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Topographical-Historical Method in Sixteenth-century German Scholarship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2019
Extract
One of the most pressing tasks facing German humanist scholars at the beginning of the sixteenth century was the exploration and description of their country. The national awakening of which they liked to speak and write, the quickening of energies under Maximilian and Charles which they thought they perceived, could have little political meaning until the German territories became known to the Germans themselves. The courses of rivers, the dimensions of forests, roads and passes and waterways, the size and location of towns and villages were familiar to local residents, but virtually unknown to Germans at large. The mental image which the German humanist had before his mind's eye, a vision of a spacious and flourishing country, well endowed with resources and populous enough to exploit them, no longer the land of vast swamps and impenetrable forests of which the ancients had written—this vision needed to be fixed.
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References
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8 Ptolemy, Geography, I, I. I use The Geography of Claudius Ptolemy, tr. and ed. Edward Luther Stevenson (New York, 1932).
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17 Herodotus was the first to assume that exact geographical knowledge of a country is vital to an understanding of its history. But though he had been translated by Valla in 1475, Herodotus exercised little or no influence on the opinions of German humanists. He is rarely quoted.
18 The 1472 Venice edition sees him ‘non minus historicus quam Geographus atque philosophus’ (Strabonis Geographia, latine ex interpretatione Guarini Veronensis et Gregorii Typhernatis…, Venice, 1472, preface).
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26 Ptolemy, Geography, 1, 2.
27 Libri odarum quatuor… (Strassburg, 1513), III, 5; Konrad Celtis: Fünf Bücher Epigramme, ed. Karl Hartfelder (Berlin, 1881), IV, 12.
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30 Eydgnoschaft, 1586 edition, 605v. Sebastian Münster also crossed the Valais in order to expand the section on the canton for the third edition of his Cosmographia (1550), p. 330.
31 Brant, Sebastian, Beschreybung etlicher gelegenheyt Teutsches lands, an wasser, berg, stetten und grentzen mit anzeygung der meilen und strassen von statt zu statt, in Kaspar Hedio's Ein auserlessne Chronik… (Strassburg, 1549)Google Scholar.
32 ‘Ehren Gedechtnus des… von Watt, Herrn Joachim’, 16-17; appended to Beschreibung der eidgenössischen Stadt St. Gallen (St. Gall, 1683)Google Scholar. The climb is a reference to the scaling of Mons Fractis.
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34 Cosmographia (1544), a vr.
35 Weltbuch; Spiegel und bildtniss des gantzen Erdtbodens… (Tübingen, 1534), 143v.
36 This was never published. Cf. König, Erich, Peutingerstudien (Freiburg i.B., 1914), pp. 43–60 Google Scholar, for a description of the manuscript.
37 Originum ac Germanicarum antiquitatum libri, Leges videlicet, Salicae, Allemannorum, Saxonum, Angliorum, Thuringorum, Burgundionum, Francorum, Ripuaria [sic], Boioariorum, Vuestphalorum, Vuerinorum, Frisionum, Langobardorum, Theutonum (Basel, 1557).
38 Described in Wegele, Franz X. von, Geschkhte der deutschen Historiographie (Munich and Leipzig, 1885), pp. 216–217 Google Scholar.
39 Prosopographiae heroum atque illustrium virorum totius Germaniae libri III (Basel, 1565-1566). A German translation was published in 1567-1570, also in Basel.
40 Cosmographia (1544), pp. 72-74.
41 Ibid., pp. 225-226.
42 Ibid., p. 226.
43 Many of these are published by Oefele, Andreas Felix in his Rerum Boicarum scriptores (Augsburg, 1763), II, 557–664 Google Scholar.
44 Geography, 1, 1; Stevenson translation
45 Petri Apiani Cosmographia… (first ed. 1524; I use ed. Antwerp, 1540), pp. iii-iv.
46 Frisius, Gemma (Rainer Gemma), De principiis astronomiae et cosmographiae … (Antwerp, 1530)Google Scholar.
47 Joachim Rheticus, Chorographia, tewsch, durch Georgium Joachimum Rheticum… zusamengebracht und an den Tag geben, MDXLI. See the edition of the manuscript by Hipler, Franz, ‘Die Chorographie des Joachim Rheticus’, Zeitschr. f. Math. u. Phys., Hist.-lit. Abt., XXI (1876), 125–150 Google Scholar.
48 ‘Ioachimi Vadiani Helvetii Rudimentaria in Gaeographiam Catechesis…', Pomponii Melae Hispani, Libri de situ orbis tres, adiectis Ioachimi Vadiani Helvetii in eosdem scholiis: Addita quoque in Gaeographiam Catechesi…. (Vienna, 1518), a 3v ff.
49 Gallois, Lucien, Les géographes allemands de la Renaissance (Paris, 1890), p. 160 Google Scholar.
50 Bonaventura Vulcanius writes to Abraham Ortelius, the Belgian cartographer, in 1598, taking issue with the title ‘Cosmographia’ of a truly geographical work by Paulus Merula. He continues: ‘κóμoυ enim appellatione et caelum et terra comprehenditur. Et video doctos viros nonnullos etiam in huius vocis usurpatione labi; qui te Cosmographum Regium vocant; cum sis meo quidem judicio Geographus.’ (Abrahami Ortelius … Epistulac, ed. Jan Hendrik Hessels, Cambridge, 1887, p. 743.)
51 Cosmographia (1544), preface, a iiir.
52 ‘… gelegenheit und form des gantzen Erdtreichs und seiner Stück, dass ist, besonderer Landtschafften … ‘ (Cosmographia, 1598, a vr).
53 Ibid. There was nothing exclusively German about this cosmographical form as described by Miinster. Cf. Thevet, André, La Cosmographie universelle (Paris, 1575) 1Google Scholar, a vr: ‘Vous trouverez qu'en ce mien oeuvre ie me suis essaié de faire comme Solin en son livre nommé Polyhistor, ou non seulement il fait mention des pais et villes: mais aussi des animaux, maniere de vivre des habitans, et plusieurs autres choses singulieres; a fin que l'oeuvre composé de diverses matieres, puisse mieux recreer l'entendement humain, qui est semblable aux terres, qui demandent diversite, et mutation de semences.’
54 Preface to the reader by Rudolph, Johann Stumpf in the second edition of the Eydgnoschaft (Zurich, 1586), iiiiv Google Scholar.
55 Cosmographia… (Frankfurt, 1597), iiiir.
56 Civitates III, Av-Br. Bodin, Jean, in the Methodus ad facilem historiarium cognitionem (Paris, 1572), chap. 2, pp. 26–30 Google Scholar, arrives at the same definition, but goes on to distinguish between chorographia, topographia, andgromatica (land surveying).
56 Sebastian Franck, Weltbuch…, 3r.
58 Johann Rauw, Cosmographia…, iiiiv.
59 Johann Stumpf, Eydgnoschaft (1586), iiiiv
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