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  1. Interactive Nolli Map Website. Map Index. Index of the features that Nolli numbered on his map. You can explore them by scrolling the list, navigating the map, or typing a specific location, building type, patron or architect in the search box.

  2. The Nolli map is composed of 12 nearly equal-sized plates, each measuring approximately 80 cm by 54 cm with the assembled map at 176 cm by 208 cm. Numbers are indicated in the upper corner margins in each plate that were to have been used as identifying page numbers for the publication of the map in bound format which never materialized.

  3. Nollis plan is valuable not only because it presents a cartographic record of Rome that was unprecedented in its detail and accuracy, but also because it does so at a very fortuitous moment, perched as it is between the early modern and modern changes that so drastically altered the city.

  4. The “Nolli Map”—a highly accurate ichnographic plan (as opposed to a bird’s eye perspective typical of earlier representations)— was a milestone in the art and science of cartography, and a touchstone for Roman and urban studies and a prototype for the study of spatial history.

  5. Nolli map Log in to Favorite Emiel Govaert. April 10, 2016. 180059 views. 1163 favorites. Nolli map generator, made for a master thesis about architectural cellular automata. dark no-labels simple SPONSORED BY. Create a map with this style using Atlist ...

  6. Giuseppe Vasi’s Grand Tour presents an innovative geo-database (geographic database) and website that references the work of two 18th century masters of Roman topography: Giambattista Nolli (1701-1756), who published the first accurate map of Rome (La Pianta Grande di Roma, 1748); and his contemporary Giuseppe Vasi (1710-1782), whose ...

  7. 22 de dic. de 2014 · Posted on December 22, 2014 by @kennethfield. The Italian architect and surveyor Giambattista Nolli is perhaps best known for his epic ichnographic plan of Rome, known as the Nolli map. He began his exhaustive survey in 1736 and eventually engraved and published the map in 1748 across twelve sheets measuring 176cm by 208cm when pieced together.