Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento: estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera
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Sprache: | Spanish Italian German French |
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Alcalá de Henares
Editorial Universidad de Alcalá
2020
Sevilla Editorial Universidad de Sevilla |
Schriftenreihe: | Monografías de GAHIA
6 |
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Beschreibung: | 462 Seiten Illustrationen 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9788447230754 9788418254291 |
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adam_text | TABLA DE CONTENIDOS Retrato de Francesco Prontera............................................................................ vii Presentación........................................................................................................... ix Los Editores Directorio de participantes.................................................................................. xv Abreviaturas........................................................................................................... xvii Geographorum artífex sodalitatis.......................................................................... xix Didier Marcotte Francesco Prontera: publicaciones 1972-2020................................................. xxvii Tolemeo e la geografia degli antichi................................................................... 39 Francesco Prontera Abstract: With Ptolomey ancient cartography reaches its highest point in terms of theoretical development. Conversely, and surprisingly, to pography shows a regression especially in the provinces of the Roman Empire. This regression can be explained by the separation between historiography and ‘scientific’ geography. By using examples from Ptolemys’ Geography, the paper aims to call attention on the conse quences of this separation. Tan cerca, tan lejos. Asia menor en la percepción geográfica griega (de Homero al siglo IV a.C.)............................................................................... Francisco Javier Gómez Espelosín Abstract: Asia Minor was for the greeks a foreign and far place, despite its apparent
geographical closeness and the frequent contacts with the reigns of Phrygia and Lidia during the archaic period. Only Herodotus’histories provides us with a partial view of its landscapes and peo ples, mainly issued from the knowlwdge of military expeditions in this land. This was a privileged medium for a detailed information on in ner Anatolian geography, such as it was the case with Xenophon s 51
Anabasis. This case is a good example for the general conditions and lack of resources that characterize the Greek view of foreign lands. Les sources du Stadiasme et la typologie des périples anciens............... Pascal Arnaud Abstract: The Stadiasmus of the (Great) Sea is a compilation work of com pilation works based on a long and very diverse tradition, combining documentary layers, the oldest of which can be traced back to at least the 4th century BCE and the most recent of which were not later than the Emperor Augustus. Successive compilers have never tried to unify its content or form. It therefore offers a case study that is ideal enough to figure out the diversity of the tradition of the ancient periplography. This contribution is based on a comparison between the forms and contents of the various parts of the Stadiasmus and the rest of the written tradi tion and identifies the dominant features of a literature that establishes variable combinations between two extreme poles: the practical experi ence of sailors and the expectations of an urban public. La geografìa delle aree estreme (Nord-Est) nella “carta” alessandrina . .. Serena Bianchetti Abstract: The geographic area mentioned herein was initially drawn up by Eratosthenes and included both the Taurus fine and the meridian that passed through the Caspian Sea. His map is based not only on doc umentation dating back to Alexander’s expedition, but also on the one of Seleucid origin. Indeed, we find that Eratosthenes repeatedly criti cized the geographic framework of Alexander’s historians (see the Tanais-
Iaxartes or the Paropamisos-Caucasus) and also searched for news drawn from local traditions, such as those transmitted by Persian and Seleucidic sources. Nevertheless, despite the absence or lack of infor mation, Eratosthenes succeeded in using a geometric procedure to draw lines and points in order to reconstruct the contours of the inhabited world. In fact, traces of such can even be found in Ptolemy’s Geography. Artemidoro, il Νότου κόρας e il sud dell’ecumene..................................... Silvia Panichi Abstract: Artemidorus of Ephesus (II-I century ВС) is the most ancient source on the Νότου κόρας, the “Horn of the South (Cape Guardafili), the last promontory of the Cinnamon-bearing country (Somaly). We know this thanks to Strabo, who could thus update Eratosthenes, who in the Cinnamon-bearing country had indicated the extreme southern limit of the inhabited world. The comparison between Eratosthenes and Artemidorus that Strabo (XVI4,4-19) proposes on the occasion of the description of the Arabian Gulf (Red Sea), on the other hand, can offer a starting point for reflecting on Artemidorus as a ‘geographer.
César et la géographie de la Gaule..................................................................... 143 Pierre Moret Abstract: This study offers an analysis of geographic information con cerning Gaul in the Bellum Gallicum. Only the fourth part of the cities and peoples named by Caesar are associated with geographic land marks. Information related to physical features is limited to eastern Gaul, with a density that increases as one approaches the Rhine, a stra tegic area that became the centre of attention of the Romans after the submission of Gaul. These scattered elements are based on personal observations or reports commissioned by Caesar, not on pre-existing geographic knowledge. The description in paragraphs 5-7 of the pro logue of Book I is of a different nature. This simplified picture based on cartographic knowledge, centred on ethnic spaces and structured by orientations, adapts the tripartite scheme of a Greek geographer on whom Strabo (IV 1,1) is also dependent. Its faulty insertion into the prologue, as well as contradictions with the information contained in the description of Britain in Book V, raise questions about the role of Caesar in the addition of these geographic excursus, but the hypothe sis of a late interpolation is not retained. Alpi ed appetitimi: note sull’orografia nelľitalia di strabone........................ 183 Eleonora Sideri Abstract: In Strabo’s description of Italy the orographic elements fulfil a very important dividing fiinction. For the first time, in Strabo’s Geog raphy” (II 5, 28) the Alps take the shape of an arch and
they are much more clearly featured than in Polybius’ “Stories” both in their internal sections and in the whole delineation. For historical reasons, the ge ometric center of the Alpine arch is located in the land of the Salassi, and, at its far ends, it owns a double fold whose symmetry, albeit fic titious, affects the geometric scheme of the contiguous Gallia Narbon ensis (Str., IV 1, 3) as well as the layout of the Gallic rivers that arise from the Alps. By contrast, the Apennines are described in a less detailed manner. Nevertheless, there is a particularly interesting passage (Str., V 2,10) in which Umbri, Sabines and Latins are arranged obliquely in re lation to the chain, therefore they contribute to the partition of the re gional spaces. Il libro e la carta. Note sulla terminologia cartografica nella Geografia di Strabone........................................................................................................... Roberto Nicolai Abstract: Since besides the discussed Artemidorus’s papyrus there are no other geographical papyri accompanied by maps, the only way to address the problem of the possible presence of maps next to the texts of the works of geography is the internal analysis of the texts. 197
The subject of this contribution are two key terms present in Strabo’s work: τήνα£ and γραμμή. Strabon und germanien................................................................................... 217 Hans-Joachim Gehrke Abstract: The article deals with Strabo’s description of Middle Europe. Its first part lines out general principles, which shaped Strabo’s men tal map, pointing out the geometric-cartographic perspective that his description was based upon. The second part comments the empirical description, esp. of the Germanic tribes, which is put into this overall framework. The third part shows Strabo’s intense familiarity with and understanding of the political and military constellations of his time, with regard to geography and his dealing with Germania. Un chevalier romain historien de la géographie grecque: l’hommage empoisonné de Pline l’Ancien à Eratosthène de Cyrène........................ 249 Arthur Haushalter Abstract: This study intends to reconsider the widely spread opposi tion, despite of all the evidences of documentation, between Greek pure science and Roman practical knowledge, concentrating on geog raphy. Proceeding from PUny’s homage to Alexandrian scholar Era tosthenes’ subtilitas, we try to assess the place of Greek geography in the culture of the Roman elites and to understand the genesis of this trumped-up distribution of roles. Los datos geográficos como fiiente histórica. Plinio e Hispánia: algunas cuestiones sobre el ordenamiento de su descripción geográfica............ 263 Pilar Ciprés Abstract: In the description of the Iberian
Peninsula carried out by Pli nio we find data that belongs to two organizational spheres: the Ro man political-administrative based on the provincia, the ciuitas and the conuentus and what we could call geographical-ethnographic, where there are included, amongst rivers, mountain systems, etc., geo-ethno graphic spaces and gentes, whom we refer to as the population groups that we identify with ethnic groups or peoples. This article analyzes the use of the gentes as an articulating element of his description of His pánia, contrasting it with the one given in the epigraphic sources. Del Mediterráneo al Ìndico: los estrechos del mar Rojo.............................. 285 Manuel Albaladejo Vivero Abstract: The aim of this paper is to show the strategic importance of the two straits of the Red Sea (the Suez and Bab el-Mandeb areas) during classical antiquity. In this way, the existence of a channel con necting the Mediterranean with the Red Sea is reviewed, as well as the
interest shown by some classical authors to describe the geography and anthropology of the Bab el-Mandeb area and the connection with the Indian Ocean. Likewise, the repercussions of the commercial flow with India and the presence of a Roman fleet in the region are seen. La periplografia griega en los escolios a Apolonio de Rodas........................ 305 Francisco J. González Ponce Abstract: In the Apollonius scholia there are quotations from 13 Greek peripli, which are dated from before the imperial period, most of which are focused on the description of Pontus Euxinus and his geographical environment. It is remarkable that a great number of them, many pre served only by the quotations of these scholiasts, do not interest Mar cián of Heraclea, so that the knowledge of them must have reached our commentators by other, more obscure, ways. Besides such conclu sions, it is interesting to examine this reality in connection with the two “editorial projects” of the minor geographers that have reached us: the Paris corpus (Marcian), which the scholiasts used, and the Heidel berg corpus (Arrian?), which could have been influenced by the older layers of our present scholia. Ріпах dionysii............................................................................... .......................... 331 Patrick Counillon Abstract: Dionysios’ Periegesis is the hypotyposis of a map whose mod els have been lost: thus one has to make them up with the help of the text. Three types of maps are to be found in the Periegesis: a gen eral map of the oikoumene in the shape of a sling,
borrowed from Po sidonius; maps of the regions characterized by geographical features such as seas, mountains or rivers; a general grid worked out through a net of repeated words, whose function is to obtain a form of cohe sion between the different parts of the world. This last grid, like the two others, is far from what could be called a geographical map since it lacks the characteristics of a map such as measures, coordinates or ac curate directions. What these build up instead is an organization chart of the poem itself, balancing and coordinating its different parts. La aportación bizantina a las ilustraciones de Meteorologica: a propòsito del mapamundi del Ms. Salamanca 2747................................................... 349 Inmaculada Pérez Martín Abstract: The map of the largest mountains and rivers that appears on f. 50v of Ms. Biblioteca General Histórica de la Universidad de Sala manca, 2747, released in 1900 by Charles Graux and André Martin in a publication that analyzed all the illustrations of that copy of the Meteorologica de Aristoteles, has remained unknown to most schol ars of ancient geography and has never been studied in depth. The
codicological and palaeographic analysis contextualizes the manufac ture of this Byzantine codex, one of the primary textual testimonies of Meteorologica, in Constantinople around 1125-1150, in a circle of copying and illumination of high quality books. A twin and contem porary testimony of the text and its illustrative apparatus, in this case accompanied by Alexander of Aphrodisias’s Commentary on Meteor ologica, is split into the Mss. Milano, Biblioteca Ambrosiana, E 93 sup. and Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, gr. 1880. A third codex with the illustrations of the two mentioned copies is the Firenze, Bib lioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Plut. 87.26, from the second half of the 13th century. Some glosses of the Salamanca Ms. that would be found in the model, as well as some terms used in the figures and, especially, the choice of the Bosphorus as the axis around which the map of f. 50v is organized suggest that the illustrations in book I of Meteorologica were conceived and designed in the Byzantine period, in all probabil ity in the 11th century, in the context of Michael Psellos’ (t 1078/81) teaching of the Aristotelian text. ... In ordine superiore post spoletum: Überlegungen zum Umbrien-Kapitel in Flavio Biondos Italia Illustrata................................................................. 383 Klaus Geus Abstract: One of the most important geographical and topographi cal works of the Quattrocento, the Italia Illustrata of Flavio Biondo, bridges the gap between Antiquity and modern times. In order to cre ate a historical and geographical image of all of
Italy Biondo resorts primarily to Roman classics: Vergil, Livy and Pliny, but also Ptolemy and Strabo. On the basis of Umbria the present contribution seeks to question two basic assumptions in current scholarship on Biondo: a) that a principle of organisation originating in Strabo plays an import role in the Italia Illustrata; b) that Biondo to a large extent had re course to maps. Although neither assumption may be completely dis missed with, a detailed analysis indicates that Biondo primarily wrote his work according to the Graeco-Roman hodological model, only rarely (if at all) making use of maps. Francesco Patrizi et la géographie antique....................................................... 399 Patrick Gautier Dalché Abstract: The Sienese humanist Francesco Patrizi is the author of a pedagogical treatise (De regno regisque institutione) composed from 1471/1473 to 1482/1483 and dedicated to the Duke of Calabria. Knowledge of places and peoples is presented to the sovereign as nec essary, through texts and maps. Patrizi made a presentation of the an cient geographers, largely taken from Strabon and supplemented by various other authors. It underlines the necessity of the use of maps, particularly in military operations. He conceives ancient geography as
a cumulative process based on travel and promoted by the constitution of the empires of Alexander and Rome. He gives much more impor tance to Strabo, non minus historicus quam geographus”, who pro vided what was essential for the prince’s institutio and who could not appear in a mathematical”, and therefore abstract, work such as Ptole my’s Geography. Patrizi’s reflections help to understand that the two major works of ancient geography were not received in a single way in the Quattrocento. Depending on the cultural and intellectual back grounds, and the circumstances, Strabo and Ptolemy have responded to a variety of concerns. Patrizi occupies an original place, character ized both by an absolute respect for Strabon’s extraordinary achieve ments, but also by his concern to make them useful in the present to the sovereign, and finally by his awareness of the historicity of geo graphical knowledge. Carte nautiche nell’antichità։1 Una discussione fra Cinque e Seicento....... 421 Pietro Janni Abstract: Did the Ancients own and use nautical charts? The ques tion has been much debated in our time, and today it sees the ma jority (although not the entirety) of scholars inclined to a negative answer: the sailors of Antiquity navigated with empirical means, far from any form of cartography. This discussion has a forgotten prec edent in the controversy between two Italian authors at the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: the polygraph Girolamo Rus celli (1518-1566) and the naval engineer Bartolomeo Crescenzio (his book Nautica mediterranea was published in
1607). Ruscelli was for the negative, and suggested (so interestingly preceding recent hypoth eses) that the so-called ‘portolano cards’, the first reliable depictions of the Mediterranean, had been drawn with the aid of the compass, whose appearance coincides with that of the cards; Crescenzio argued, with arguments unacceptable for the modern historical thought, that the nautical charts, and the compass too, existed in Antiquity, relying on two passages of Plautus. INDICES Index locorum................................................................................................... 435 Index nominum...................................... 445 Listado de figuras y tablas................................................................................ 459 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München
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TABLA DE CONTENIDOS Retrato de Francesco Prontera. vii Presentación. ix Los Editores Directorio de participantes. xv Abreviaturas. xvii Geographorum artífex sodalitatis. xix Didier Marcotte Francesco Prontera: publicaciones 1972-2020. xxvii Tolemeo e la geografia degli antichi. 39 Francesco Prontera Abstract: With Ptolomey ancient cartography reaches its highest point in terms of theoretical development. Conversely, and surprisingly, to pography shows a regression especially in the provinces of the Roman Empire. This regression can be explained by the separation between historiography and ‘scientific’ geography. By using examples from Ptolemys’ Geography, the paper aims to call attention on the conse quences of this separation. Tan cerca, tan lejos. Asia menor en la percepción geográfica griega (de Homero al siglo IV a.C.). Francisco Javier Gómez Espelosín Abstract: Asia Minor was for the greeks a foreign and far place, despite its apparent
geographical closeness and the frequent contacts with the reigns of Phrygia and Lidia during the archaic period. Only Herodotus’histories provides us with a partial view of its landscapes and peo ples, mainly issued from the knowlwdge of military expeditions in this land. This was a privileged medium for a detailed information on in ner Anatolian geography, such as it was the case with Xenophon's 51
Anabasis. This case is a good example for the general conditions and lack of resources that characterize the Greek view of foreign lands. Les sources du Stadiasme et la typologie des périples anciens. Pascal Arnaud Abstract: The Stadiasmus of the (Great) Sea is a compilation work of com pilation works based on a long and very diverse tradition, combining documentary layers, the oldest of which can be traced back to at least the 4th century BCE and the most recent of which were not later than the Emperor Augustus. Successive compilers have never tried to unify its content or form. It therefore offers a case study that is ideal enough to figure out the diversity of the tradition of the ancient periplography. This contribution is based on a comparison between the forms and contents of the various parts of the Stadiasmus and the rest of the written tradi tion and identifies the dominant features of a literature that establishes variable combinations between two extreme poles: the practical experi ence of sailors and the expectations of an urban public. La geografìa delle aree estreme (Nord-Est) nella “carta” alessandrina . . Serena Bianchetti Abstract: The geographic area mentioned herein was initially drawn up by Eratosthenes and included both the Taurus fine and the meridian that passed through the Caspian Sea. His map is based not only on doc umentation dating back to Alexander’s expedition, but also on the one of Seleucid origin. Indeed, we find that Eratosthenes repeatedly criti cized the geographic framework of Alexander’s historians (see the Tanais-
Iaxartes or the Paropamisos-Caucasus) and also searched for news drawn from local traditions, such as those transmitted by Persian and Seleucidic sources. Nevertheless, despite the absence or lack of infor mation, Eratosthenes succeeded in using a geometric procedure to draw lines and points in order to reconstruct the contours of the inhabited world. In fact, traces of such can even be found in Ptolemy’s Geography. Artemidoro, il Νότου κόρας e il sud dell’ecumene. Silvia Panichi Abstract: Artemidorus of Ephesus (II-I century ВС) is the most ancient source on the Νότου κόρας, the “Horn of the South" (Cape Guardafili), the last promontory of the Cinnamon-bearing country (Somaly). We know this thanks to Strabo, who could thus update Eratosthenes, who in the Cinnamon-bearing country had indicated the extreme southern limit of the inhabited world. The comparison between Eratosthenes and Artemidorus that Strabo (XVI4,4-19) proposes on the occasion of the description of the Arabian Gulf (Red Sea), on the other hand, can offer a starting point for reflecting on Artemidorus as a ‘geographer.
César et la géographie de la Gaule. 143 Pierre Moret Abstract: This study offers an analysis of geographic information con cerning Gaul in the Bellum Gallicum. Only the fourth part of the cities and peoples named by Caesar are associated with geographic land marks. Information related to physical features is limited to eastern Gaul, with a density that increases as one approaches the Rhine, a stra tegic area that became the centre of attention of the Romans after the submission of Gaul. These scattered elements are based on personal observations or reports commissioned by Caesar, not on pre-existing geographic knowledge. The description in paragraphs 5-7 of the pro logue of Book I is of a different nature. This simplified picture based on cartographic knowledge, centred on ethnic spaces and structured by orientations, adapts the tripartite scheme of a Greek geographer on whom Strabo (IV 1,1) is also dependent. Its faulty insertion into the prologue, as well as contradictions with the information contained in the description of Britain in Book V, raise questions about the role of Caesar in the addition of these geographic excursus, but the hypothe sis of a late interpolation is not retained. Alpi ed appetitimi: note sull’orografia nelľitalia di strabone. 183 Eleonora Sideri Abstract: In Strabo’s description of Italy the orographic elements fulfil a very important dividing fiinction. For the first time, in Strabo’s "Geog raphy” (II 5, 28) the Alps take the shape of an arch and
they are much more clearly featured than in Polybius’ “Stories” both in their internal sections and in the whole delineation. For historical reasons, the ge ometric center of the Alpine arch is located in the land of the Salassi, and, at its far ends, it owns a double fold whose symmetry, albeit fic titious, affects the geometric scheme of the contiguous Gallia Narbon ensis (Str., IV 1, 3) as well as the layout of the Gallic rivers that arise from the Alps. By contrast, the Apennines are described in a less detailed manner. Nevertheless, there is a particularly interesting passage (Str., V 2,10) in which Umbri, Sabines and Latins are arranged obliquely in re lation to the chain, therefore they contribute to the partition of the re gional spaces. Il libro e la carta. Note sulla terminologia cartografica nella Geografia di Strabone. Roberto Nicolai Abstract: Since besides the discussed Artemidorus’s papyrus there are no other geographical papyri accompanied by maps, the only way to address the problem of the possible presence of maps next to the texts of the works of geography is the internal analysis of the texts. 197
The subject of this contribution are two key terms present in Strabo’s work: τήνα£ and γραμμή. Strabon und germanien. 217 Hans-Joachim Gehrke Abstract: The article deals with Strabo’s description of Middle Europe. Its first part lines out general principles, which shaped Strabo’s men tal map, pointing out the geometric-cartographic perspective that his description was based upon. The second part comments the empirical description, esp. of the Germanic tribes, which is put into this overall framework. The third part shows Strabo’s intense familiarity with and understanding of the political and military constellations of his time, with regard to geography and his dealing with Germania. Un chevalier romain historien de la géographie grecque: l’hommage empoisonné de Pline l’Ancien à Eratosthène de Cyrène. 249 Arthur Haushalter Abstract: This study intends to reconsider the widely spread opposi tion, despite of all the evidences of documentation, between Greek pure science and Roman practical knowledge, concentrating on geog raphy. Proceeding from PUny’s homage to Alexandrian scholar Era tosthenes’ subtilitas, we try to assess the place of Greek geography in the culture of the Roman elites and to understand the genesis of this trumped-up distribution of roles. Los datos geográficos como fiiente histórica. Plinio e Hispánia: algunas cuestiones sobre el ordenamiento de su descripción geográfica. 263 Pilar Ciprés Abstract: In the description of the Iberian
Peninsula carried out by Pli nio we find data that belongs to two organizational spheres: the Ro man political-administrative based on the provincia, the ciuitas and the conuentus and what we could call geographical-ethnographic, where there are included, amongst rivers, mountain systems, etc., geo-ethno graphic spaces and gentes, whom we refer to as the population groups that we identify with ethnic groups or peoples. This article analyzes the use of the gentes as an articulating element of his description of His pánia, contrasting it with the one given in the epigraphic sources. Del Mediterráneo al Ìndico: los estrechos del mar Rojo. 285 Manuel Albaladejo Vivero Abstract: The aim of this paper is to show the strategic importance of the two straits of the Red Sea (the Suez and Bab el-Mandeb areas) during classical antiquity. In this way, the existence of a channel con necting the Mediterranean with the Red Sea is reviewed, as well as the
interest shown by some classical authors to describe the geography and anthropology of the Bab el-Mandeb area and the connection with the Indian Ocean. Likewise, the repercussions of the commercial flow with India and the presence of a Roman fleet in the region are seen. La periplografia griega en los escolios a Apolonio de Rodas. 305 Francisco J. González Ponce Abstract: In the Apollonius scholia there are quotations from 13 Greek peripli, which are dated from before the imperial period, most of which are focused on the description of Pontus Euxinus and his geographical environment. It is remarkable that a great number of them, many pre served only by the quotations of these scholiasts, do not interest Mar cián of Heraclea, so that the knowledge of them must have reached our commentators by other, more obscure, ways. Besides such conclu sions, it is interesting to examine this reality in connection with the two “editorial projects” of the minor geographers that have reached us: the Paris corpus (Marcian), which the scholiasts used, and the Heidel berg corpus (Arrian?), which could have been influenced by the older layers of our present scholia. Ріпах dionysii. . 331 Patrick Counillon Abstract: Dionysios’ Periegesis is the hypotyposis of a map whose mod els have been lost: thus one has to make them up with the help of the text. Three types of maps are to be found in the Periegesis: a gen eral map of the oikoumene in the shape of a sling,
borrowed from Po sidonius; maps of the regions characterized by geographical features such as seas, mountains or rivers; a general grid worked out through a net of repeated words, whose function is to obtain a form of cohe sion between the different parts of the world. This last grid, like the two others, is far from what could be called a geographical map since it lacks the characteristics of a map such as measures, coordinates or ac curate directions. What these build up instead is an organization chart of the poem itself, balancing and coordinating its different parts. La aportación bizantina a las ilustraciones de Meteorologica: a propòsito del mapamundi del Ms. Salamanca 2747. 349 Inmaculada Pérez Martín Abstract: The map of the largest mountains and rivers that appears on f. 50v of Ms. Biblioteca General Histórica de la Universidad de Sala manca, 2747, released in 1900 by Charles Graux and André Martin in a publication that analyzed all the illustrations of that copy of the Meteorologica de Aristoteles, has remained unknown to most schol ars of ancient geography and has never been studied in depth. The
codicological and palaeographic analysis contextualizes the manufac ture of this Byzantine codex, one of the primary textual testimonies of Meteorologica, in Constantinople around 1125-1150, in a circle of copying and illumination of high quality books. A twin and contem porary testimony of the text and its illustrative apparatus, in this case accompanied by Alexander of Aphrodisias’s Commentary on Meteor ologica, is split into the Mss. Milano, Biblioteca Ambrosiana, E 93 sup. and Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, gr. 1880. A third codex with the illustrations of the two mentioned copies is the Firenze, Bib lioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Plut. 87.26, from the second half of the 13th century. Some glosses of the Salamanca Ms. that would be found in the model, as well as some terms used in the figures and, especially, the choice of the Bosphorus as the axis around which the map of f. 50v is organized suggest that the illustrations in book I of Meteorologica were conceived and designed in the Byzantine period, in all probabil ity in the 11th century, in the context of Michael Psellos’ (t 1078/81) teaching of the Aristotelian text. . In ordine superiore post spoletum: Überlegungen zum Umbrien-Kapitel in Flavio Biondos Italia Illustrata. 383 Klaus Geus Abstract: One of the most important geographical and topographi cal works of the Quattrocento, the Italia Illustrata of Flavio Biondo, bridges the gap between Antiquity and modern times. In order to cre ate a historical and geographical image of all of
Italy Biondo resorts primarily to Roman classics: Vergil, Livy and Pliny, but also Ptolemy and Strabo. On the basis of Umbria the present contribution seeks to question two basic assumptions in current scholarship on Biondo: a) that a principle of organisation originating in Strabo plays an import role in the Italia Illustrata; b) that Biondo to a large extent had re course to maps. Although neither assumption may be completely dis missed with, a detailed analysis indicates that Biondo primarily wrote his work according to the Graeco-Roman hodological model, only rarely (if at all) making use of maps. Francesco Patrizi et la géographie antique. 399 Patrick Gautier Dalché Abstract: The Sienese humanist Francesco Patrizi is the author of a pedagogical treatise (De regno regisque institutione) composed from 1471/1473 to 1482/1483 and dedicated to the Duke of Calabria. Knowledge of places and peoples is presented to the sovereign as nec essary, through texts and maps. Patrizi made a presentation of the an cient geographers, largely taken from Strabon and supplemented by various other authors. It underlines the necessity of the use of maps, particularly in military operations. He conceives ancient geography as
a cumulative process based on travel and promoted by the constitution of the empires of Alexander and Rome. He gives much more impor tance to Strabo, "non minus historicus quam geographus”, who pro vided what was essential for the prince’s institutio and who could not appear in a'mathematical”, and therefore abstract, work such as Ptole my’s Geography. Patrizi’s reflections help to understand that the two major works of ancient geography were not received in a single way in the Quattrocento. Depending on the cultural and intellectual back grounds, and the circumstances, Strabo and Ptolemy have responded to a variety of concerns. Patrizi occupies an original place, character ized both by an absolute respect for Strabon’s extraordinary achieve ments, but also by his concern to make them useful in the present to the sovereign, and finally by his awareness of the historicity of geo graphical knowledge. Carte nautiche nell’antichità։1 Una discussione fra Cinque e Seicento. 421 Pietro Janni Abstract: Did the Ancients own and use nautical charts? The ques tion has been much debated in our time, and today it sees the ma jority (although not the entirety) of scholars inclined to a negative answer: the sailors of Antiquity navigated with empirical means, far from any form of cartography. This discussion has a forgotten prec edent in the controversy between two Italian authors at the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: the polygraph Girolamo Rus celli (1518-1566) and the naval engineer Bartolomeo Crescenzio (his book Nautica mediterranea was published in
1607). Ruscelli was for the negative, and suggested (so interestingly preceding recent hypoth eses) that the so-called ‘portolano cards’, the first reliable depictions of the Mediterranean, had been drawn with the aid of the compass, whose appearance coincides with that of the cards; Crescenzio argued, with arguments unacceptable for the modern historical thought, that the nautical charts, and the compass too, existed in Antiquity, relying on two passages of Plautus. INDICES Index locorum. 435 Index nominum. 445 Listado de figuras y tablas. 459 Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München |
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spelling | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera Encarnación Castro-Páez, Gonzalo Cruz Andreotti (eds. científicos) Alcalá de Henares Editorial Universidad de Alcalá 2020 Sevilla Editorial Universidad de Sevilla 462 Seiten Illustrationen 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Monografías de GAHIA 6 Beiträge teilweise spanisch, teilweise italienisch, teilweise französisch, teilweise deutsch Prontera, Francesco (DE-588)132432226 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 800 v.Chr-1500 gnd rswk-swf Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd rswk-swf Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4016928-5 Festschrift gnd-content (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content Prontera, Francesco (DE-588)132432226 p DE-604 Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 s Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 s Geschichte 800 v.Chr-1500 z Castro Páez, Encarnación (DE-588)1198704594 edt Cruz Andreotti, Gonzalo (DE-588)1056315865 edt Prontera, Francesco (DE-588)132432226 hnr Monografías de GAHIA 6 (DE-604)BV044530586 6 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032710033&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera Monografías de GAHIA Prontera, Francesco (DE-588)132432226 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)132432226 (DE-588)4020216-1 (DE-588)4029823-1 (DE-588)4016928-5 (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera |
title_auth | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera |
title_exact_search | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera |
title_exact_search_txtP | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera |
title_full | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera Encarnación Castro-Páez, Gonzalo Cruz Andreotti (eds. científicos) |
title_fullStr | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera Encarnación Castro-Páez, Gonzalo Cruz Andreotti (eds. científicos) |
title_full_unstemmed | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera Encarnación Castro-Páez, Gonzalo Cruz Andreotti (eds. científicos) |
title_short | Geografía y cartografía de la Antigüedad al Renacimiento |
title_sort | geografia y cartografia de la antiguedad al renacimiento estudios en honor de francesco prontera |
title_sub | estudios en honor de Francesco Prontera |
topic | Prontera, Francesco (DE-588)132432226 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Kartografie (DE-588)4029823-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Prontera, Francesco Geografie Kartografie Festschrift Konferenzschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032710033&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV044530586 |
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