Rare Old Map of the Road into Rome by Halma, 1704: Aqueducts, Tiber Bridge, Arch, Fortress Walls, Temples
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No se necesita código — la oferta se aplica automáticamente al finalizar la compra.
Válido en todos los mapas estándar y impresiones de arte fino. Puedes mezclar y combinar cualquier diseño.
Si deseas enviar artículos a múltiples direcciones, por favor contáctanos antes de realizar tu pedido.
Las comisiones personalizadas y a medida están excluidas.
Contáctanos si tienes alguna pregunta
20% de descuento en 2 — 33% de descuento en 3
Añade dos artículos elegibles a tu carrito para recibir 20% de descuento. Añade un tercero y será complementario (equivalente a 33% de descuento al comprar tres).
No se necesita código — la oferta se aplica automáticamente al finalizar la compra.
Válido en todos los mapas estándar y impresiones de arte fino. Puedes mezclar y combinar cualquier diseño.
Si deseas enviar artículos a múltiples direcciones, por favor contáctanos antes de realizar tu pedido.
Las comisiones personalizadas y a medida están excluidas.
Contáctanos si tienes alguna pregunta
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Designed in London • Made in the EU
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Waarschynlyke Verbeelding Der Gedaante van den Roomschen Heirweg Buiten de Stad en der Naburige Wegen en Plaatzen aan Dien Gehecht, engraved in 1704 by the Dutch master Francois Halma, offers a captivating vision of Rome at its threshold. Rather than a cramped street plan, this city map revels in the city’s edge—where fortress walls give way to arterial roads and the Tiber’s crossings pull commerce and ceremony outward. Halma’s bird’s-eye vantage translates infrastructure into narrative: aqueducts stride across the landscape, an arch signals arrival and triumph, and monuments anchor the urban horizon. It is a city map with a difference, charting how Rome’s life-blood pulsed along the routes that once bound empire and, centuries later, still carried pilgrims, traders, and ideas.
The composition draws the eye along the principal Roman road as it threads from the gates into a countryside busy with cultivation and exchange. A bridge over the Tiber River knits the capital to its hinterland, while aqueducts, temples, and statues articulate the sacred and civic stages upon which Rome performed its identity. Troops on the march and carriages crowding the thoroughfare animate the scene, revealing a lived roadscape rather than a sterile plan. Agricultural plots, grazing animals, and roadside shrines add texture to the liminal belt where city dissolves into field. In charting these flows, Halma presents a rare city view that understands Rome not only in walls and forums, but in the networks that sustained it.
Francois Halma, renowned in the Netherlands for intricate city views and maps of the late 17th and early 18th centuries, channels the Northern engraver’s precision into Roman drama. His pictorial, bird’s-eye method allows distance and depth to coexist with documentary detail: crenellated walls read as fortification and symbol; arches register as both topography and ceremony. Ornate staffage—figures, animals, and passing carriages—enlivens the margins without distracting from the clarity of routes and landmarks. This balance of information and spectacle is Halma’s hallmark, and here it underscores the social vibrancy of ancient transport corridors, where traders, soldiers, and worshipers shared the same stones, their converging paths turning infrastructure into theater.
As a map of a world city, this work excels by revealing what most urban plans conceal: circulation. The Tiber functions as a commercial corridor; bridges channel movement between quarters and fields; aqueducts deliver the city’s most vital resource across improbable spans. Fortress walls demarcate civic power, yet the roads pierce them, carrying the city’s reach outward and drawing lifeways inward. By the early 18th century many of these ancient arteries still organized travel, pilgrimage, and trade, so Halma’s view registers both antiquity and contemporaneity. Rome appears not as a static monument but as a living machine, its prosperity fed by the disciplined geometry of roads and the river’s mutable current.
Look closely and the map becomes a learned promenade: temples punctuate the procession like milestones of memory; statues and monuments converse across the open air; fields ripple with labor that provisioned markets within the walls. Without burdening the eye with street labels, Halma invites an intuitive reading anchored by landmark forms and the logic of movement. The result is a rich, legible portrait of Rome’s urban metabolism at the city’s edge—where ceremony meets commerce, and stone meets soil. For the connoisseur of Rome and the history of infrastructure, this is an illuminating, narrative city map, attuned to the routes that made the capital enduringly legible to travelers across time.
Streets and roads on this map
- No specific street names or road labels were visibly identifiable in the image provided.
Notable Features & Landmarks
- Aqueducts
- Arch
- Bridge over the Tiber River
- Carriages and horses on the road
- Fortress walls
- Temples
- Various agricultural scenes
- Statues and monuments
- Troops depicted on the road
Historical and design context
- Creation Date: 1704
- Mapmaker: Francois Halma, a Dutch engraver known for intricate city views and maps (late 17th–early 18th centuries)
- Region: Ancient Rome and its surrounding landscape
- Design and Style: bird’s-eye pictorial map with detailed engraving; ornate illustrations featuring figures, animals, and architectural highlights
- Themes and Topics: visualizes the Roman road outside Ancient Rome and surrounding routes; conveys the social vibrancy of ancient transport and traffic
- Historical Significance: highlights the enduring legacy of Roman infrastructure; many roads remained in use in the 18th century, with lasting cultural and economic impacts
Please double check the images to make sure that a specific town or place is shown on this map. You can also get in touch and ask us to check the map for you.
This map looks great at every size, but I always recommend going for a larger size if you have space. That way you can easily make out all of the details.
This map looks amazing at sizes all the way up to 70in (180cm). If you are looking for a larger map, please get in touch.
The model in the listing images is holding the 16x20in (40x50cm) version of this map.
The fifth listing image shows an example of my map personalisation service.
If you’re looking for something slightly different, check out my collection of the best old maps to see if something else catches your eye.
Please contact me to check if a certain location, landmark or feature is shown on this map.
This would make a wonderful birthday, Christmas, Father's Day, work leaving, anniversary or housewarming gift for someone from the areas covered by this map.
This map is available as a giclée print on acid free archival matte paper, or you can buy it framed. The frame is a nice, simple black frame that suits most aesthetics. Please get in touch if you'd like a different frame colour or material. My frames are glazed with super-clear museum-grade acrylic (perspex/acrylite), which is significantly less reflective than glass, safer, and will always arrive in perfect condition.
This map is also available as a float framed canvas, sometimes known as a shadow gap framed canvas or canvas floater. The map is printed on artist's cotton canvas and then stretched over a handmade box frame. We then "float" the canvas inside a wooden frame, which is available in a range of colours (black, dark brown, oak, antique gold and white). This is a wonderful way to present a map without glazing in front. See some examples of float framed canvas maps and explore the differences between my different finishes.
For something truly unique, this map is also available in "Unique 3D", our trademarked process that dramatically transforms the map so that it has a wonderful sense of depth. We combine the original map with detailed topography and elevation data, so that mountains and the terrain really "pop". For more info and examples of 3D maps, check my Unique 3D page.
Many of our maps and art prints are chosen as thoughtful gifts for homes, offices, studies and meaningful places.
Choose a framed option for the easiest ready-to-hang gift, or choose an unframed print if the recipient may prefer to select their own frame.
We make orders locally in 23 countries around the world, so gifts can often be produced close to the recipient. This helps them arrive faster, travel more safely, and avoid customs or import duty surprises.
- We can deliver directly to the recipient
- Framed pieces arrive ready to hang
- Unframed prints are carefully packed in a strong protective tube
- Almost every order is made locally, for faster, safer gifting
- 90-day returns give the recipient time to decide
If you are not sure what to choose, please contact us. We can help you pick the right map, size, finish or delivery option.
Para la mayoría de los pedidos, el tiempo de entrega es de aproximadamente 3 días laborables. Los productos personalizados y a medida tardan más, ya que tengo que hacer la personalización y enviártelo para su aprobación, lo cual suele tardar 1 o 2 días.
Tenga en cuenta que los pedidos enmarcados muy grandes suelen tardar más en fabricarse y entregarse.
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Todos mis mapas y impresiones artísticas están bien empaquetados y enviados en un tubo resistente si no están enmarcados, o rodeados de espuma si están enmarcados.
Intento enviar todos los pedidos dentro de 1 o 2 días después de recibir tu pedido, aunque algunos productos (como mascarillas, tazas y bolsas de tela) pueden tardar más en fabricarse.
Si seleccionas Entrega Exprés al finalizar la compra, priorizaremos tu pedido y lo enviaremos por mensajería de 1 día (Fedex, DHL, UPS, Parcelforce).
La entrega al día siguiente también está disponible en algunos países (EE. UU., Reino Unido, Singapur, EAU), pero por favor intenta hacer tu pedido temprano en el día para que podamos enviarlo a tiempo.
Mi marco estándar es un marco de madera de fresno negro estilo galería. Es simple y tiene un aspecto bastante moderno. Mi marco estándar tiene alrededor de 20 mm (0.8 in) de ancho.
Utilizo acrílico super claro (perspex/acrylite) para el vidrio del marco. Es más ligero y seguro que el vidrio, y se ve mejor, ya que la reflectividad es menor.
Seis colores de marco estándar están disponibles de forma gratuita (negro, marrón oscuro, gris oscuro, roble, blanco y oro antiguo).El enmarcado y montaje/matizado personalizado está disponible si buscas algo diferente.
La mayoría de los mapas, arte e ilustraciones también están disponibles como un lienzo enmarcado. Utilizamos lienzo de algodón mate (no brillante), lo estiramos sobre un marco de madera de caja de origen sostenible, y luego 'flotamos' la pieza dentro de un marco de madera. El resultado final es bastante hermoso, y no hay cristal que se interponga.
Todos los marcos se proporcionan "listos para colgar", con una cuerda o soportes en la parte posterior. Los marcos muy grandes tendrán placas de colgar de alta resistencia y/o un listón de montaje. Si tienes alguna pregunta, por favor ponte en contacto.
Mira algunos ejemplos de mis mapas enmarcados y mapas en lienzo enmarcados.
Alternativamente, también puedo proporcionar mapas antiguos y obras de arte en lienzo, tablero de espuma, papel de algodón y otros materiales.
Si deseas enmarcar tu mapa o obra de arte tú mismo, por favor lee mi guía de tamaños primero.
Mis mapas son reproducciones de mapas originales de altísima calidad.
Obtengo mapas originales y raros de bibliotecas, casas de subastas y colecciones privadas de todo el mundo, los restauro en mi taller de Londres y luego uso tintas e impresoras giclée especializadas para crear hermosos mapas que lucen incluso mejor que el original.
Mis mapas están impresos en papel de archivo mate (no brillante) sin ácido que se siente de muy alta calidad y casi como una tarjeta. En términos técnicos, el peso/grosor del papel es de 10 mil/200 g/m². Es perfecto para enmarcar.
Imprimo con tintas pigmentadas Epson ultrachrome giclée UV resistentes a la decoloración, algunas de las mejores tintas que puedes encontrar.
yo también puedo hacer mapas sobre lienzo, trapo de algodón y otros materiales exóticos.
Obtenga más información sobre The Unique Maps Co..
Personalización de mapas
Si está buscando el regalo perfecto de aniversario o inauguración de la casa, puedo personalizar su mapa para hacerlo verdaderamente único. Por ejemplo, puedo agregar un mensaje corto, resaltar una ubicación importante o agregar el escudo de armas de su familia.
Las opciones son casi infinitas. Por favor mira mi página de personalización de mapas para ver algunos maravillosos ejemplos de lo que es posible.
Para pedir un mapa personalizado, seleccione "personalizar su mapa" antes de agregarlo a su carrito.
Ponerse en contacto si buscas personalizaciones y personalizaciones más complejas.
Envejecimiento del mapa
A lo largo de los años, los clientes me han preguntado cientos de veces si podían comprar un mapa que se viera uniforme. más viejo.
Bueno, ahora puedes hacerlo seleccionando Envejecido antes de agregar un mapa a tu carrito.
Todas las fotografías de productos que ve en esta página muestran el mapa en su forma original. Así es como se ve el mapa hoy.
Si selecciona Envejecido, envejeceré su mapa a mano, usando un proceso especial y único desarrollado a través de años de estudiar mapas antiguos, hablar con investigadores para comprender la química del envejecimiento del papel y, por supuesto... ¡mucha práctica!
Si no estás seguro, quédate con el color original del mapa. Si quieres algo un poco más oscuro y más viejo buscando, opte por Envejecido.
Si no estás satisfecho con tu pedido por cualquier motivo, contáctame para un reembolso sin complicaciones. Por favor, consulta nuestra política de devoluciones y reembolsos para más información.
Estoy muy seguro de que te gustará tu mapa o impresión artística restaurada. He estado haciendo esto desde 1984. Soy un vendedor de 5 estrellas en Etsy. He vendido decenas de miles de mapas e impresiones artísticas y tengo más de 5,000 opiniones reales de 5 estrellas.
Utilizo un proceso único para restaurar mapas y obras de arte que consume mucho tiempo y mano de obra. Buscar los mapas e ilustraciones originales puede llevar meses. Utilizo tecnología de última generación y extremadamente cara para escanear y restaurarlos. Como resultado, garantizo que mis mapas e impresiones artísticas son superiores a los demás - por eso puedo ofrecer un reembolso sin complicaciones.
Casi todos mis mapas e impresiones artísticas se ven increíbles en tamaños grandes (200cm, 6.5ft+) y también puedo enmarcarlos y entregártelos a través de un servicio de mensajería especial para tamaños grandes. Contáctame para discutir tus necesidades específicas.
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Waarschynlyke Verbeelding Der Gedaante van den Roomschen Heirweg Buiten de Stad en der Naburige Wegen en Plaatzen aan Dien Gehecht, engraved in 1704 by the Dutch master Francois Halma, offers a captivating vision of Rome at its threshold. Rather than a cramped street plan, this city map revels in the city’s edge—where fortress walls give way to arterial roads and the Tiber’s crossings pull commerce and ceremony outward. Halma’s bird’s-eye vantage translates infrastructure into narrative: aqueducts stride across the landscape, an arch signals arrival and triumph, and monuments anchor the urban horizon. It is a city map with a difference, charting how Rome’s life-blood pulsed along the routes that once bound empire and, centuries later, still carried pilgrims, traders, and ideas.
The composition draws the eye along the principal Roman road as it threads from the gates into a countryside busy with cultivation and exchange. A bridge over the Tiber River knits the capital to its hinterland, while aqueducts, temples, and statues articulate the sacred and civic stages upon which Rome performed its identity. Troops on the march and carriages crowding the thoroughfare animate the scene, revealing a lived roadscape rather than a sterile plan. Agricultural plots, grazing animals, and roadside shrines add texture to the liminal belt where city dissolves into field. In charting these flows, Halma presents a rare city view that understands Rome not only in walls and forums, but in the networks that sustained it.
Francois Halma, renowned in the Netherlands for intricate city views and maps of the late 17th and early 18th centuries, channels the Northern engraver’s precision into Roman drama. His pictorial, bird’s-eye method allows distance and depth to coexist with documentary detail: crenellated walls read as fortification and symbol; arches register as both topography and ceremony. Ornate staffage—figures, animals, and passing carriages—enlivens the margins without distracting from the clarity of routes and landmarks. This balance of information and spectacle is Halma’s hallmark, and here it underscores the social vibrancy of ancient transport corridors, where traders, soldiers, and worshipers shared the same stones, their converging paths turning infrastructure into theater.
As a map of a world city, this work excels by revealing what most urban plans conceal: circulation. The Tiber functions as a commercial corridor; bridges channel movement between quarters and fields; aqueducts deliver the city’s most vital resource across improbable spans. Fortress walls demarcate civic power, yet the roads pierce them, carrying the city’s reach outward and drawing lifeways inward. By the early 18th century many of these ancient arteries still organized travel, pilgrimage, and trade, so Halma’s view registers both antiquity and contemporaneity. Rome appears not as a static monument but as a living machine, its prosperity fed by the disciplined geometry of roads and the river’s mutable current.
Look closely and the map becomes a learned promenade: temples punctuate the procession like milestones of memory; statues and monuments converse across the open air; fields ripple with labor that provisioned markets within the walls. Without burdening the eye with street labels, Halma invites an intuitive reading anchored by landmark forms and the logic of movement. The result is a rich, legible portrait of Rome’s urban metabolism at the city’s edge—where ceremony meets commerce, and stone meets soil. For the connoisseur of Rome and the history of infrastructure, this is an illuminating, narrative city map, attuned to the routes that made the capital enduringly legible to travelers across time.
Streets and roads on this map
- No specific street names or road labels were visibly identifiable in the image provided.
Notable Features & Landmarks
- Aqueducts
- Arch
- Bridge over the Tiber River
- Carriages and horses on the road
- Fortress walls
- Temples
- Various agricultural scenes
- Statues and monuments
- Troops depicted on the road
Historical and design context
- Creation Date: 1704
- Mapmaker: Francois Halma, a Dutch engraver known for intricate city views and maps (late 17th–early 18th centuries)
- Region: Ancient Rome and its surrounding landscape
- Design and Style: bird’s-eye pictorial map with detailed engraving; ornate illustrations featuring figures, animals, and architectural highlights
- Themes and Topics: visualizes the Roman road outside Ancient Rome and surrounding routes; conveys the social vibrancy of ancient transport and traffic
- Historical Significance: highlights the enduring legacy of Roman infrastructure; many roads remained in use in the 18th century, with lasting cultural and economic impacts
Please double check the images to make sure that a specific town or place is shown on this map. You can also get in touch and ask us to check the map for you.
This map looks great at every size, but I always recommend going for a larger size if you have space. That way you can easily make out all of the details.
This map looks amazing at sizes all the way up to 70in (180cm). If you are looking for a larger map, please get in touch.
The model in the listing images is holding the 16x20in (40x50cm) version of this map.
The fifth listing image shows an example of my map personalisation service.
If you’re looking for something slightly different, check out my collection of the best old maps to see if something else catches your eye.
Please contact me to check if a certain location, landmark or feature is shown on this map.
This would make a wonderful birthday, Christmas, Father's Day, work leaving, anniversary or housewarming gift for someone from the areas covered by this map.
This map is available as a giclée print on acid free archival matte paper, or you can buy it framed. The frame is a nice, simple black frame that suits most aesthetics. Please get in touch if you'd like a different frame colour or material. My frames are glazed with super-clear museum-grade acrylic (perspex/acrylite), which is significantly less reflective than glass, safer, and will always arrive in perfect condition.

