Braun and Hogenberg's Alexandria--Renaissance View of the Egyptian Great Port City

Braun and Hogenberg's Alexandria--Renaissance View of the Egyptian Great Port City

12" x 9" (Horizontal) / 1.25"
$22.58
Sale price  $22.58 Regular price 
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Braun and Hogenberg's Alexandria--Renaissance View of the Egyptian Great Port City

Braun and Hogenberg's Alexandria--Renaissance View of the Egyptian Great Port City

$22.58
Sale price  $22.58 Regular price 
Size
Depth1.25"

Bring a slice of maritime history into your home with this matte stretched canvas print. The soft, muted palette and hand-drawn detail evoke old-world mapmakers and coastal harbors, while the museum-quality coating and Greenguard Gold inks keep lines crisp and colors true. Hung above a reading nook or in a study, the canvas invites slow looks—boats drifting, streets unfurling, tiny figures moving through time. The 1.25" depth and pine stretcher frame give it a solid, gallery-ready presence; rubber corner dots protect walls and keep it steady. It reads like an artifact, not just wall decor—quietly historic, tactile, and full of stories to discover.

A lively, hand-colored bird’s-eye view of Alexandria by Georg Braun & Frans Hogenberg, from their celebrated city atlas Civitates Orbis Terrarum – the great town-book of the late Renaissance. Issued in Cologne between 1572 and 1618, the Civitates was the first extensive series of printed city views, intended to show educated Europeans the major ports, capitals, and trading centers of the known world. A Renaissance vision of Alexandria: By the time Braun and Hogenberg engraved this plate, Alexandria’s ancient Ptolemaic glory was long past, but the city remained a vital Ottoman port and gateway between the Mediterranean and the Nile. Renaissance merchants, pilgrims, and scholars knew it as the landing point for journeys up the Nile and across to the Red Sea trade routes, and as the legendary home of the vanished Library and Pharos lighthouse. This print captures that mixture of living city and classical memory that so fascinated 16th-century Europe. The engraving presents Alexandria as a fortified peninsula thrusting into the “MEDITERRANEVM MARE,” bustling with galleons and oared galleys under sail. A continuous city wall with towers and gates separates the harbor from the dense urban core within. Inside the walls, Braun & Hogenberg crowd the scene with narrow streets, packed houses, domes, towers, and monumental public buildings, all drawn in charming miniature perspective. Branches of the Nile or city canals flow from the upper left through the town, crossed by bridges and lined with architecture, before emptying into the harbor. Beyond the walls, the surrounding landscape shows cultivated fields, palms, ruins, tombs, and small shrines, as well as caravans of camels and figures in Eastern dress, evoking Alexandria’s position between sea and desert. A decorative Latin title cartouche crowns the composition, while forts guard the harbor mouth and offshore islands. The result is both a map and an imaginative panorama—instantly decorative on the wall, yet historically important as one of the earliest widely circulated images of Alexandria.

Details: Cartographers: Georg Braun (editor) & Frans Hogenberg (engraver) Title: Alexandria Work: From Civitates Orbis Terrarum (City Atlas of the World) Place & date: Cologne, late 16th / early 17th century

Product features - Matte stretched canvas with 1.25" depth and kiln-dried radiata pine inner frame - Printed with UL-certified Greenguard Gold latex inks for vivid, non-toxic color - Proprietary coating for high image fidelity and archival quality - Soft rubber dots on back corners plus included hanging hardware for secure display

Care instructions - If the canvas does gather any dust, you may wipe it off gently with a clean, damp cloth.

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