File:Canaan. 1662 Jansson and Hornius Map of the Holy Land, Israel, and Palestine - Geographicus - HolyLand-jansson-1662 (cropped).jpg

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Jan Janssonius: Hornius Map of the Holy Land.   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Artist
Jan Janssonius  (1588–1664)  wikidata:Q949492 s:it:Autore:Johannes Janssonius
 
Alternative names
Jan Jansson, Jan Jansz, Jan Janszoon, Joannes Janssonius
Description Dutch cartographer, publisher, printseller and visual artist
Date of birth/death 1588 Edit this at Wikidata 11 July 1664 / 1664 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Arnhem Amsterdam
Work period from 1616 until 1664
date QS:P,+1650-00-00T00:00:00Z/7,P580,+1616-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P582,+1664-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Work location
Amsterdam (1612–1664); Arnhem (1612–1612) Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
artist QS:P170,Q949492
Title
Hornius Map of the Holy Land.
Description
English: An extraordinarily rare map, this is the 1662 Johannes Jansson and Georgius Hornius six part map of the Holy Land. Divided into six panels and oriented to the east, this map covers Israel or the Holy Land from the southern tip of the Dead Sea and Edom to the Golan Heights and modern day Lebanon. This map is an expansion and enlargement of a smaller plan of the same general area issued by Christian van Adricham around 1590. Jansson expanded and embellished Adricham's map in order to illustrate the text composed by Georgius Hornius (George Horn) for volume six of his Novus Atlas , Accuratissimia Orbis Antiqui Delineatio . Consequently some refer to this map, which is as a whole untitled, as the Hornius Map. As a whole this map is embellished with countless vignettes and other images drawn from Biblical tradition. The smoking ruins of Sodom and Gomorra appear in the Dead Sea, Jonas is drawn being devoured by the whale, there is a mountain on which Jesus arguing with Satan, etc. Each of the tribes of Israel are named and associated with their lands. Mountains and forests and shown in profile. Individually each of the maps have a title in the margins, these are: Tribus Ruben, et Gad et partes orientales tribuum Beniamin, Ephraim, et dimidiae Manasse intra Iordenem . This panel, considered by most scholars to be the first in the series, features numerous Biblical vignettes including Jesus and Satan arguing on a mountaintop, Moses looking across the Jordan, the entry point of the Hebrews into the land of Milk and Honey, and a stairway ascending to heaven. Depicts the lands controlled by Ruben and Gad, as well as the eastern lands of Benjamin, Ephraim, and part of Manasseh beyond the Jordan River. Shows the western part of the Dead Sea. Tribuum Ephraim, Beniamin, et Dimidiae Manasse intra Iordanem partes occidentales, et partes septentrionales Dan et Iuda. . Depicts the lands of Ephraim, Benjamin, and part of Manasseh beyond the Jordan river. Numerous Biblical illustrations include a dramatic scene where Jonas is being cast from a sailing ship into the open maw of the awaiting whale. Also shows the lands of Palestine and numerous armies. Tribus Aser, et partes occidentales tribuum Zabulon et Isachar . One of the two larger panels of this series, this map shows the land of Asher and the western territories of Zebulon and Issachar. Numerous Biblical illustrations include St. George slaying the Dragon, the city of Tyre, Nazareth, and the Tabernacle of Abraham. Dimidia Tribus Manasse Ultra Iordanem, Tribus Neptalim et partes orientales tribuum Zabulon et Isachar . The second of the two larger panels of this series, this map details the parts of Manasseh lying on the western shores of the Jordan River, the tribe of Naphtali, and parts of the lands of Zebulon and Issachar. This map, among the most attractive of the series, shows the Sea of Galilee (Lake Tiberius) in full with several scenes from the life of Jesus, including the walking on water episode, Jesus preaching from a boat, and two others. A large inset map in the upper left quadrant, entitled Peregrinatio Abrahae shows the route followed by Abraham from Ur into Canaan. Pars maxima Tribus Iusa Versus Orientem . The southeastern most sheet in this series, this map depicts much of the Dead Sea as well as the lands claimed by the tribe of Judah. Features the smoking ruins of Sodom, Gomorrah, Adaima, and Seboim. In the upper right quadrant there is a large inset entitled, Itinera et Mansiones Deserti , which depicts the route taken in Exodus by the Hebrews as they fled from Egypt. Shows the parting of the Red Sea. Tribus Simeon et pars meridionalis Tribus Dan, et orientalis Tribus Idua . Considered the last in the serious, this is an attractive mountainous panel depicting the lands of Simeon, as well as parts of Dan and Judah.
Date 1662 (undated)
Dimensions height: 36 in (91.4 cm); width: 73 in (185.4 cm)
dimensions QS:P2048,36U218593
dimensions QS:P2049,73U218593
Accession number
Geographicus link: HolyLand-jansson-1662
Source/Photographer

Jannson, J. and Hornius, G., Atlas Novus, volume VI (Accuratissimia Orbis Antiqui Delineatio, 1662 French edition.

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current21:37, 8 February 2023Thumbnail for version as of 21:37, 8 February 2023408 × 679 (91 KB)Geagea (talk | contribs)File:1662 Jansson and Hornius Map of the Holy Land, Israel, and Palestine - Geographicus - HolyLand-jansson-1662.jpg cropped 96 % horizontally, 86 % vertically using CropTool with precise mode.