Skip to content

Münster’s Map of Belgrade

SKU: 8061
£125.00

Title:
Münster’s Map of Belgrade

Date of publication:

  • 1578
  • Printed Measurement:

  • 11.5 x 15.8 cm
  • Publisher:

  • Heinrich Petri
  • Colour:

  • black and white
  • Kriechich Wyssenburg

    This map of Belgrade showing the confluence of the rivers Danube and Sava at Belgrade, Serbia, is from Sebastian Münster's Cosmographia. Griechisch Wyssenburg, Greek (ie Byzantine) Weissenburg, was the common German name for Belgrade until the 16th century, when it began to be supplanted by the modern slavic name. Read more

    A compendium of topographical information, folklore and travels, the Cosmographia was first published with a modest 26 maps in 1544, mostly borrowed from his Ptolemy of 1540. A substantial enlargement took place in 1550, and after Münster's death in 1552 his step-son, Heinrich Petri (and his son, Sebastian), continued to revise and augment the work.

    A major revision took place in 1588, replacing some of the original maps with new examples following those in Ortelius' Theatrum; in the 1590s improved town plans were added, following the accurate examples in Braun and Hogenberg's Civitates Orbis Terrarum, so that by the last edition of 1628 the work had swollen to include over 260 maps and views.

    It was an immensely popular work: over forty editions were issued in half a dozen languages Latin, French, German, Dutch and Italian as well as a solitary Czech edition. It was one of the most widely read and influential geographical works of its age.

    Condition & Materials 

    Woodcut, 11.5 x 15.8 cm, black and white, set within descriptive German text, some spotting, sheet size 33.2 x 21.5 cm, old repair to corner, top right. Read less