![KATIB CELEBI (Mustafa ibn Abd Allah, aka Hacci Halife, 1609-1657). Jihannuma [Mirror of the World], in Turkish in Arabic alphabet. Edited and with supplement by Ibrahim Mteferrika. Constantinople: Ibrahim Mteferrika, 1145H [1732].](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/1999/CKS/1999_CKS_06109_0035_000(114334).jpg?w=1)
細節
KATIB CELEBI (Mustafa ibn Abd Allah, aka Hacci Halife, 1609-1657). Jihannuma [Mirror of the World], in Turkish in Arabic alphabet. Edited and with supplement by Ibrahim Mteferrika. Constantinople: Ibrahim Mteferrika, 1145H [1732].
2 (320 x 205mm). 36 (of 39/41) engraved plates, comprising 22 maps, 9 double-page, and 14 astronomical plates, 5 double-page. (Some spotting, light dampstaining, one plate with tear to plate edge, short tear at fold in another.) Contemporary blindstamped goatskin with envelope flap on rear board, rebacked with red goatskin, covered by green cloth (cloth faded, tears at spine), modern brown half morocco solander box. Provenance: occasional marginal annotations.
FIRST AND ONLY EDITION OF THE JIHANNUMA. Planned as a great cosmosgraphy, the work was never completed, although Katib Celebi wrote two versions. The text contained here is the second version, rewritten after the author had acquired a Mercator-Hondius Atlas minor (Koemans mistakenly considered the Jihannuma a translation into Turkish of that Atlas). It covers the world from Japan to the Ottoman borders and is well-illustrated with engraved maps, including: the World in twin hemispheres, the World in oval projection, Europe, Africa, Asia, America, the North and South Poles, Arabia, Japan and various other parts of Asia and Asia Minor. Several of the maps and diagrams had appeared in earlier books printed by Mteferrika (see previous lot).
The author, born Mustafa ibn Abd Allah at Constantinople in 1609, was a prolific scholar, historian, geographer, and bibliophile. Another of his works, Tuhfet l-Kibar fi esfar il bihar was published only 4 years earlier at the same press, and was the first geographical work to be printed in Turkey. Mteferrika added to the Jihannuma a section concerning the ideas of Copernicus and Tycho Brahe. Koemans II, 549 cites 37 plates; Toderini p.114ff. cites 39; and copies are known with 41.
2 (320 x 205mm). 36 (of 39/41) engraved plates, comprising 22 maps, 9 double-page, and 14 astronomical plates, 5 double-page. (Some spotting, light dampstaining, one plate with tear to plate edge, short tear at fold in another.) Contemporary blindstamped goatskin with envelope flap on rear board, rebacked with red goatskin, covered by green cloth (cloth faded, tears at spine), modern brown half morocco solander box. Provenance: occasional marginal annotations.
FIRST AND ONLY EDITION OF THE JIHANNUMA. Planned as a great cosmosgraphy, the work was never completed, although Katib Celebi wrote two versions. The text contained here is the second version, rewritten after the author had acquired a Mercator-Hondius Atlas minor (Koemans mistakenly considered the Jihannuma a translation into Turkish of that Atlas). It covers the world from Japan to the Ottoman borders and is well-illustrated with engraved maps, including: the World in twin hemispheres, the World in oval projection, Europe, Africa, Asia, America, the North and South Poles, Arabia, Japan and various other parts of Asia and Asia Minor. Several of the maps and diagrams had appeared in earlier books printed by Mteferrika (see previous lot).
The author, born Mustafa ibn Abd Allah at Constantinople in 1609, was a prolific scholar, historian, geographer, and bibliophile. Another of his works, Tuhfet l-Kibar fi esfar il bihar was published only 4 years earlier at the same press, and was the first geographical work to be printed in Turkey. Mteferrika added to the Jihannuma a section concerning the ideas of Copernicus and Tycho Brahe. Koemans II, 549 cites 37 plates; Toderini p.114ff. cites 39; and copies are known with 41.