Digital Image: 1579 Philip Galle Portrait of Abraham Ortelius

Portrait-ortelius-1579_d
[Untitled Portrait]. - Main View
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Digital Image: 1579 Philip Galle Portrait of Abraham Ortelius

Portrait-ortelius-1579_d

This is a downloadable product.
  • [Untitled Portrait].
  • Added: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 13:03:00
Ortelius, himself.
$50.00

Title


[Untitled Portrait].
  1579 (undated)     12.5 x 8.25 in (31.75 x 20.955 cm)

Description


FOR THE ORIGINAL ANTIQUE MAP, WITH HISTORICAL ANALYSIS, CLICK HERE.

Digital Map Information

Geographicus maintains an archive of high-resolution rare map scans. We scan our maps at 300 DPI or higher, with newer images being 600 DPI, (either TIFF or JPEG, depending on when the scan was done) which is most cases in suitable for enlargement and printing.

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You can use your digial image any way you want! Our digital images are unrestricted by copyright and can be used, modified, and published freely. The textual description that accompanies the original antique map is not included in the sale of digital images and remains protected by copyright. That said, we put significant care and effort into scanning and editing these maps, and we’d appreciate a credit when possible. Should you wish to credit us, please use the following credit line:

Courtesy of Geographicus Rare Antique Maps (https://www.geographicus.com).

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In general, at 300 DPI, you should at least be able to double the size of the actual image, more so with our 600 DPI images. So, if the original was 10 x 12 inches, you can print at 20 x 24 inches, without quality loss. If your display requirements can accommodate some loss in image quality, you can make it even larger. That being said, no quality of scan will allow you to blow up at 10 x 12 inch map to wall size without significant quality loss. For more information, it is best consult a printer or reprographics specialist.

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Cartographer S


Philip Galle (1537 – March 1612) was a Dutch publisher, best known to the map world for his role as Abraham Ortelius' longtime publisher. He also was active in publishing engraved prints of the paintings of old masters, which he also engraved. Galle was born in Haarlem in the Netherlands, where he was a pupil of humanist and engraver Dirck Volkertszoon Coornhert. He married Catharina van Rollant in 1569. They had five children who later became active as artists. He worked for a time under Antwerp and publisher and engraver Hieronymus Cock, and began independent work in 1563. He moved to Antwerp about this time, across the street from Abraham Ortelius; he was a friend of printer Christopher Plantin. He took over Cock's publishing business in 1570 managed Cock's press and succeeded Cock in 1570 and was received as a citizen of Antwerp the following year. His publishing house proved successful and his heirs continued the business well into the next century. More by this mapmaker...


Adriaen Thomasz. Key (c. 1544 – 1589) was a Flemish painter, draughtsman and printmaker active in Antwerp. He is most known for his specialty work on portraits and altarpieces. Little is known of his early life. He is believed to have been born in Antwerp in 1544. He trained for a time under glass painter Jan Hack III, and was registered as a pupil at the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1558. It may have been as early as this that he was employed by Antwerp painter Willem Key. He would eventually take over the shop, but the two were not related: in fact, he adopted his former employer's surname when he took over the shop in 1567; previously he went by Adreaen Thomasz., or Thomaszoon. It was that year that he was admitted to the Guild as a master painter. He appears to have been very politically nimble. Despite his Calvinist beliefs, he remained in Antwerp and took students during and after the Spanish sack of the city in 1585; despite remaining there, he received commissions from William of Orange (leader of the Dutch Revolt.) His death in or after 1589 is supposed due to his disappearance from the historical record at that point: it is not actually known that he died then, or simply finally abandoned the city. Learn More...


Abraham Ortelius (April 14, 1527 - June 28, 1598) also known as Ortels, was a cartographer, geographer, and cosmographer of Brabant, active in Antwerp. He was the creator of the first modern atlas, Theatrum Orbis Terrarum and is a seminal figure in the history of cartography. Along with Gerard Mercator and Gemma Frisius, he was a founder of the Netherlandish school of cartography. His connections with Spain - culminating in his 1575 appointment as Royal Cartographer to King Phillip II of Spain - gave him unmatched access to Spanish geographical knowledge during a crucial period of the Age of Discovery. Ortelius was born in 1527 in Antwerp. In 1547 he entered the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke as an illuminator of maps. He began trading in books, prints, and maps, traveling regularly to the Frankfurt book and print fair, where in 1554 he met Mercator. He accompanied Mercator on journeys throughout France in 1560 and it was at this time, under Mercator's influence, that he appears to have chosen his career as a scientific geographer. His first published geographic work appeared in 1564, an eight-sheet cordiform world map. A handful of other maps preceded the 1570 publication of the first edition of the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, which would prove to be his life work. Appearing with but 53 maps in its first edition, Ortelius' work expanded with new maps added regularly. By 1592, it had 134 maps. Many of Ortelius' maps remained the standard for nearly a century. He traveled extensively, but his genius was as a compiler, locating the best informed maps on which to base his own. His contacts throughout Europe and extending even (via the Portuguese) to the Far East were formidable. Moreover, many of his maps were based on his own scholarship, particularly his historical works. His theories of geography were particularly ahead of his time with respect to the notion of continental drift, the possibility of which he mused on as early as 1596, and which would be proven correct centuries later.

In a sense his greatest achievement was his successful navigation of the religious and political violence endemic to his city throughout his adult life: The Dutch Revolt, or Eighty Years' War (1568 - 1648), fully embroiled Antwerp. Although outwardly and officially recognized as Catholic (Arias Montanus vouched for Ortelius' Catholic orthodoxy prior to his appointment as Royal Geographer), Ortelius was able to separate himself from the religious furor which characterized the war in the low countries. Ortelius showed a glimpse of himself in a letter to a friend, regarding humanist Justus Lipsius: 'I do not know whether he is an adherent of the Pope or a Calvinist, but if he has ears to hear, he will neither be one nor the other, for sins are committed on both sides'. Ortelius' own explorations of Biblical history in his maps, and the Christogram contained in his own motto, suggest him to be a religious man, but his abjuration of political religious authorities mark him as an individualist. His tombstone at St Michael's Præmonstratensian Abbey in Antwerp bears the inscription, Quietis cultor sine lite, uxore, prole. ('served quietly, without accusation, wife, and offspring.') Learn More...

Source


Ortelius, A., Theatre de l'univers, contenant les cartes de tout le monde, (Antwerp: Plantin) 1581.     Abraham Ortelius' magnum opus, Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, was the world's first regularly produced atlas, which 'set the standards for later atlases . . . It was the first undertaking of its kind to reduce the best available maps to an uniform format.' (Koeman) A modestly-sized work of fifty-three maps in its first edition of May 1570, it was an immediate success: there were three further editions that year, and the work remained in print for a total of 32 editions, the last of which was 1641, well after its author's 1598 death. Ortelius added to his atlas constantly, and by 1595 the Theatrum contained 147 maps. Ortelius is renowned generally as an editor, and indeed much of the Theatrum is compiled from a variety of sources: in such cases, Ortelius was scrupulous in naming his sources. But Ortelius was also a mapmaker in his own right: many of his maps are a distillation of various sources into his own work, and there were many maps - particularly in his atlas of Biblical and ancient history Parergon - which were entirely Ortelius' work. In his role as an editor, Ortelius followed in the footsteps of Munster, whose Cosmographia was, until Ortelius, the best window on the world for the curious European reader. In terms of the artistry of his maps, Ortelius oversaw the first great flourishing of copperplate engraving in the service of cartography to occur in Northern Europe. Ortelius' work provided the model for the atlases of Mercator, Hondius, Blaeu and all their progeny in the 17th century - many of whom were to produce faithful editions of Ortelius' maps in their own productions.

References


OCLC 605321671. van den Broecke, M., Ortelius Atlas Maps, #121 A and B.