Apian - Cosmographia - 1540

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Ilaria Colombo
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Selected by Ilaria Colombo

Specialist in old books, specialising in theological disputes since 1999.

Estimate  € 6,000 - € 12,000
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Description from the seller

BEFORE COPERNICUS, BEFORE GALILEO: COSMOGRAPHY AT THE ORIGINS OF MODERN SCIENCE
Complete with all the original volvelles and in excellent condition.
This Antwerp edition of 1540 of Pierre Apian’s Cosmographia, revised, corrected and expanded by Gemma Frisius, is one of the cornerstone works in the construction of modern science. Even before the theoretical rupture introduced by heliocentrism and telescopic astronomy, this book teaches how to measure the world: the Earth, the sky, distances, coordinates. It is here that the mathematical and geometric language is formed, without which the Copernican revolution and Galileo’s work would have been unthinkable.
Cosmographia does not propose a new cosmology, but provides the conceptual and operational tools that will make its overcoming possible.
MARKET VALUE
Complete copies in good condition of this 1574 edition are rare on the market. Valuations vary significantly depending on the completeness of the volvelles and the presence of the folded world map. Complete and well-preserved copies can fetch values between €18,000 and €30,000.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION AND CONDITION - COLLECTOR'S COPY
Complete with all original volvelles and in excellent condition.
Full parchment-backed binding. Frontispiece with woodcut vignette; about 110 wood engravings in the text, including vignettes, historiated initials, tables and volvelles, four of which are of the movable-system type. Generally clean copy. The copy conforms to the editorial state of 1540 and does not include the folded cordiform world map, whose systematic introduction is documented only from editions of 1550 and later; its absence is not a defect but faithfully reflects the original configuration of this Antwerp phase. In old books with a multigenerational history, there may be some imperfections, not always noted in the description. Collation: (1), 61, 1 unpaginated leaf; for a total of 135 pages.

FULL TITLE AND AUTHOR
Cosmographia Petri Apiani, per Gemmam Frisium medicum et mathematicum Lovaniensium, ab omnibus mendis vindicata, aucta ac illustrata.
Antuerpiae, Arnoldo Berckman, 1540.
Author: Pierre Apian. Editor and commentator: Gemma Frisius.

CONTEXT AND SIGNIFICANCE
Cosmographia represents one of the pillars of the transition from medieval descriptive cosmography to the mathematical science of the physical world. The work does not challenge the Ptolemaic system but reinforces its quantitative structure, providing rigorous methods for determining coordinates, measuring terrestrial and celestial distances, and geometrically representing space.
It is precisely this approach that creates the scientific ground on which Niccolò Copernicus’ heliocentrism will be built, as he inherits from Apian and Frisius’ cosmographic tradition the primacy of calculation and the mathematical structure of the cosmos. In the same way, the work prepares the conceptual world in which Galileo Galilei will operate: a universe now conceived as measurable, quantifiable, translatable into numbers and proportions. In this sense, Cosmographia is not a book “before” the scientific revolution, but one of its essential prerequisites.

BIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHORS
Pierre Apian (1495–1552) was a German-born astronomer and mathematician, professor at the University of Ingolstadt. His work stands out for its ability to translate complex astronomical concepts into practical and educational tools, making cosmography an applied and accessible discipline.
Gemma Frisius (1508–1555), Flemish physician, mathematician and cartographer, taught in Leuven and played a decisive role in the development of scientific cartography and methods of geographical measurement. He was a master of Mercator and a central figure in the diffusion of applied mathematics in the 16th century.

PRINTING HISTORY AND CIRCULATION
From the early 16th century to the end of the century, Cosmographia enjoyed extraordinary diffusion, with more than forty reprints in fourteen languages. Antwerp editions of the 1530s and 1540s, such as the 1540 edition, precede the stable introduction of the large folded cordiform world map and represent a phase in which the work is configured as a compact and fully functional scientific manual. Later editions, from 1550 onward, expand the cartographic apparatus and intensify the iconographic dimension.

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERENCES
Adams, H.M., Catalogue of Books Printed on the Continent of Europe, 1501–1600, in Cambridge Libraries, Cambridge, 1967, A–1087 (Antwerp editions of Cosmographia; reference for Frisius’ tradition).
Alden, J.E. – Landis, D., European Americana, 1493–1600, New York, 1980, no. 540/2 (for the sixteenth-century editions of Cosmographia with mention of America; useful for distinguishing variants prior to 1550).
BM/STC (German Books), British Museum, Catalogue of German Books Printed before 1601, London, n.d., p. 12 (entry Apianus; distinguishes Antwerp editions of 1539–1544 from later reprints).
Church, G.E., Catalogue of Books Relating to the Discovery and Early History of North and South America, New York, 1907, no. 78 (fundamental reference for the presence of America on Apian’s cosmographic maps).
Harrisse, H., Bibliotheca Americana Vetustissima, New York, 1866, no. 230 (for the American context of Cosmographia and its diffusion in the 16th century).
Nijhoff, W. – Kronenberg, M.E., Nederlandsche Bibliographie van 1500 tot 1540, ’s-Gravenhage, 1923–1971, no. 126 (survey of Antwerp editions and typographic attribution to Berckmann).
Sabin, J., Bibliotheca Americana, New York, 1868–1936, no. 1745 (entry Apianus; description of editions with reference to world maps and variants).
Shirley, R.W., The Mapping of the World: Early Printed World Maps 1472–1700, London, 1983, pp. 56–58 (on the woodcut cosmographic map and the subsequent introduction of the large folded cordiform world map in post-1550 editions).
Van der Krogt, P., Globi Neerlandici, Utrecht, 1993, pp. 84–87 (iconographic context of the globe and the Frisian cartography tradition).
Zinner, E., Verzeichnis der astronomischen Instrumente der Renaissance, München, 1956, pp. 112–118 (on the analysis of the volvelles and cosmographic instruments depicted in Cosmographia).
ICCU – OPAC SBN, record for Cosmographia of Petrus Apianus, Antwerp edition 1540 (counts in Italian libraries; comparison with surrounding Antwerp editions 1539 and 1543).
USTC – Universal Short Title Catalogue, entry Apianus, Cosmographia, Antwerp 1540 (identification of the edition and comparison with later 1550 emissions).

Seller's Story

Luxury Books: Your Go-To Guide for Nabbing Literary Treasures! Embarking on the thrilling journey of collecting rare and timeless printed works? Here's your snappy rundown, "The Collector's Cheat Sheet," to ensure you're not just flipping pages but stacking up the value: 1. Edition and Rarity: Rarity is the name of the game. First editions, limited printings, and books flaunting unique features like eye-catching illustrations or mind-blowing bindings? Consider them the VIPs of the collector's world. 2. Condition & Dimension: Picture this – a book in mint condition, untouched by the woes of wear and tear. Now, flip the script: wear, foxing, discoloration – they're the villains here. And don't forget to size up the dimensions, because a book's size matters in the collector's universe. 3. Authenticity: In a world of replicas and forgeries, verifying a book's authenticity is your superhero move. Expert examination and authentication – your trusty sidekicks in this quest. 4. Provenance: Who owned it before you? If the book has hobnobbed with famous figures or danced through historical events, its value skyrockets. Every book has a story, but some have blockbuster tales. 5. Demand and Market Trends: Think of book values as the stock market of the literary world. Stay savvy on collector trends and market shifts to ride the waves of value. 6. Subject Matter: Some topics are like fine wine – they get better with time. Dive into subjects with a timeless appeal or ride the wave of emerging cultural and historical relevance. 7. Binding and Design: Beauty is more than skin deep. Intricate bindings, stunning covers, and illustrations – these are the accessories that make a book runway-ready in the collector's eyes. 8. Association Copies: Books with a personal touch – whether it's a connection to the author or a famous personality – elevate the historical vibes. A book with a backstory? Count us in. 9. Investment Potential: Passion is the engine, but some collectors eye future returns. Keep in mind, though, that the book market can be as unpredictable as a plot twist. 10. Expert Advice: New to the game? Don't play solo. Seek wisdom from the book gurus, hit up book fairs, and join collector communities. We at Luxury Books are the Yodas of the rare book galaxy, helping you build collections that scream sophistication and cultural clout. Because collecting rare books isn't just about dollar signs – it's a journey of preserving heritage and embracing literary treasures. Happy collecting!
Translated by Google Translate

BEFORE COPERNICUS, BEFORE GALILEO: COSMOGRAPHY AT THE ORIGINS OF MODERN SCIENCE
Complete with all the original volvelles and in excellent condition.
This Antwerp edition of 1540 of Pierre Apian’s Cosmographia, revised, corrected and expanded by Gemma Frisius, is one of the cornerstone works in the construction of modern science. Even before the theoretical rupture introduced by heliocentrism and telescopic astronomy, this book teaches how to measure the world: the Earth, the sky, distances, coordinates. It is here that the mathematical and geometric language is formed, without which the Copernican revolution and Galileo’s work would have been unthinkable.
Cosmographia does not propose a new cosmology, but provides the conceptual and operational tools that will make its overcoming possible.
MARKET VALUE
Complete copies in good condition of this 1574 edition are rare on the market. Valuations vary significantly depending on the completeness of the volvelles and the presence of the folded world map. Complete and well-preserved copies can fetch values between €18,000 and €30,000.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION AND CONDITION - COLLECTOR'S COPY
Complete with all original volvelles and in excellent condition.
Full parchment-backed binding. Frontispiece with woodcut vignette; about 110 wood engravings in the text, including vignettes, historiated initials, tables and volvelles, four of which are of the movable-system type. Generally clean copy. The copy conforms to the editorial state of 1540 and does not include the folded cordiform world map, whose systematic introduction is documented only from editions of 1550 and later; its absence is not a defect but faithfully reflects the original configuration of this Antwerp phase. In old books with a multigenerational history, there may be some imperfections, not always noted in the description. Collation: (1), 61, 1 unpaginated leaf; for a total of 135 pages.

FULL TITLE AND AUTHOR
Cosmographia Petri Apiani, per Gemmam Frisium medicum et mathematicum Lovaniensium, ab omnibus mendis vindicata, aucta ac illustrata.
Antuerpiae, Arnoldo Berckman, 1540.
Author: Pierre Apian. Editor and commentator: Gemma Frisius.

CONTEXT AND SIGNIFICANCE
Cosmographia represents one of the pillars of the transition from medieval descriptive cosmography to the mathematical science of the physical world. The work does not challenge the Ptolemaic system but reinforces its quantitative structure, providing rigorous methods for determining coordinates, measuring terrestrial and celestial distances, and geometrically representing space.
It is precisely this approach that creates the scientific ground on which Niccolò Copernicus’ heliocentrism will be built, as he inherits from Apian and Frisius’ cosmographic tradition the primacy of calculation and the mathematical structure of the cosmos. In the same way, the work prepares the conceptual world in which Galileo Galilei will operate: a universe now conceived as measurable, quantifiable, translatable into numbers and proportions. In this sense, Cosmographia is not a book “before” the scientific revolution, but one of its essential prerequisites.

BIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHORS
Pierre Apian (1495–1552) was a German-born astronomer and mathematician, professor at the University of Ingolstadt. His work stands out for its ability to translate complex astronomical concepts into practical and educational tools, making cosmography an applied and accessible discipline.
Gemma Frisius (1508–1555), Flemish physician, mathematician and cartographer, taught in Leuven and played a decisive role in the development of scientific cartography and methods of geographical measurement. He was a master of Mercator and a central figure in the diffusion of applied mathematics in the 16th century.

PRINTING HISTORY AND CIRCULATION
From the early 16th century to the end of the century, Cosmographia enjoyed extraordinary diffusion, with more than forty reprints in fourteen languages. Antwerp editions of the 1530s and 1540s, such as the 1540 edition, precede the stable introduction of the large folded cordiform world map and represent a phase in which the work is configured as a compact and fully functional scientific manual. Later editions, from 1550 onward, expand the cartographic apparatus and intensify the iconographic dimension.

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERENCES
Adams, H.M., Catalogue of Books Printed on the Continent of Europe, 1501–1600, in Cambridge Libraries, Cambridge, 1967, A–1087 (Antwerp editions of Cosmographia; reference for Frisius’ tradition).
Alden, J.E. – Landis, D., European Americana, 1493–1600, New York, 1980, no. 540/2 (for the sixteenth-century editions of Cosmographia with mention of America; useful for distinguishing variants prior to 1550).
BM/STC (German Books), British Museum, Catalogue of German Books Printed before 1601, London, n.d., p. 12 (entry Apianus; distinguishes Antwerp editions of 1539–1544 from later reprints).
Church, G.E., Catalogue of Books Relating to the Discovery and Early History of North and South America, New York, 1907, no. 78 (fundamental reference for the presence of America on Apian’s cosmographic maps).
Harrisse, H., Bibliotheca Americana Vetustissima, New York, 1866, no. 230 (for the American context of Cosmographia and its diffusion in the 16th century).
Nijhoff, W. – Kronenberg, M.E., Nederlandsche Bibliographie van 1500 tot 1540, ’s-Gravenhage, 1923–1971, no. 126 (survey of Antwerp editions and typographic attribution to Berckmann).
Sabin, J., Bibliotheca Americana, New York, 1868–1936, no. 1745 (entry Apianus; description of editions with reference to world maps and variants).
Shirley, R.W., The Mapping of the World: Early Printed World Maps 1472–1700, London, 1983, pp. 56–58 (on the woodcut cosmographic map and the subsequent introduction of the large folded cordiform world map in post-1550 editions).
Van der Krogt, P., Globi Neerlandici, Utrecht, 1993, pp. 84–87 (iconographic context of the globe and the Frisian cartography tradition).
Zinner, E., Verzeichnis der astronomischen Instrumente der Renaissance, München, 1956, pp. 112–118 (on the analysis of the volvelles and cosmographic instruments depicted in Cosmographia).
ICCU – OPAC SBN, record for Cosmographia of Petrus Apianus, Antwerp edition 1540 (counts in Italian libraries; comparison with surrounding Antwerp editions 1539 and 1543).
USTC – Universal Short Title Catalogue, entry Apianus, Cosmographia, Antwerp 1540 (identification of the edition and comparison with later 1550 emissions).

Seller's Story

Luxury Books: Your Go-To Guide for Nabbing Literary Treasures! Embarking on the thrilling journey of collecting rare and timeless printed works? Here's your snappy rundown, "The Collector's Cheat Sheet," to ensure you're not just flipping pages but stacking up the value: 1. Edition and Rarity: Rarity is the name of the game. First editions, limited printings, and books flaunting unique features like eye-catching illustrations or mind-blowing bindings? Consider them the VIPs of the collector's world. 2. Condition & Dimension: Picture this – a book in mint condition, untouched by the woes of wear and tear. Now, flip the script: wear, foxing, discoloration – they're the villains here. And don't forget to size up the dimensions, because a book's size matters in the collector's universe. 3. Authenticity: In a world of replicas and forgeries, verifying a book's authenticity is your superhero move. Expert examination and authentication – your trusty sidekicks in this quest. 4. Provenance: Who owned it before you? If the book has hobnobbed with famous figures or danced through historical events, its value skyrockets. Every book has a story, but some have blockbuster tales. 5. Demand and Market Trends: Think of book values as the stock market of the literary world. Stay savvy on collector trends and market shifts to ride the waves of value. 6. Subject Matter: Some topics are like fine wine – they get better with time. Dive into subjects with a timeless appeal or ride the wave of emerging cultural and historical relevance. 7. Binding and Design: Beauty is more than skin deep. Intricate bindings, stunning covers, and illustrations – these are the accessories that make a book runway-ready in the collector's eyes. 8. Association Copies: Books with a personal touch – whether it's a connection to the author or a famous personality – elevate the historical vibes. A book with a backstory? Count us in. 9. Investment Potential: Passion is the engine, but some collectors eye future returns. Keep in mind, though, that the book market can be as unpredictable as a plot twist. 10. Expert Advice: New to the game? Don't play solo. Seek wisdom from the book gurus, hit up book fairs, and join collector communities. We at Luxury Books are the Yodas of the rare book galaxy, helping you build collections that scream sophistication and cultural clout. Because collecting rare books isn't just about dollar signs – it's a journey of preserving heritage and embracing literary treasures. Happy collecting!
Translated by Google Translate

Details

Number of books
1
Subject
Astrology, Astronomy
Book title
Cosmographia
Author/ Illustrator
Apian
Condition
Good
Publication year oldest item
1540
Height
215 mm
Edition
Illustrated Edition
Width
168 mm
Language
Latin
Original language
Yes
Publisher
Antverpiae, apud Ioannem Bellerum, 1574
Binding/ Material
Vellum
Extras
Tipped in plates
Number of pages
128
ItalyVerified
104
Objects sold
100%
protop

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