Featured on PDR in the collection Peter Fabris’ Illustrations for William Hamilton’s Campi Phlegraei (1776–79)

A British diplomat serving as Envoy Extraordinary to the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, William Hamilton (1730–1803) spent a large part of his life in Naples — observing volcanic activity, collecting antiquities, and shepherding adventurous travelers, including kings and queens, to the summit of magma-rich mountains. Present for the eruptions of Mount Vesuvius during the mid-to-late eighteenth century, Hamilton wrote Campi Phlegraei in two parts, with a tertiary supplement, based on his Observations on Mount Vesuvius (1772) for the Royal Society. Composed as a bilingual French and English edition, the work is a notable watershed in volcanology, trading biblically-inflected narratives of catastrophe and creation for precise observational description. To illustrate these volumes in a manner true to his approach, Hamilton recruited the English-born Neapolitan artist…

The island of Stromboli, smoke erupting from its peak

Artist

Date

1776–9

From

Campi Phlegraei


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

1400 x 754

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