Sociology, asked by sanju59, 1 year ago

who was the father of dutch cartography

Answers

Answered by Sidyandex
47

Dutch cartography is well famous as among the very best and also principally due to the many Dutch cartographers and printer in the previous 16th.

Joan Blaeu is one of the finest cartographers and he is son of the cartographer of the Dutch East India Company with no risk and trouble of it.

Answered by krishna210398
0

Answer:

Willem Janszoon Blaeu

Explanation:

Willem Janszoon Blaeu 1571 – 21 October 1638), also shortened to Willem Jansz. Blaeu, was a Dutch cartographer, atlas maker, and publisher. Along with his son Johannes Blaeu, Willem is considered one of the notable numbers of the Netherlandish or Dutch academy of cartography in its golden age( the 16th and 17th centuries).

Blaeu was born at Uitgeest or Alkmaar. As the son of a well- to- do herring salesperson, he was fated to succeed his father in the trade, but his interests lay more in mathematics and astronomy. Between 1594 and 1596, as a pupil of the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, he qualified as an instrument and globe maker. In 1600 he discovered the alternate ever variable star, now known as P Cygni.

Once he returned to Holland, he made country charts and world globes, and as he held his printing workshop, he was suitable to regularly produce country charts in an atlas format, some of which appeared in the Atlas Novus published in 1635. In 1633 he was appointed chart-maker of the Dutch East India Company. He was also an editor and published workshop of Willebrord Snell, Descartes, Adriaan Metius, Roemer Visscher, Gerhard Johann Vossius, Barlaeus, Hugo Grotius, Vondel and the annalist and minstrel Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft. He failed in Amsterdam

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