Rare Old Map of Istria, Croatia & Slovenia by Zatta, 1784: Rijeka, Pula, Poreč, Kvarner, Habsburg–Venetian border
20% off 2 — 33% off 3
Add any two eligible items to your bag to receive 20% off. Add a third and it will be complimentary (equivalent to 33% off when purchasing three).
No code needed — the offer applies automatically at checkout.
Valid on all standard maps and fine art prints. You can mix and match any designs.
If you’d like to ship items to multiple addresses, please contact us before placing your order.
Custom and bespoke commissions are excluded.
Contact us if you have any questions
20% off 2 — 33% off 3
Add any two eligible items to your bag to receive 20% off. Add a third and it will be complimentary (equivalent to 33% off when purchasing three).
No code needed — the offer applies automatically at checkout.
Valid on all standard maps and fine art prints. You can mix and match any designs.
If you’d like to ship items to multiple addresses, please contact us before placing your order.
Custom and bespoke commissions are excluded.
Contact us if you have any questions
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➢ Pick the closest size that's larger than your custom size
➢ Type the exact size in millimetres
➢ Add to bag and checkout as normal
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Gift message & custom finish

If you want to add a gift message, or a finish (jigsaw, aluminium board, etc.) that is not available here, please request it in the "order note" when you check out.
Every order is custom made, so if you need the size adjusted slightly, or printed on an unusual material, just let us know. We've done thousands of custom orders over the years, so there's (almost) nothing we can't manage.
You can also contact us before you order, if you prefer!

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Titled Istria, this 1784 engraving stands as a luminous chapter in Antonio Zatta’s Atlante novissimo, the Venetian publishing triumph that married rigorous geography with painterly elegance. Drafted by Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano and issued from Zatta’s celebrated press, the sheet centers the storied peninsula that today spans Croatia and Slovenia, placing it with precision along the Adriatic rim. The composition balances science and spectacle: lucid coastal outlines and carefully notated interiors are framed by decorative borders and an ornate cartouche that hints at the region’s classical and maritime inheritance. At a glance, one perceives both a navigable landscape and a readable history—an 18th-century vision of Istria as crossroads, frontier, and nautical stage, refined through the atelier’s meticulous hand-coloring and the cool logic of Enlightenment cartography.
The map’s relief is rendered by a silken web of hachures that imparts motion to the terrain—ridges and limestone uplands gather into a rugged spine, while valleys widen into arable plains before meeting the sea. Mountain chains are handled with an engraver’s tact, modeling light and shadow to suggest passable saddles and forbidding escarpments. Rivers thread the peninsula as connective tissue, their courses guiding the eye from inland villages to sheltered coves and working harbors. Lakes and waterways are not merely scenic punctuation but structural, revealing how drainage, geology, and settlement cohere. In these strokes, the cartographer’s practical intelligence animates the land: routes are implied, seasons hinted, and the peninsula’s storied karst revealed as both barrier and resource.
Political and administrative realities appear in crisp partitions of color and line, registering the tense, negotiated frontier between Habsburg and Venetian influence in the late Enlightenment. Jurisdictions are enumerated with an accountant’s care yet enlivened by the artist’s palette, allowing the viewer to read diplomacy as geography. Cities and towns are named with a classicizing cadence—Rijeka (Fiume), Pula (Pola), and Poreč (Parenzo) anchor the coast—while inland centers provide a counterweight to maritime power. Even Graz appears as a regional point of orientation, reminding the viewer that Istria’s destinies were braided with those of the interior. The result is a political portrait that is lucid without being stark: a living map of allegiances, customs, and gates upon which commerce and empire turned.
Along the seaboard, Zatta’s engravers lavish attention on the sinuous Adriatic littoral, where scalloped bays, river mouths, and roadsteads shape the navigational theater of Istria. The coastline is drawn with a sailor’s memory for shelter and hazard; capes and promontories punctuate the shore while the bays of the Kvarner reflect the peninsula’s embrace with the sea. Maritime iconography remains discreet yet evocative: the surfacing geometry of the coast, the tempo of inlets and peninsulas, the quiet implication of prevailing routes. Decorative vignettes conjure a cosmopolitan Adriatic—mercantile, cultured, and contested—inviting the connoisseur to read not only distances but relationships: between port and hinterland, between customs house and monastery, between a reefed sail and the city it serves.
Antonio Zatta’s genius lay in orchestrating such harmonies—uniting scholars, engravers, and colorists to produce an atlas at once authoritative and beautiful. In Istria, his press translates Europe’s expanding geographical thought into a page where the data breathe: each boundary crisp, each name a footnote to diplomacy, each cartouche a compact essay in history and taste. Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano’s contribution is palpable in the confident draftsmanship and measured annotation—a local intelligence rendered legible to a continental audience. As a document, the map records an Enlightenment understanding of space; as an object of art, it speaks to the Venetian eye for ornament. Together, they produce a portrait of the peninsula that endures: precise, eloquent, and quietly enthralling.
Cities and towns on this map
- Rijeka (approx. 128,624)
- Pula (approx. 78,000)
- Graz (approx. 280,200)
- Poreč (approx. 16,000)
Notable Features & Landmarks
- Detailed hachured representations of topography.
- Political and administrative divisions clearly marked.
- Major cities, towns, and villages labeled.
- Illustrations of historical and topographical scenes within cartouches.
- Iconic geographical landmarks such as mountains and rivers.
- Maritime features including coastlines and bays of Istria.
- Decorative borders and vignettes showcasing cultural elements.
Historical and design context
- Created by Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano and published by Antonio Zatta in Venice, 1784.
- Part of Zatta’s Atlante novissimo, a significant 18th-century atlas blending extensive geography with artistic representation.
- Antonio Zatta was a prominent cartographer and publisher; his atlas featured contributions from notable artists and geographers.
- The map features meticulous hand coloring, hachuring for relief depiction, and ornate cartouches that provide historical and cultural context.
- Reflects advances in European geographical thought and exploration in the 18th century, serving as a vital document of historical landscape awareness.
- Primarily depicts the Istria region, now within modern-day Croatia and Slovenia.
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 90in (230cm). If you are looking for a larger map, please get in touch.
The model in the listing images is holding the 24x36in (60x90cm) 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.
Most orders are made locally and delivered in around 2–3 working days, depending on the product, size and destination.
We print and frame maps and artwork in 23 countries around the world, so your order is usually made close to you or your recipient. That means faster delivery, less time in transit, and no customs or import duty surprises.
Personalised and customised pieces usually take an extra 1–2 working days, because we prepare your design and send it to you for approval before printing.
Very large framed orders can take a little longer, as they need extra care in production and delivery.
Every order is carefully packaged: unframed prints are sent in a strong protective tube, while framed pieces are securely packed with protective materials around the frame.
If you need your order by a particular date, please contact us before ordering. We’ll check the best production route and delivery option for your location.
Express delivery is available at checkout for most countries. Next-day delivery is available in the UK, US, Singapore and the UAE.
Your order is covered by our 90-day returns policy and 10-year guarantee.
Our standard frame is a gallery-style black ash hardwood frame, with a simple, modern look. It is approximately 20mm (0.8in) wide. You can also view some lovely customer photos of framed maps and art.
We use super-clear acrylic glazing, also known as Perspex or Acrylite, instead of traditional glass. It is lighter, safer, and has lower reflectivity, giving the artwork a clearer, cleaner appearance.
Six standard frame colours are available at no extra cost: black, dark brown, dark grey, oak, white, and antique gold. Custom framing and mounting/matting is also available for customers looking for something more specific.
Most maps, art prints, and illustrations are also available as a framed canvas. We use matte cotton canvas, stretch it over a sustainably sourced wooden box frame, and then float the piece within a wooden outer frame. The finished result is beautifully presented, with no glazing between you and the artwork.
All frames are supplied ready to hang, with either string or brackets fitted to the back. Very large frames will include heavy-duty hanging plates and/or a mounting baton. If you have any questions, please get in touch.
We can also supply old maps and artwork on canvas, foam board, cotton rag, and other materials.
If you would prefer to frame your map or artwork yourself, please read our size guide before ordering.
My maps are extremely high quality reproductions of original maps.
I source original, rare maps from libraries, auction houses and private collections around the world, restore them at my London workshop, and then use specialist giclée inks and printers to create beautiful maps that look even better than the original.
My maps are printed on acid-free archival matte (not glossy) paper that feels very high quality and almost like card. In technical terms the paper weight/thickness is 10mil/200gsm. It's perfect for framing.
I print with Epson ultrachrome giclée UV fade resistant pigment inks - some of the best inks you can find.
I can also make maps on canvas, cotton rag and other exotic materials.
Learn more about The Unique Maps Co.
Map personalisation
If you're looking for the perfect anniversary or housewarming gift, I can personalise your map to make it truly unique. For example, I can add a short message, or highlight an important location, or add your family's coat of arms.
The options are almost infinite. Please see my map personalisation page for some wonderful examples of what's possible.
To order a personalised map, select "personalise your map" before adding it to your basket.
Get in touch if you're looking for more complex customisations and personalisations.
Map ageing
I have been asked hundreds of times over the years by customers if they could buy a map that looks even older.
Well, now you can, by selecting Aged before you add a map to your basket.
All the product photos you see on this page show the map in its Original form. This is what the map looks like today.
If you select Aged, I will age your map by hand, using a special and unique process developed through years of studying old maps, talking to researchers to understand the chemistry of aging paper, and of course... lots of practice!
If you're unsure, stick to the Original colour of the map. If you want something a bit darker and older looking, go for Aged.
If you are not happy with your order for any reason, contact me and I'll get it fixed ASAP, free of charge. Please see my returns and refund policy for more information.
I am very confident you will like your restored map or art print. I have been doing this since 1984. I'm a 5-star Etsy seller. I have sold tens of thousands of maps and art prints and have over 5,000 real 5-star reviews. My work has been featured in interior design magazines, on the BBC, and on the walls of dozens of 5-star hotels.
I use a unique process to restore maps and artwork that is massively time consuming and labour intensive. Hunting down the original maps and illustrations can take months. I use state of the art and eye-wateringly expensive technology to scan and restore them. As a result, I guarantee my maps and art prints are a cut above the rest. I stand by my products and will always make sure you're 100% happy with what you receive.
Almost all of my maps and art prints look amazing at large sizes (200cm, 6.5ft+) and I can frame and deliver them to you as well, via special oversized courier. Contact me to discuss your specific needs.
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Titled Istria, this 1784 engraving stands as a luminous chapter in Antonio Zatta’s Atlante novissimo, the Venetian publishing triumph that married rigorous geography with painterly elegance. Drafted by Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano and issued from Zatta’s celebrated press, the sheet centers the storied peninsula that today spans Croatia and Slovenia, placing it with precision along the Adriatic rim. The composition balances science and spectacle: lucid coastal outlines and carefully notated interiors are framed by decorative borders and an ornate cartouche that hints at the region’s classical and maritime inheritance. At a glance, one perceives both a navigable landscape and a readable history—an 18th-century vision of Istria as crossroads, frontier, and nautical stage, refined through the atelier’s meticulous hand-coloring and the cool logic of Enlightenment cartography.
The map’s relief is rendered by a silken web of hachures that imparts motion to the terrain—ridges and limestone uplands gather into a rugged spine, while valleys widen into arable plains before meeting the sea. Mountain chains are handled with an engraver’s tact, modeling light and shadow to suggest passable saddles and forbidding escarpments. Rivers thread the peninsula as connective tissue, their courses guiding the eye from inland villages to sheltered coves and working harbors. Lakes and waterways are not merely scenic punctuation but structural, revealing how drainage, geology, and settlement cohere. In these strokes, the cartographer’s practical intelligence animates the land: routes are implied, seasons hinted, and the peninsula’s storied karst revealed as both barrier and resource.
Political and administrative realities appear in crisp partitions of color and line, registering the tense, negotiated frontier between Habsburg and Venetian influence in the late Enlightenment. Jurisdictions are enumerated with an accountant’s care yet enlivened by the artist’s palette, allowing the viewer to read diplomacy as geography. Cities and towns are named with a classicizing cadence—Rijeka (Fiume), Pula (Pola), and Poreč (Parenzo) anchor the coast—while inland centers provide a counterweight to maritime power. Even Graz appears as a regional point of orientation, reminding the viewer that Istria’s destinies were braided with those of the interior. The result is a political portrait that is lucid without being stark: a living map of allegiances, customs, and gates upon which commerce and empire turned.
Along the seaboard, Zatta’s engravers lavish attention on the sinuous Adriatic littoral, where scalloped bays, river mouths, and roadsteads shape the navigational theater of Istria. The coastline is drawn with a sailor’s memory for shelter and hazard; capes and promontories punctuate the shore while the bays of the Kvarner reflect the peninsula’s embrace with the sea. Maritime iconography remains discreet yet evocative: the surfacing geometry of the coast, the tempo of inlets and peninsulas, the quiet implication of prevailing routes. Decorative vignettes conjure a cosmopolitan Adriatic—mercantile, cultured, and contested—inviting the connoisseur to read not only distances but relationships: between port and hinterland, between customs house and monastery, between a reefed sail and the city it serves.
Antonio Zatta’s genius lay in orchestrating such harmonies—uniting scholars, engravers, and colorists to produce an atlas at once authoritative and beautiful. In Istria, his press translates Europe’s expanding geographical thought into a page where the data breathe: each boundary crisp, each name a footnote to diplomacy, each cartouche a compact essay in history and taste. Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano’s contribution is palpable in the confident draftsmanship and measured annotation—a local intelligence rendered legible to a continental audience. As a document, the map records an Enlightenment understanding of space; as an object of art, it speaks to the Venetian eye for ornament. Together, they produce a portrait of the peninsula that endures: precise, eloquent, and quietly enthralling.
Cities and towns on this map
- Rijeka (approx. 128,624)
- Pula (approx. 78,000)
- Graz (approx. 280,200)
- Poreč (approx. 16,000)
Notable Features & Landmarks
- Detailed hachured representations of topography.
- Political and administrative divisions clearly marked.
- Major cities, towns, and villages labeled.
- Illustrations of historical and topographical scenes within cartouches.
- Iconic geographical landmarks such as mountains and rivers.
- Maritime features including coastlines and bays of Istria.
- Decorative borders and vignettes showcasing cultural elements.
Historical and design context
- Created by Giovanni Valle Giustinoplitano and published by Antonio Zatta in Venice, 1784.
- Part of Zatta’s Atlante novissimo, a significant 18th-century atlas blending extensive geography with artistic representation.
- Antonio Zatta was a prominent cartographer and publisher; his atlas featured contributions from notable artists and geographers.
- The map features meticulous hand coloring, hachuring for relief depiction, and ornate cartouches that provide historical and cultural context.
- Reflects advances in European geographical thought and exploration in the 18th century, serving as a vital document of historical landscape awareness.
- Primarily depicts the Istria region, now within modern-day Croatia and Slovenia.
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 90in (230cm). If you are looking for a larger map, please get in touch.
The model in the listing images is holding the 24x36in (60x90cm) 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.

