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Author Topic: Ancient Roman Road Map Unveiled - The Tabula Peutingeriana  (Read 61 times)
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« on: November 27, 2007, 01:27:38 PM »

Ancient Roman Road Map Unveiled 

By Bethany Bell - BBC News, Vienna 

   The Tabula Peutingeriana is one of the Austrian National Library's greatest treasures.

Detail from the Tabula Peutingeriana showing Rome on the right, represented by a crowned figure on a throne

   The parchment scroll, made in the Middle Ages, is the only surviving copy of a road map from the late Roman Empire.

   The document, which is almost seven metres long, shows the network of main Roman roads from Spain to India.

   It is normally never shown to the public. The parchment is extremely fragile, and reacts badly to daylight.

   But it has been on display for one day to celebrate its inclusion in Unesco's Memory of the World Register.

Practical guide

   At first sight, it looks very unlike a modern map. Both the landmass and the seas have been stretched and flattened. The Mediterranean has been reduced to a thin strip of water, more like a river than a sea.

   Instead of being oriented from north to south, the map, which is only 34 centimetres wide, works from west to east.

  "Every so often there is a pictogram of a building to show you that there was a hotel or a spa where you could stay." Andreas Fingernagel, Austrian National Library

   But despite its unfamiliar appearance, the director of the Department of Manuscripts, Autographs and Closed Collections at the Austrian National Library, Andreas Fingernagel, says it is an intensely practical document, more like a plan of the London Underground than a map.

   "The red lines are the main roads. Every so often there is a little hook along the red lines which represents a rest stop - and the distance between hooks was one day's travel."

   "Every so often there is a pictogram of a building to show you that there was a hotel or a spa where you could stay," he said.

   "It was meant for the civil servants of the late Roman Empire, for couriers and travellers," he added. Some of the buildings have large courtyards - a sign of more luxurious accommodation.

Clue to ancient world

   At the centre of the Tabula Peutingeriana is Rome. The city, represented by a crowned figure on a throne, has numerous roads leading to and from the metropolis. Some, such as the Via Appia and the Via Aurelia, still exist today.

   The Tabula Peutingeriana scroll dates from the late 12th or the early 13th century and was made in Southern Germany or Austria.

   But Mr Fingernagel says it is very different from other medieval maps and is clearly a copy of a much earlier document, dating back to the 5th century.

   "In maps from the 12th or 13th century, Jerusalem, not Rome, was in the centre," he said.

   "The interests of map makers in the Middle Ages were quite different. They don't show roads or rest stations, instead they show the holy places of Christianity."

   And the map contains other details which indicate the original probably dates back to the 5th century, including the city of Aquileia, which was destroyed in 452 by the Huns.

   The scroll was named after one of its earlier owners, the Renaissance German humanist Konrad Peutinger.
Later it was obtained by the Imperial Library in Vienna - now the Austrian National Library.

   "It's unique," said Mr Fingernagel. "It's the only map of the ancient world - although it's a copy - that gives us an impression of how things used to be."

   The Tabula Peutingeriana was included in the Unesco Memory of the World Register this year, and was on limited view in Vienna on 26 November 2007.

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« Reply #1 on: November 28, 2007, 02:39:26 PM »



Map description

The Tabula Peutingeriana is the sole surviving copy of the Roman cursus publicus; it was made by a monk in Colmar in the thirteenth century. It is a parchment scroll, 0.34 m high and 6.75 m long, assembled from eleven sections, a medieval reproduction of the original scroll. It is a very schematic map: the land masses are distorted, especially in the east-west direction. The map shows many Roman settlements, the roads connecting them, rivers, mountains, forests and seas. The distances between the settlements are also given. Three most important cities of the Roman Empire, Rome, Constantinople and Antioch, are represented with special iconic decoration. Besides the totality of the Empire, the map shows the Near East, India and the Ganges, Sri Lanka (Insula Taprobane), even an indication of China. In the west, the absence of the Iberian Peninsula indicates that a twelfth original section has been lost in the surviving copy.

The Peutinger Table does not satisfy modern conceptions of a map: longitude, which can only be calculated with an accurate clock, is highly compressed in comparison with latitude. The table appears to be based on "itineraries", or lists of destinations along Roman roads, as the distances between points along the routes are indicated.[3] Travellers would not have possessed anything so sophisticated as a map, but they needed to know what lay ahead of them on the road, and how far. The Peutinger table represents these roads as a series of roughly parallel lines along which destinations have been marked in order of travel. The shape of the parchment pages accounts for the conventional rectangular layout. However, a rough similarity to the coordinates of Ptolemy's earth-mapping gives some writers a hope that some terrestrial representation was intended by the unknown compilers.

The stages and cities are represented by hundreds of functional place symbols, used with discrimination from the simplest icon of a building with two towers to the elaborate individualized "portraits" of the three great cities. Annalina and Mario Levi, the Tabulas editors, conclude that the semi-schematic semi-pictorial symbols reproduce Roman cartographic conventions of the itineraria picta described by Vegetius,[4] of which this is the sole testimony.

The fourth century tabula[5] was the distant descendant of the one prepared under the direction of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, a friend of Augustus. After Agrippa's death the map was engraved on marble and placed in the Porticus Vipsaniae, not far from the Ara Pacis.

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