Sold

The BADA Standard

  • Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
  • Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
  • Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
  • Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
  • Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees
Click here for more information on the BADA Standard

The first widely circulated map showing the world on an oval projection.

Title Untitled World Map.

Author BORDONE, Benedetto di.

Publisher Nicolo Zoppino.

Publication place Venice.

Publication date 1522.

Wood block map.

Notes

Bordone's world map was the first widely circulated map showing the world on an oval projection (after Franco Rosselli's 1508 version) and the first to appear in an 'Isolario'. Bordone's rendering of the Americas and Africa are modern. The Americas (Novo Mondo) appear on the left, but in drastically reduced form.

Unlike Rosselli's map, Bordone shows open water between the two continents and does not join North America and Asia. India and Ceylon remain Ptolemaic. Southeast Asia is modelled after the typical thinking of the time, a large subcontinent offsetting the Austronesian islands to the south. The outline of Japan is hypothetical, based on Marco Polo's textual account.

Bordone's was the first printed isolario to encompass the entire world, and arguably is therefore the first atlas to completely shed Ptolemy's classical bonds. The only isolario to precede it was the little book of Bartolomeo dalli Sonetti, 1485, which covered only the Aegean islands.

Waldseemuller's 1513 edition of Ptolemy's geography did include new modern maps of the new modern world, but is still essentially a Ptolemaic work. Bordone's isolario boasts many cornerstone maps, and is the first atlas ever to contain separate maps of North and South America, and the first to contain regional maps of America.

Bibliography

Shirley 59.





Stock number

13880
Open Monday-Friday 10-6; other times by appointment

The BADA Standard

  • Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
  • Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
  • Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
  • Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
  • Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees
Click here for more information on the BADA Standard