Konrad Peutinger

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Konrad Peutinger in a Renaissance engraving.
Konrad Peutinger in a Renaissance engraving.
Painting from Maximilian Museum in Augsburg
Painting from Maximilian Museum in Augsburg

Konrad Peutinger (October 14, 1465December 28, 1547) was a German humanist diplomat, politician, and economist, who was educated at Bologna and Padua. Known as a notorious antiquarian, he collected, with the help of Marcus Welser and his wife Margareta Welser, one of the largest private libraries north of the Alps.

[edit] Biography

Peutinger was born at Augsburg.

In 1497 he was town clerk (Stadtschreiber) of his native place, and was on intimate terms with the emperor Maximilian. He was one of the first to publish Roman inscriptions, and his name remains associated with the famous Tabula Peutingeriana, a map of the military roads beyond the western Roman Empire, which was discovered by Konrad Celtes, who handed it over to Peutinger for collection. The map was published in 1591 by the Antwerp-based publishing house of Johannes Moretus. Peutinger also first printed the Getica of Jordanes[1] and the Historia gentis Langobardorum of Paulus Diaconus.

The Tabula Peutingeriana was first published as a whole by F. de Scheyb in 1753.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Smith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 1849, "Jornandes"

[edit] External links