Jerusalem in Old Maps and Views
-
-
9/14/1998
-
-
GovXContentSection
|
JERUSALEM IN OLD MAPS AND VIEWS | |
INTRODUCTION | 6TH-13TH CENTURY | 15TH-16TH CENTURY | 17TH-18TH CENTURY | 19TH CENTURY |
|
|
|
|
|
BERNHARD VON BREYDENBACH'S MAP OF THE HOLY LAND (1486) | |
|
In 1483 Bernhard von Breydenbach, a nobleman and deacon of Mainz cathedral, Germany, made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. After returning home he published a |
description of his voyage together with this map by Erhard Reuwich. The country is seen from the west (with a pilgrim's vessel near the coast at Jaffa) towards the east. However, the most important feature in the map is Jerusalem, drawn in minute detail as seen from the Mount of Olives westward, since this is the best viewing angle of the Holy City.
|
|
THE FIRST PRINTED MAPS, BY LUCAS BRANDIS (1475) | |
|
|
|
In 1475 (some 25 years after the invention of printing from moveable type) Lucas Brandis published an encyclopaedic work about Christianity to which he added two maps which thus became the first |
printed maps, all previous maps having been manuscripts. One is a circular world map centered on the Holy Land. The other, shown here, is a map of the Land of Israel with Jerusalem at its center. In common with most mediaeval maps it, too, describes the Bible lands not geographically but symbolically.
|
|
|
|
VIEW OF JERUSALEM BY BRAUN AND HOGENBERG (1575) | |
|
This view of Jerusalem by Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg belongs to the genus of views of Jerusalem which portray the Holy City not as seen personally, but by a mixture of imagination and reliance on the Bible and other |
literary sources. Within the nearly circular (and imaginary) city walls some buildings, such as the dome of the Rock and the Holy Sepulchre, are depicted quite realistically, following e.g. Breydenbach's map.
|
|
BÜNTING'S CLOVER-LEAF MAP, 1581 | |
|
|
|
"The whole world in a clover leaf, which is the crest of the city of Hannover, my beloved fatherland." This caption was given by Heinrich Bünting, native of that city, to one of his allegorical maps. The three continents of the Old |
World are shown well-divided by the seas, but connected by Jerusalem as the hub of the world because of its religious importance, especially at the time of the European wars of the Reformation. The blue ocean is titled "The Great Mediterranean Sea of the World"; only the Red Sea is colored red and shown separately.
| |
|
|
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-