This product is successfully added to your cart
Questions about this product? (#29164)

Authenticity Guarantee
All items are guaranteed authentic prints (woodcuts or engravings) or manuscripts made at or about (c.) the given date and in good condition unless stated otherwise. We don’t sell facsimiles or reproductions. We deliver every map with a Certificate of Authenticity containing all the details.

Scotland, by Gerard Mercator. 1628

Gerard Mercator (1512 – 1594)

Gerard Mercator was born Gerard de Cremere in Rupelmonde (near Antwerp) on 5 March 1512.

Young Gerard learned what Latin he could in Rupelmonde, and when he was about fifteen, his uncle sent him to s'Hertogenbosch to study at a school run by the Brothers of the Common Life. One of Mercator’s teachers was the celebrated humanist Macropedius. After three and a half years with the brothers, Gerard went to Louvain, where he enrolled in the university in 1530 as one of the poor students at Castle College.

By this time, he had Latinized his name to Mercator. He studied philosophy and took his master’s degree in 1532. The problems of the creation of the Universe and the Earth interested him in particular; this is reflected by his works written in later years.

After spending a few years in Antwerp, he returned to Louvain in c. 1535, where he took courses in mathematics under Gemma Frisius. Soon, he was recognised as an expert on the construction of mathematical instruments, as a land surveyor and, after 1537, as a cartographer. He drew his income from these activities after his marriage on August 3, 1536. He also qualified himself as a copper engraver, the first to introduce italic handwriting to this trade. The first maps, drawn and engraved by Gerard Mercator, are Palestine, 1537; the World in double heart-shaped projection, 1538; and Flanders, 1540.

In 1544, Mercator came into great danger: he was arrested on the accusation of heresy and put into jail. Thanks to the intervention of the University of Louvain, he was released after four months. In 1552, he moved with his family to Duisburg (Germany). In 1560, Mercator became a cosmographer in service of the Duke of Jülich-Cleve-Berge, and in 1563, he became a lecturer at the Grammar School of the new University in Duisburg. During this period, he made wall maps of Europe, 1554; of Loraine, 1564; the British Isles, 1564; and the famous world map with increasing latitudes, 1569. About this time, Mercator was also working on the project for a complete description of the creation, the Heavens, Earth, Sea and world history. This resulted in his Atlas, sive cosmographicae meditationes de fabrica mundi et fabricati figura. He also worked on an edition of Ptolemy’s Geographia, which appeared in 1578. The first part of his book with modern maps (France, Germany and the Netherlands) appeared in 1585.

Shortly after the publication of the second part of his map book (not yet called Atlas) with the maps of Italy (1589), he had a stroke that ended his highly significant productivity. The great man passed away on 2 December 1594, leaving the responsibility of finishing the map book to his son Rumold. The final part of it appeared in 1595. Its title is Pars Altera, and it constitutes an essential part of what was then called Mercator’s Atlas.

The map of Europe and the world map in the Atlas are by Rumold Mercator. After Rumold died in 1599, the Atlas was reissued in 1602.

The plates of the maps, both of the Ptolemy edition and the Atlas, were sold in 1604 to Jodocus Hondius of Amsterdam. The following year, Hondius managed to bring out Ptolemy’s Geographia. In 1606, the first Amsterdam edition of the Mercator Atlas appeared in the next year. From then to 1638, the Atlas saw many enlarged editions in various languages.

back

Scotia Regnum.

SOLD

Item Number:  29164 Authenticity Guarantee

Category:  Antique maps > Europe > British Isles

Old, antique map of Scotland, by Gerard Mercator.

Title: Scotia Regnum.
Per Gerardum Mercatorem Cum Privilegio.

Date of the first edition: 1595.
Date of this map: 1628.

Copper engraving, printed on paper.
Map size: 350 x 405mm (13.78 x 15.94 inches).
Sheet size: 475 x 580mm (18.7 x 22.83 inches).
Verso: French text.
Condition: Original coloured, excellent.
Condition Rating: A+.

From: Gerardi Mercatoris - ATLAS Sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura. Amsterdam, H. Hondius, 1628. (Van der Krogt 1, 1:114)

Gerard Mercator (1512 – 1594)

Gerard Mercator was born Gerard de Cremere in Rupelmonde (near Antwerp) on 5 March 1512.

Young Gerard learned what Latin he could in Rupelmonde, and when he was about fifteen, his uncle sent him to s'Hertogenbosch to study at a school run by the Brothers of the Common Life. One of Mercator’s teachers was the celebrated humanist Macropedius. After three and a half years with the brothers, Gerard went to Louvain, where he enrolled in the university in 1530 as one of the poor students at Castle College.

By this time, he had Latinized his name to Mercator. He studied philosophy and took his master’s degree in 1532. The problems of the creation of the Universe and the Earth interested him in particular; this is reflected by his works written in later years.

After spending a few years in Antwerp, he returned to Louvain in c. 1535, where he took courses in mathematics under Gemma Frisius. Soon, he was recognised as an expert on the construction of mathematical instruments, as a land surveyor and, after 1537, as a cartographer. He drew his income from these activities after his marriage on August 3, 1536. He also qualified himself as a copper engraver, the first to introduce italic handwriting to this trade. The first maps, drawn and engraved by Gerard Mercator, are Palestine, 1537; the World in double heart-shaped projection, 1538; and Flanders, 1540.

In 1544, Mercator came into great danger: he was arrested on the accusation of heresy and put into jail. Thanks to the intervention of the University of Louvain, he was released after four months. In 1552, he moved with his family to Duisburg (Germany). In 1560, Mercator became a cosmographer in service of the Duke of Jülich-Cleve-Berge, and in 1563, he became a lecturer at the Grammar School of the new University in Duisburg. During this period, he made wall maps of Europe, 1554; of Loraine, 1564; the British Isles, 1564; and the famous world map with increasing latitudes, 1569. About this time, Mercator was also working on the project for a complete description of the creation, the Heavens, Earth, Sea and world history. This resulted in his Atlas, sive cosmographicae meditationes de fabrica mundi et fabricati figura. He also worked on an edition of Ptolemy’s Geographia, which appeared in 1578. The first part of his book with modern maps (France, Germany and the Netherlands) appeared in 1585.

Shortly after the publication of the second part of his map book (not yet called Atlas) with the maps of Italy (1589), he had a stroke that ended his highly significant productivity. The great man passed away on 2 December 1594, leaving the responsibility of finishing the map book to his son Rumold. The final part of it appeared in 1595. Its title is Pars Altera, and it constitutes an essential part of what was then called Mercator’s Atlas.

The map of Europe and the world map in the Atlas are by Rumold Mercator. After Rumold died in 1599, the Atlas was reissued in 1602.

The plates of the maps, both of the Ptolemy edition and the Atlas, were sold in 1604 to Jodocus Hondius of Amsterdam. The following year, Hondius managed to bring out Ptolemy’s Geographia. In 1606, the first Amsterdam edition of the Mercator Atlas appeared in the next year. From then to 1638, the Atlas saw many enlarged editions in various languages.

References: Van der Krogt 1 - 5800:1A.1; Karrow - 56/145

Related items

Scotland, by Petrus Bertius.

Scotia. 1618
Scotland, by Petrus Bertius.
[Item number: 18211]

€170  ($180.2 / £144.5)
Scotland (North and South), by Petrus Bertius.

Scotia Septentrion [in set with] Scotia Australis. 1618
Scotland (North and South), by Petrus Bertius.
[Item number: 18212]

€220  ($233.2 / £187)
Scotland and Orkney Islands, by Doncker H.

De Custen van Schotlandt en de Eylanden van Orcanese, van 't eylandt Coket tot I. Sande. 1686
Scotland and Orkney Islands, by Doncker H.
[Item number: 15386]

€460  ($487.6 / £391)
Northern Scotland, by Van Keulen Johannes.

Paskaart vande Noord Cust van Schotland als mede de Eylanden van Hitlandt en Fero 1697-1709
Northern Scotland, by Van Keulen Johannes.
[Item number: 5399]

€450  ($477 / £382.5)
Sea chart of the East coast of England & Scotland, by Van Keulen Johannes

Nieuwe Paskaert vande Oost Cust van Engeland en Schotland Beginnende van't Flamburger Hooft tot aan Rivier van Eedenborg ... 1697-1709
Sea chart of the East coast of England & Scotland, by Van Keulen Johannes
[Item number: 8077]

€420  ($445.2 / £357)
Scotland, with Lewis Island, by J. Van Keulen. Sea chart.

Pascaert, vande Westkust van Schotlant, als mede een Gedeelte vande Lewys Eylanden, van S. Patricius tot Nary, Nog t' I. Roda ofte Barre en t' I. S. Kilda ... 1697-1709
Scotland, with Lewis Island, by J. Van Keulen. Sea chart.
[Item number: 12461]

€480  ($508.8 / £408)
Scotland, by G. & L. Valck.

Regnum Scotiae, seu Pars Septent: Magnae Britanniae Divisa ... c. 1700
Scotland, by G. & L. Valck.
[Item number: 26013]

€250  ($265 / £212.5)
Scotland - Edinburgh, by Georg Braun & Frans Hogenberg.

Edenburg - Edenburgum, Scotiae Metropolis. 1582
Scotland - Edinburgh, by Georg Braun & Frans Hogenberg.
[Item number: 26787]

€1100  ($1166 / £935)
Scotland, by Francesco Santini.

L'Ecosse Divisée en Shires ou Comtés. 1776-79
Scotland, by Francesco Santini.
[Item number: 26961]

€300  ($318 / £255)
Scotland by Frederik de Wit, published by Covens & Mortier.

Scotia Regnum divisum in Partem Septentrionalem et Meridionalem. After 1721
Scotland by Frederik de Wit, published by Covens & Mortier.
[Item number: 28242]

€500  ($530 / £425)
Scotland by Willem Blaeu.

Scotia Regnum. 1630-1664
Scotland by Willem Blaeu.
[Item number: 28525]

€680  ($720.8 / £578)
Scotland by Vincenzo Coronelli.

Scotia - Parte Settentrionale. [in set with:] Parte Meridionale. 1696
Scotland by Vincenzo Coronelli.
[Item number: 28661]

€720  ($763.2 / £612)
Great Brittain by Sebastian Münster.

Beschreibung Engellandts und Schottlandts. 1578
Great Brittain by Sebastian Münster.
[Item number: 29468]

€380  ($402.8 / £323)