BREUNING VON BUCHENBACH, Hans Jacob
Hans Jacob Breüning Von Buchenbach (1552-1616) belonged to an old noble family of Tübingen and received a classical education. He met Jean Carlier de Pinon in London and in Paris. They went on the pilgrimage to the Holy Land together in 1579.
They left Venice on April 30th 1579, carrying with them the works of Greek and Roman geographers as well as earlier travel chronicles. After stopping over at the Ionian and the Aegean islands, they reached Istanbul on the 22nd of June. They stayed at the Ottoman capital for approximately a month, visited Egypt and finally arrived at the Holy Land. Breuning returned to Marseilles in December 1579.
In 1584 he became a judge and an administrative official in Obervogt region. We also know that he was head of a diplomatic mission to the court of Elizabeth II of England in 1595.
His travel chronicle, illustrated with numerous engravings, was published in 1612. Breuning is interested in the particularities of the ethnicities he came to know during his journey, is fond of description and a keen observer. These features differentiate his work from Carlier de Pinon’s chronicle of the same journey.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
BREUNING VON BUCHENBACH, Hans Jacob - Egypt
-
View of Mount Sinai with Saint Catherine's Monastery, as well as other monasteries and chapels.
-
Bovid of the Gazelle or Oryx genus, that Jacob Breuning saw at the castle of Cairo.
-
Jacob Breuning, his companion Carlier de Pinon, and their escorts on their way to Mount Sinai.
-
Embalmed tapir from South America, seen by Jacob Breuning in Cairo.
-
Bovid from Egypt, most probably of the genus Bos indicus or Zebu.
BREUNING VON BUCHENBACH, Hans Jacob - Rest Images
-
Frontispiece of the fifth travel of Jacob Breuning, return to Europe.
-
Frontispiece of the fourth travel of Jacob Breuning, in Palestine, Tripoli and Syria.
-
Frontispiece of the third travel of Jacob Breuning, from Egypt to Palestine.
-
Coats of arms of the Knights Hospitaller from the medieval city of Rhodes.
-
Frontispiece of the second travel of Jacob Breuning (from Istanbul to Egypt).
-
Dedication of the author to the Duke John Friedrich of Württemberg.
-
Title page. Allegoric representation of the four continents: Europe, Asia, Africa and America.