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Caspar Vopel's Ventures in Sixteenth-Century Celestial Cartography
Authors:Elly Dekker
Affiliation:1. vanbueren-dekker@planet.nl
Abstract:ABSTRACT

This paper concerns the undertakings in celestial cartography of the sixteenth-century Cologne cartographer Caspar Vopel. Copies of his printed celestial globe and of the celestial maps included on his world map are also described. Vopel's celestial mappings display his extraordinary interest in astronomical myths through a series of conspicuous iconographic features. In particular, Vopel's introduction of the images of Antinous and Coma Berenices is revealed to have been inspired by a humanist edition of the Ptolemaic star catalogue. Finally, a study of the celestial maps on the copies of Vopel's world map by Valvassore (1558) and by Van den Putte (1570) shows that these represent different editions of Vopel's world map and that the celestial maps on the world map of Matteo Pagano were in turn copied from those on the world map of Valvassore.
Keywords:Caspar Vopel  Bernaard van den Putte  Matteo Pagano  G. A. Valvassore  Albrecht Dürer  Johannes van Bronckhorst (Noviomagus)  George of Trebizond (Trapezuntius)  astronomy  mythology  celestial cartography  celestial globe  celestial map  world map
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