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We all presume [!] that you’ve already contacted the Austrian National
Library’s Globe Museum and/or the associated Coronelli Society. Or, if
so, not yet received a response (the Society’s 12th International
Symposium was held a fortnight ago in Jena, Germany). And/or you’ve not
found any answers or clues in the original series of either Der
Globusfreund or the more recent alternative (German or English) language
versions of Globe Studies: the Journal of the International Coronelli
Society (‘English version of Der Globusfreund’), ISSN 1680-5356.

 

International Coronelli Society for the Study of Globes

c/o Austrian National Library, Globe Museum

Josefsplatz 1

A-1015 Vienna

Austria

 

T +43 1 53410 / 298; F +43 1 53410319

 

 <http://www.coronelli.org/> www.coronelli.org

 

Thinking laterally, too, have childhood museums been contacted?

 

Francis Herbert 

[email protected]

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Seb Falk
Sent: 14 October 2011 09:23
To: [email protected]
Subject: [MapHist] Seeking information about Spanish globe

 

Dear all

 

I am researching a Spanish toy globe which is held in the collection of
the Whipple Museum at the University of Cambridge.   It is an unusual
item, with a planetarium and educational information inside.  My initial
investigation gives a date of c. 1905-1910.  The maker’s cartouche names
Benjamin Tena, of Villafranca del Cid, near Valencia.  There is also a
printer’s stamp inside, of J. Ortega, Valencia.

 

A picture and description of the globe can be found at
http://www.skinnerinc.com/asp/fullCataloguese.asp?salelot=2133+++++++1+
<http://www.skinnerinc.com/asp/fullCataloguese.asp?salelot=2133+++++++1+
&refno=++456117> &refno=++456117 (note: there are some inaccuracies in
the description).  I can supply further pictures or a transcript of the
educational information if it would be of interest.

 

I would be grateful if anyone could provide any information that might
help us to understand this globe better.  Does anyone know of any other
Spanish globes?  The only manufacturer I have found so far is Pedro
Martín de López, who was producing globes in Madrid earlier in the
nineteenth century.  I have found no information about Benjamin Tena.

 

This globe has some superficial similarities to those produced in Berlin
by Schotte & Co, but I have not yet found any examples of globes with
planetariums inside.  Can anyone think of other globes that could have
influenced the production of this one?

 

I would be very grateful for any advice or suggestions.

 

Many thanks,

 

Seb Falk

University of Cambridge

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