Daniel Good Rare Books and Engravings
1624 G. Laurus, Gardens at Maecenas, Rome, Italy engraving
1624 G. Laurus, Gardens at Maecenas, Rome, Italy engraving
Gardens at Maecenas
Antiquae Urbis Splendor, Hoc Est Praecipua Eiusdem Templa Amphitheatra Theatra Circi Naumachiae Arcus Triumphales Mausolea .Romae, Apresso Vitale Mascardi, Roma, 1612-1622.
FROM THE VERY SCARCE FIRST ISSUE ISSUED IN PARTS UNTIL 1622. CORRESPONDINGLY THE ENGRAVING ARE PARTICULARLY CRISP AND WELL DEFINED. In this, and only this, issue there is not text to the verso of the engravings
FINE ENGRAVING from one of the most influential and beautiful works on the monuments and antiquities of ancient Rome. The Antiquae urbis splendor, ('The Splendor of the Ancient City') served as an important reference book and source of inspiration for many writers and artists. Giacomo Lauro was a roman printmaker active from 1583 to about 1650.
Leaf: 26 x 21 cm
Worming to lower margin. Minor fingering to margins.
Laid out over a former graveyard on the Esquiline Hill by Maecenas (ca. 74-8 B.C.), a wealthy knight, advisor of Augustus, and patron of poets such as Vergil and Horace. Ancient sources tell us that Maecenas had the first heated swimming pool in Rome; and that the gardens contained a tall tower. The so-called “Auditorium” is preserved and can be visited. After Maecenas' death, the gardens became an imperial property. Tiberius lived here when he returned to Rome in A.D. 2 from exile on Rhodes.
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