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Oldest drawing of Venice discovered

 

An Italian pilgrim headed for Jerusalem passed through Venice in the 1340s, and stopped long enough to make a small pen-and-ink sketch of the city, showing churches, gondolas and canals. A few years later, he stuck it in a manuscript about his travels, where it went unnoticed until last year.

The drawing by Niccolo da Poggibonsi is now considered to be the oldest depiction of the city in a drawing, although older maps exist. Sandra Toffolo, a researcher at Scotland's St Andrews University, found it while reading da Poggibonsi's manuscript in the National Library in Florence while preparing a monograph on Venice in the Renaissance.

The Brussels Times quotes Toffolo on the drawing's significance: “The discovery of this view of Venice has major consequences for our understanding of the city’s representations, because it shows that it already fascinated its contemporaries.”

The best part of every trip is realizing that it has upset your expectations

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