{"product_id":"ryd-valerius-with-stoffler-johann","title":"RYD, Valerius [with] STÖFFLER, Johann","description":"\u003cp\u003eHandsomely bound, finely illustrated historico-astrological sammelband. Valerius Ryd (Valerius Anshelm, 1475-1546\/7) was a Swiss historian and the official chronicler of the city of Bern an appointment he received thanks to the fame achieved with his  Catalogus . Written c.1510 and widely circulated in ms., it is a history of the world  ab homine condito  (from the Creation) to the early C16, handsomely illustrated with biblical and historical scenes, heraldic shields, portraits of princes and genealogical trees in the style of the Nuremberg Chronicle. Ryd relied on the tradition of  universal historiography  dating back to Eusebius s  Chronicon  (4th century), which rooted the history of the world in the genealogies of Genesis from Adam and Eve. The pivotal ancestor was Noah, whose three sons populated the world anew after the Flood Japhet in Europe, Shem in Asia and Cham in Africa. Expanded by the Renaissance scholar Annius of Viterbo, this view of history embraced ancient and present civilisations within an immense genealogical network filling the gaps between Genesis and history with mythical figures like Hercules, the Amazons and Gomer, and it identified the passing of history with the (often artificial) linear progression of royal lines. The genealogies of the Four Kingdoms of Daniel the empires of Babylon, Persia, Greece and Rome are followed by those of European princes and the succession of the Popes. A beautifully crafted instance of the early modern chronicle tradition. \u003cbr\u003e\n  \u003cbr\u003e\n Johann Stöffler (1452-1531) was a German astrologer, astronomer and priest who taught at Tubingen one of his students was Philip Melanchthon and produced globes and clocks for notables including the Bishop of Konstanz. This sammelband features his most important, posthumous  Commentarius  to Pseudo-Proclus s  Sphaera  a major text on cosmography for Renaissance astronomers attributed to a Neoplatonic Greek mathematician. However,  Commentarius  presents Latin excerpts mostly from another ancient astronomical manual, Geminus s  Isagoge , discussing the structure of the earth, the trajectory of the sun, the zodiac and constellations.  Catalogus  is renowned for its cartographically detailed references to the New World. For instance, in a paragraph on oceanic navigation Stöffler mentioned Vespucci s discoveries and in another commenting on lands beyond the  terra cognita  delineated by Ptolemy he mentioned new cartographic additions like  the western province of America near and partially under the Tropic of Capricorn . He certainly consulted Martin Waldseemüller s world map of 1507, the first to call the new continent  America , and the only one to include, like his full passage, references to the Abbey of All Saints founded by Columbus as well as mention of smaller islands like St Marich and the Primeras.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"RYD, Valerius [with] STÖFFLER, Johann","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57816162926927,"sku":"K146","price":9500.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1016\/2425\/0703\/files\/20190404_163757.jpg?v=1781794889","url":"https:\/\/www.sokol.co.uk\/products\/ryd-valerius-with-stoffler-johann","provider":"Sokol Books Ltd","version":"1.0","type":"link"}