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CAMOCIO, GIOVANNI FRANCESCO: VIEW OF THE DISTRICT OF ŠIBENIK

CAMOCIO, GIOVANNI FRANCESCO: VIEW OF THE DISTRICT OF ŠIBENIK

Inventory number 271
Original title: Sebenico et contado citta nella dalmatia confina[n]te con Zara d[el]li Ill[ustrissi]mi S[igno]ri Veneciani al p[rese]nte da Turchi molestado
Publishing year: 1571
Place of publishing and publisher: Venezia
Format: 17,5 x 22 cm
Technique: Copper engraving

This view of Šibenik with its surroundings was made by Martin Rota Kolunić for the isolario entitled  “Isole famose porti, fortezze, e terre maritime sottoposte della serenissima Signoria di Venetia, ad altri Principi Christiani, et al signor Turco, nuoamete poste in luce” published by Giovanni Francesco Camocio in 1571. Besides the view of Zadar and its inland area, this is the most famous and most important from among Kolunić’s maps. It shows Šibenik with its inland area as it was during the period of the Venetian-Turkish war. The outline of the territory  conquered by the Turks in the inland zone of Šibenik shown with the dotted line is shown. On the continent and on the sea the scenes of contemporary war conflicts are featured. After the map of  Zadar and Šibenik surroundings by Mateo Pagano dated 1530, this is one of the rare maps representing the then inland area of Šibenik most part of which was occupied by the Turks. As at that time, direct topographic surveys of that area were not possible, Kolunić, also a native of Šibenik, made this map out of  his own memory of the area that he knew exceptionally well. The map went through a series of editions and revisions in later issues of isolarios and in numerous atlases published during the 16th and 17th centuries.

CAMOCIO, GIOVANNI FRANCESCO
CAMOCIO, GIOVANNI FRANCESCO (Camocius, Camotio, Cametti, Gioan, Joan Francisco) a Venetian cartographer, publisher and merchant whose most productive period was between 1558 and 1575. He obtained his bookseller's and publisher's licence in Venice in 1552, marked Al segno della Pyramide. His copper-plate engraving workshop produced maps and vedute that as a publisher he was signing with apresso or apud G. F. Camocio cum privilegio. The most fertile period of his artistic production, between the 1550s and the 1570s, was also the peak of the isolarii (depictions of islands) period, especially in Italy. These are detailed, practical, perspective depictions of certain cities and ports, created predominantly in a large-scale copper-plate engraving technique. Unlike earlier portulan charts, these depictions of the maritime area and the inland of the islands were largely based on field work. Along with G. Rosaccio, G. Franco and S. Pinargenti, Camocio was the most significant representative of the tradition. His interest lay on the eastern Adriatic coast where he had his informants and topographers, so he created several maps of the Croatian lands. His most famous works are Lombardija Atlantic from 1560, which he created with Forlani, Dalmatia i Friuli from 1563, Isole Famose from 1563 and 1564, Grčka, Italija i Napulj from 1566, Venecija from 1571 and Europa, published in 1579. His copper plates were passed on to Donato Bertelli. Copper plates were, at the time, passed on, inherited, exchanged and traded, and the information they carried was also often exchanged among cartographers and publishers. His most famous maps of our (Croatian) territories are Novo dissegno della Dalmatia et Crovatia from 1566, Istra  from 1569, and he also authored the isolario or atlas Isole famose, porti, fortezze e terre maritimme… from 1571 and 1574, comprising a large number of maps of the Croatian territories, although he did not author all of the maps contained within it. Almost twenty of his maps are depictions of the Croatian Littoral or port vedute, but he only signed some of them, which are most likely the ones he personally refined or updated. His maps of Dalmatia and Istria show that he had access to higher quality topographic templates or data only for some regions, such as Coppo’s map of Istria from 1525. He also published the works by local cartographers, Natalo Bonifaci and Martino Rota, from where he clearly sourced the cartographic information for his own works. He was obviously very skilled in selecting the information he would use, as he tried to correct some frequently repeated errors he had come accross.
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