Cities of the world : 363 engravings revolutionize the view of the world : complete edition of the colour plates of 1572-1617. Civitates orbis terrarum

Fiche technique

Format : Valisette
Nb de pages : 501 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 30cm X 43cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-3-8228-5272-9
EAN : 9783822852729

Cities of the world

363 engravings revolutionize the view of the world
complete edition of the colour plates of 1572-1617

de ,

chez Taschen

Paru le | Valisette 501 pages

Tout public

Coffret
150.00 Indisponible

edited by Stephan Füssel | directed and produced by Benedikt Taschen | foreword by Rem Koolhaas


Quatrième de couverture

« Kindly and most esteemed reader,
We hereby place on the market the next book of the most noble cities of the entire world, of which I hope that it will please you very much because the first book was received with such great pleasure and was so highly sought-after that not a single copy still remains, nor is available to buy. »
Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Cologne, 1576

More than four centuries alter the first volume of the Civitates orbis terrarum (Cities of the World) was published in Cologne, this superlative collection of engravings of city views by Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg is once again made available to the public. The present edition is a reprint of an exceptionally well-preserved copy in the possession of the Historisches Museum in Frankfurt. This magnificent work, which first appeared in six volumes between 1572 and 1617, shortly before the havoc that was wrought by the Thirty Yeats' War, enables readers and viewers to trace the development of cities in the early modern era. Following on the books of cities so reminiscent of medieval chronicles - from Hartmann Schedel's Nuremberg Chronicle (1493) to Sebastian Münster's Cosmographia (1544) - the panoramic atlas of city maps by Braun and Hogenberg reveals entirely new insights into economic and social issues as well as cultural and social life around 1600. It shows a prosperous Europe with far-flung trade links to Africa, Asia and Central America and does so in a completely new medium, copperplate engraving, which was both aesthetically and technically superior to the woodcut and wood engraving of previous centuries.

In 363 plates, 564 views of cities, city maps and decorative heraldic plates are featured. The most skilful engravers and cartographers of the day created both frontal and oblique views, astonishing representations from a reconstructed bird's-eye perspective and city maps drawn accurately to scale. In his introduction, Braun writes that the cities « are to be shown in such a way that the viewer can look into all streets and alleys, and all houses and squares lie open to him before his very eyes ». So accurate are they that, if you stroll today through the Old Towns of the great European cities with these maps in hand, you will be immersed in the economic and social reality of the early modem era. The cities and towns are embedded in scenic surroundings; both the beneficial and the threatening aspects of arable land and meadows, vineyards, gardens, rivers and seas are depicted. Heavily laden carts, coaches and groups of pedestrians populate trade routes. River barges and ocean-going ships give a realistic impression of trade and movement in the cities. In rich port cities such as Hamburg and Kid, ships are shown being loaded with cargo, and casks of claret are being unloaded from the quays of Bordeaux, while two dons in academic gowns are engaged in learned discourse before the gates of Oxford. The « gallows-knowe [knoll] » and places where criminals were flogged shed light on municipal law and are of importance to legal historians. Another remarkable feature is the representation of the dress worn by the peoples of the .different countries, revealing the professions they practised, for example. The work is alive with unique copperplate engravings in their original tints, supplemented by Georg Braun's informative texts on municipal history, the etymology of proper names and the importance of the individual cities to his contemporaries. Heraldic illustrations link royal and ducal families with places and indicate die status of cities as episcopal sees or Free Imperial Cities.

Showing all the city views, this edition also provides an informative selection of texts from Braun's writings on history and the importance of the urban centres of his day as well as translations of the information given in Latin in the plates' cartouches. Each engraving is accompanied by a comprehensive commentary on its cartographic, cultural and art-historical significance, as well as its sources and later versions. References are cited for further reading. This edition is rounded off with an introduction examining the cultural and historical status of Braun and Hogenberg's city maps in the context of contemporaneous cartography and printed books.

Biographie

The authors : Stephan Füssel is the director of the Institute for Book Sciences at the Johannes-Gutenberg University in Mainz, where he also holds the Gutenberg Chair. He has published prolifically on the early days of printing, the sale and publication of books between the 18th and 20th centuries and the future of communications. He is also the editor of TASCHEN's Chronicle of the World of 1493, Luther Bible of 1534, Emperor Maximilian I : The Adventures of the Knight Theuerdank and Friedrich Schiller : Gedichte - Nachdruck der Prachtausgabe 1859.

Rem Koolhaas is a co-founder of the Office for Metropolitan Architecture. In 1995, his book S,M,L,XL summarized the work of OMA and established connections of contemporary society and architecture. Amongst many international awards and exhibitions he received the Pritzker Prize (2000) and the Praemium Imperiale (2003).