Geoadria, Vol. 17 No. 2, 2012.
Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.15291/geoadria.247
The Historic-Geographic Context Pertaining to the Origin of Lučić's Map Illyricum Hodiernum
Dubravka Mlinarić
; Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies, Zagreb
Josip Faričić
; Department of Geography, University of Zadar, Zadar
Lena Mirošević
; Department of Geography, University of Zadar, Zadar
Abstract
This paper deals with the first integral map of Croatian historical regions, which was made in the second half of the 17th century. The manuscript version of the map was drawn for the purposes of the Papal Illyrian (Croatian) Congregation of St. Jerome in Rome by Pietro Andrea Buffalini in 1663. The map was later printed, with appropriate changes, under the title Illyricum hodiernum in Ivan Lučić's historiographic work De Regno Dalmatiae et Croatiae, and in Willem Blaeu's Atlas Maior sive Geographia Blaviana in 1668. Judging from the contents of these versions of the map, and the political circumstances in which they emerged, the Croatian polyhistor and cartographer Ivan Lučić contributed the most to the formation of their contents. As an outstanding expert on the history and geography of Croatia, Lučić translated his own cartographic imaginarium into a cartographic synthesis in the form of an overview map that emerged based both on a compilation of the contents of older maps, and on his personal research. In this map his primary intent was to show, in the spirit of Illyrianism linked to the Catholic Reformation, the area which during that period constituted Illyria, or rather Croatia, and also to make use of the potential that maps, as codified depictions of geographic reality, have when it is necessary to present spatial relations in the context of a historical-geographic review of the development of Croatia.
Keywords
map; cartography; geography; Ivan Lučić; Croatia
Hrčak ID:
95635
URI
Publication date:
30.12.2012.
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