Cristoforo Buondelmonti

15th-century Italian writer and geographer
The basics

Quick Facts

Intro15th-century Italian writer and geographer
PlacesItaly
isGeographer Monk
Work fieldReligion Science
Gender
Male
BirthFlorence
The details

Biography

Cristoforo Buondelmonti (1386 - c. 1430) was an Italian monk and traveler, and a pioneer in promoting first-hand knowledge of Greece and its antiquities throughout the Western world.
He left his native city of Florence around 1414 C.E. in order to travel, mainly in the Aegean Islands. He visited Constantinople in the 1420s. He is the author of two historical-geographic works: the Descriptio insulae Cretae (1417, in collaboration with Niccolò Niccoli) and the Liber insularum Archipelagi (1420). These two books are a combination of geographical information and contemporary charts and sailing directions. The last one contains the oldest surviving map of Constantinople, and the only one which antedates the Ottoman conquest of the city in 1453.
While travelling over the island of Andros, he bought a Greek manuscript and brought back with him to Italy. This was the Heiroglyphica of Horapollo, which played a considerable role both in humanistic thinking and in art.

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