Language:unknown
Published: Christianus Weche 1540
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~358469~90125239
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spelling ftdavidrumseyc:oai:N/A:RUMSEY~8~1~358469~90125239 2024-05-12T08:04:43+00:00 Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio Fine, Oronce World 1540 Full Image Download in JP2 Format 29 42 https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~358469~90125239 https://media.davidrumsey.com/MediaManager/srvr?mediafile=/Size4/RUMSEY~8~1/213/15894000.jpg unknown Christianus Weche Paris 15894.000 https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~358469~90125239 https://media.davidrumsey.com/MediaManager/srvr?mediafile=/Size4/RUMSEY~8~1/213/15894000.jpg Separate Map 1540 ftdavidrumseyc 2024-04-12T13:40:34Z "Fine example of the 1540 edition of Oronce Fine's (Orontius Finaeus) double cordiform map of the World, first published in 1531. Oronce Fine's double cordiform map of the world is one of the most striking and influential maps of the World published in the 16th Century. First issued in 1531, its earliest appearance isin the 1532 Paris edition of Johann Huttich and Simon Grynaeus's Novus orbis regionum, a collection of travel accounts that had also been published in Basel several months before. As noted by Shirley: The eminent French cartographer Oronce Fine prepared this double-cordiform map: a rendering considerably in advance of any others printed earlier. . . Fine's map is a detailed woodcut, geographically much superior to the large oval map by Sebastian Münster-Hans Holbein in the Basle editions. Much of the right-hand (or southern) cordum is taken up with the new Terra Australis, noted as being 'recently discovered but not yet explored.' Beyond the tip of South America is marked the Mare magellanicum, one of he first uses of the navigator's name in such a context. Central America contains numerous place names reflecting the conquests and explorations of Cortez in the early 1520s, but further north Fine has unambiguously made the North America continent part of the eastern extremity of Asia. Four islands make up the north polar regions. The separate island of Greenland is named, and a large promontory marked Gaccalar (supposedly Labrador) extend from the North American land mass into the Atlantic. There is a detailed floral surround to the map, two mermaids, two muscular cherubs, the French royal coat of arms and, at the head of the map, the title in a flowing banner. Oronce Fine's map is one that deserved enlargement on to two sheets. Unfortunately, in many cases the margins of surviving copies are badly frayed as after folding once for insertion into the book they were still too wide for the binding. Based on sophisticated geometric principles for reducing the spherical earth to a two-dimensional image, ... Map Greenland David Rumsey Historical Map Collection (Cartography Associates) Greenland Terra Australis ENVELOPE(-62.900,-62.900,-64.900,-64.900) Four Islands ENVELOPE(-108.218,-108.218,56.050,56.050)
institution Open Polar
collection David Rumsey Historical Map Collection (Cartography Associates)
op_collection_id ftdavidrumseyc
language unknown
description "Fine example of the 1540 edition of Oronce Fine's (Orontius Finaeus) double cordiform map of the World, first published in 1531. Oronce Fine's double cordiform map of the world is one of the most striking and influential maps of the World published in the 16th Century. First issued in 1531, its earliest appearance isin the 1532 Paris edition of Johann Huttich and Simon Grynaeus's Novus orbis regionum, a collection of travel accounts that had also been published in Basel several months before. As noted by Shirley: The eminent French cartographer Oronce Fine prepared this double-cordiform map: a rendering considerably in advance of any others printed earlier. . . Fine's map is a detailed woodcut, geographically much superior to the large oval map by Sebastian Münster-Hans Holbein in the Basle editions. Much of the right-hand (or southern) cordum is taken up with the new Terra Australis, noted as being 'recently discovered but not yet explored.' Beyond the tip of South America is marked the Mare magellanicum, one of he first uses of the navigator's name in such a context. Central America contains numerous place names reflecting the conquests and explorations of Cortez in the early 1520s, but further north Fine has unambiguously made the North America continent part of the eastern extremity of Asia. Four islands make up the north polar regions. The separate island of Greenland is named, and a large promontory marked Gaccalar (supposedly Labrador) extend from the North American land mass into the Atlantic. There is a detailed floral surround to the map, two mermaids, two muscular cherubs, the French royal coat of arms and, at the head of the map, the title in a flowing banner. Oronce Fine's map is one that deserved enlargement on to two sheets. Unfortunately, in many cases the margins of surviving copies are badly frayed as after folding once for insertion into the book they were still too wide for the binding. Based on sophisticated geometric principles for reducing the spherical earth to a two-dimensional image, ...
format Map
author Fine, Oronce
spellingShingle Fine, Oronce
Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
author_facet Fine, Oronce
author_sort Fine, Oronce
title Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
title_short Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
title_full Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
title_fullStr Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
title_full_unstemmed Nova, et Integra Universi Orbis Descriptio
title_sort nova, et integra universi orbis descriptio
publisher Christianus Weche
publishDate 1540
url https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~358469~90125239
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op_coverage World
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.900,-62.900,-64.900,-64.900)
ENVELOPE(-108.218,-108.218,56.050,56.050)
geographic Greenland
Terra Australis
Four Islands
geographic_facet Greenland
Terra Australis
Four Islands
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_relation 15894.000
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