Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 888983
Between Secrecy and Silent Cooperation – Dissemination of Knowledge on the Republic of Dubrovnik in the Context of the Ottoman–Venetian and Napoleonic Wars
Between Secrecy and Silent Cooperation – Dissemination of Knowledge on the Republic of Dubrovnik in the Context of the Ottoman–Venetian and Napoleonic Wars // Dissemination of Cartographic Knowledge (series Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography) / Altić-Slukan, Mirela ; Demhardt, Imre Josef ; Vervust, Soetkin (ur.).
Heidelberg : New York (NY) : Dordrecht : London: Springer, 2017. str. 55-74
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Naslov
Between Secrecy and Silent Cooperation –
Dissemination of Knowledge on the Republic of
Dubrovnik in the Context of the Ottoman–Venetian
and Napoleonic Wars
Autori
Slukan-Altić, Mirela
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Dissemination of Cartographic Knowledge (series Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography)
Urednik/ci
Altić-Slukan, Mirela ; Demhardt, Imre Josef ; Vervust, Soetkin
Izdavač
Springer
Grad
Heidelberg : New York (NY) : Dordrecht : London
Godina
2017
Raspon stranica
55-74
ISBN
978-3-319-61514-1
ISSN
1863-2246
Ključne riječi
Dubrovačka Republika, mletačka kartografija, Osmansko Carstvo
(Republic of Dubrovnik, Venetian cartography, Ottoman Empire,)
Sažetak
Despite its exceptional political, commercial and naval strength, the Republic of Dubrovnik was remarkably restrained regarding the public availability of its maps. Only two original maps of the Republic of Dubrovnik are preserved to this date – one created between 1718 and 1746, and the other from the earliest 19th century. What links them is that both remained in manuscript form, and both were expressly banned by the Republic's authorities from being either copied, published or shown to foreign nationals. The turning point in this regard was “Stato di Ragusi”, the first commercial map of the Republic compiled by Vincenzo Maria Coronelli in 1688, according to the information provided by Dubrovnik authorities. Created under the most unusual circumstances, the map remained the only printed detailed map of the Republic of Dubrovnik up until its fall in 1808. The paper analyzes how the Republic of Dubrovnik was represented on maps made by Dubrovnik authorities and how the same space was seen by foreign cartographers. Furthermore, the paper evaluates the impact of the Republic's diplomats on the dissemination of knowledge about the Republic in the context of the Ottoman-Venetian and Napoleonic wars.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar, Zagreb
Profili:
Mirela Altić
(autor)
Citiraj ovu publikaciju:
Časopis indeksira:
- Scopus