“One of the most spectacular achievements of Renaissance printmaking”

£1,200,000

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Venetie M.D.

BARBARI, Jacopo de
[Venice],
1500.
First edition, second state. Woodcut map, printed from twelve blocks on twelve sheets, joined in pairs. A fine impression. Areas of marginal repairs to each sheet, holes in engraved surface of "Iudeca", and above St Marks in-filled with skilful facsimile of lost printed surface, a few small repaired tears etc., but otherwise in exceptionally fine condition.
1340 by 2818mm (52.75 by 110.5 inches).
1000

To scale:

notes:

notes:

De Barbari's landmark bird's-eye view of Venice. The map is a masterpiece of cartography, an important historical record of one of the most powerful states on earth at the time, and "one of the most spectacular achievements of Renaissance printmaking" (British Museum Catalogue).

Geography
The map is an idealized aerial view of Venice from a vantage point somewhere above San Giorgio Maggiore, and shows the city on the day of regatta. Whilst the view may be id...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Balistreri, Emiliano et al., 'Venezia Città Mirabile - Guida alla veduta prospettica di Jacopo de' Barbari', Cierre Edizioni, 2009; Romanello, Giandomenico et al., 'A volo d'uccello Jacopo de' Barbari e le Rappresentazioni di città nell'Europe del Rinascimento', Arsenale editrice, 1999; Levinson, J.A. (ed), 'Early Italian Engravings from the National Gallery of Art', National Gallery of Art, 1973.

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance

1. André Masséna (1758-1817), 1er duc de Rivoli, 1er prince d'Essling.
André masséna, Duc de Rivoli, Prince d'Essling was a leading French general of the revolutionary and Napoleonic wars.

Orphaned at an early age, Masséna enlisted in the Royal Italian regiment in the French service in 1775. At the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, he was a sergeant at Antibes. He soon became a captain in the Revolutionary government's army of Italy at Nice, and in December 1793 he was made general of a division.

He became Napoleon's most trusted lieutenant during the Italian campaign of 1796–97, and won the Battle of Rivoli on 4 January 1797. Napoleon granted him the title of prince d'Essling in January 1810. Three months later Masséna, in poor health, was given command of the French forces that were fighting the British in Portugal. The British commander, Arthur Wellesley, duke of Wellington, defeated him at Buçaco, Port., on 27 September 1810, and at Fuentes de Oñoro, Spain, on 5 May 1811. Masséna was then relieved of his command. He was in Paris in 1815 but took no part in the Hundred Days of Napoleon; instead he supported the restoration of King Louis XVIII to the French throne.

2. François Victor Masséna (1799-1863), 2e duc de Rivoli, 3e prince d'Essling (1821), fils du précédent.
3. Victor Masséna (1836-1910), 3e duc de Rivoli, 5e prince d'Essling, fils du précédent.
4. André Prosper Victor Eugène Napoléon Masséna (1891-1974), 4e duc de Rivoli, 6e prince d'Essling, fils du précédent.
5. Victor André Masséna (b.1950), 5e duc de Rivoli, 7e prince d'Essling, fils du précédent.