Tabula hydrographica
- Author(s)
- Barentsz, Willem, approximately 1550-1597, Keere, Pieter van den, 1571-approximately 1646, and Claesz, Cornelis, approximately 1546-1609
- Description
- topographicè summa diligentia designantu à Guiljelmo Barentsono; Pieter van den Keere fecit. Relief shown pictorially; depths shown in bathymetric soundings. 3 bar scales on map, given in "Miliaria Italica," "Hispanicæ Leucæ," and "Miliaria Germanica." Decorative cartouches and border. Compass roses, rhumb lines. North oriented toward upper left. Shows topography, coastline, drainage, shoals, depths, anchorages, settlements (including ports). Illustrations of cities, ships, sea monsters. Latin titles with Dutch translations. 10 inset maps: Venetia -- De vaven Ancona -- Brūdicio -- Galipoli -- La Vilona in Turkia -- De haven Trau in Dalmatia -- De haven Catarro in Dalmatia -- De stadt ende haven Ragusa -- De haven Rouigno in Istria -- De haven S. Pedro de Melata. Appears in Cornelis Claesz' Caertboeck vande Midlandtsche Zee, Amsterdam, 1595.
- Publisher
- Cornelis Claesz]
- Collection
- Caertboeck vande Midlandtsche Zee and Renaissance Exploration Map Collection
- Place(s)
- Italy, Europe, and Venice, Gulf of (Italy)
- Subject(s)
- Nautical charts and Harbors
- Held by
- Stanford
- More details at
- https://purl.stanford.edu/xp468cg7846
- Use and reproduction
- Images from the The Renaissance Exploration Collection courtesy Stanford University Libraries. This item is in the public domain. There are no restrictions on use. If you have questions, please contact the David Rumsey Map Center at rumseymapcenter@stanford.edu.
- Copyright
- This work has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. You can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.
- License
- This work has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights (Public Domain Mark 1.0).