Published by Artist: Johann Jakob Merlo ( - 1890 ) Cologne ca : 1850, 1810
Technic: Woodcut, colorit: original colored, condition: Mounted on linen,broken parts of paper perfectly restored, size (in cm): 58,5 x 350,5, Decorative and monumental view of Cologne in the middle age, arround 1531. After the original woodcut of Anton Woensam: Great view of Cologne 1531. Johann Jacob Merlo reprinted the view arround 1850 to make it accessible for the public.
Publication Date: 1890
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Very good. Original fold lines visible and exhibit some wear and toning. Accompanied by original binder with 16 page guide book. Size 71 x 7.5 Inches. This is an attractive c.1890 panoramic strip map of the Middle Rhine River in Germany issued by Gerhard Blumlein and Co. The map follows the Rhine from Mainz to Cologne, with pictorial descriptions of various landmarks, monuments, ruins, castles, churches and cities along the way. Sixty-five beautifully illustrated pictorial vignettes, including Flora in Cologne, Munster in Bonn, Dom in Cologne, Theater in Cologne, Hammerstein Ruin and Andernach, appear along the river's course. The whole is detailed with important buildings and landmarks illustrated in profile. Numerous ships are depicted traveling on the river, with villages and towns along the banks. View of Mainz and Cologne are also included on either end of the panorama. This region, today a UNESCO World Heritage Site known as 'The Romantic Rhine', is one of the most scenic parts of the river, featuring the dramatic Rhone Gorge as well as more than 40 castles and fortresses, vineyards, and quaint country towns. The map is accompanied with a 16-page guide book with interesting information about the region in French, German and English. Publication History and Census This map was created an published by the Gerhard Blumlein and Co. c.1890. Four examples are cataloged in OCLC and are part of the institutional collections at the Stadtbibliothek Braunschweig, the Stadtbibliothek Worms, the Technische Universität Darmstadt, and the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin. References: OCLC 249361469; 246569346.