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GERARDUS [latinized form of GERHARD K...

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 150 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GERARDUS [latinized

form of GERHARD KREMER] MERCATOR (1512-1594)  , Flemish mathematician and geographer, was born at Rupelmonde, in Flanders, on the 5th of March 1512 . Having studied at Bois-le-Due and Louvain (where he matricu- lated on the 29th of August 1530, and became licentiate in
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October 1532), he met Gemma Frisius, a pupil of Apian of
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Ingolstadt, who at the request of the emperor Charles V. had settled in Louvain . From Frisius young Kremer derived much of his inclination to cartography and scientific geography . In 1534 he founded his
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geographical establishment at Louvain; in 1537 he published his earliest known map, now lost (Terrae sanctae descriptio) . In 1537–1540 he executed his famous survey and map of Flanders (Exactissima Flandriae descriptio), of which a copy exists in the Musee Plantin, Antwerp . At the order of Charles V . Mercator made a
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complete set of
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instruments of observation for the emperor's
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campaigns: when these were destroyed by fire, in 1546, another set was ordered of the same maker . In 1538 appeared Mercator's map of the
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world in (north and south) hemispheres, which was rediscovered in 1878 in New York; this
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work shows Ptolemy's influence still dominant over Mercatorian cartography . In 1541 he issued the celebrated terrestrial globe, which he dedicated to Nicolas Perrenot,
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father of Cardinal Granvelle: this was accompanied by his Libellus de usu globi, which is said to have been presented to Charles V . In 1551 a celestial globe followed . Mercator early began to incline towards Protestantism; in 1533 he had retired for a time from Louvain to Antwerp, partly to avoid inquiry into his religious beliefs; in 1544 he was arrested and prosecuted for
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heresy, but escaped serious consequences (two of the
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forty-two arrested with him were burnt, one beheaded, two buried alive) . He now thought seriously of emigrating; and when in 1552 Cassander, ordered by the duke of Juliers, Cleves and Berg to organize a university at
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Duisburg, offered Mercator the chair of cosmography the offer was accepted .

The organization of the university was adjourned, and never completed in Mercator's lifetime; but he now became cosmographer to the duke and permanently settled on the

German
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soil to which many of his ancestors and relatives had belonged . Soon after this, however, he paid a visit to Charles V. at Brussels, and presented the emperor with a cosmos, a celestial sphere enclosing a terrestrial, together with an explanatory Declaratio: this work marks an era in the observation of longitude by magnetic declination, perfected by Halley . Charles rewarded the author with the title of imperatorii domesticus (Hofrath in the epitaph at Duisburg) . In 1 554 Mercator published his
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great map of
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Europe in six sheets, three or four of which had already been
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pretty well worked out at Louvain; a copy of this was rediscovered at Breslau in 1889 . Herein, though still greatly under Ptolemy's influence, Mercator begins to emancipate himself; thus Ptolemy's 62°for the length of the Mediterranean, reduced to 58° in the globe of 1541, he now cuts down to S3° . On the 28th of October 1556 he observed an eclipse at Duisburg; in 1563 he surveyed
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Lorraine, at the request of Duke Charles, and completed a map of the same (Lotharingiae descriptio) ; but it is uncertain if this was ever published . In 1564 he engraved William Camden's map of the
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British Isles; in 1568 he brought out his Chronologia, hoc est temporum demonstratio . . . ab initio mundi usque ad annum domini 1568, ex eclipsibus et observationibus astronomicis . In the same
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year was published his memorable planisphere for use in navigation, the first map on " Mercator's
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projection," with the
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parallels and meridians at right angles (Nova et aucta orbis terrae descriptio ad usum navigantium accommodata) . Improvements were introduced in this projection by
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Edward Wright in 1590; the more general use of it
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dates from about 163o, and largely came about through Dieppese support . In 1572 Mercator issued a second edition of his map of Europe; in 1578 appeared his Tabulae geographicae ad mentem Ptelemaei restitutae et emendatae; and in 1585 the first
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part (containing Germany, France and Belgium) of the
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Atlas, sire cosmographicae meditationes de fabrica mundi, in which he planned to
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crown his work by uniting in one
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volume his various detailed maps, so as to form a general description of the globe In 1585 he adapted his Europe to the Atlas; in 1587, with the help of his son Rumold, he added to the same a world-map (Orbis terrarum compendiosa descriptio), followed in 1590 by a second series of detailed maps (Italy, Slavonia,
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Greece and
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Candia) . The rest of the regional and other plans in this under-taking, mostly begun by Gerard, were finished by Rumold; they include Iceland and the Polar regions, the British Isles (dedicated to Queen Elizabeth), the Scandinavian countries (dedicated to Henr .

Ranzovius),

Prussia and Livonia, Russia, Lithuania, Transylvania, the Crimea,
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Asia, Africa and
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America (in the last Michael Mercator, in Asia and Africa Gerard Mercator the younger, assisted) The designs are accompanied by cosmographical and other
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dissertations, some of the theological views in which were condemned as heretical (see the Duisburg edition of 1594, folio) . In 1592 Mercator published, two years after his first apoplectic stroke, a
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Harmonia evangeliorum . He died on the 5th of December 1594, and was buried in St Saviour's church, Duisburg . Besides his famous projection, he did excellent service with Ortelius in helping to
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free the geography of the 16th century from the tyranny of Ptolemy; his map and instrument work is noteworthy for its delicate precision and admirable execution in detail . See the Vita Mercatoris by Gualterus Ghymnius in the Latin
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editions of the Atlas; Gerard Mercator, sa
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vie et ses suvres, by Dr J.
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van Raemdonck (St Nicolas, 1869); A . Breusing, Gerhard Kremer (Duisburg, 1878), and article " Mercator " in Ald emeine deutsche Biographic; General Wauwermans, Histoire de l'ecoie cartographique beige . . an X VI.-siecle, and article " Mercator " in Biographic nationale (de Belgique), vol. xiv . (Brussels, 1897) . Also the lesser studies of Dr J. van Raemdonck, Sur
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les exemplaires
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des grandes cartes de Mercator; Carte de Flandre de Mercator; Relations entre Mercator et . . . Plantin . (St Nicolas, 1884) ; La Geographie ancienne de la
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Palestine: Lettre de Gerard Mercator , mat 22, 1567 (St N., 1884) ; Les Spheres terrestre et celeste de Mercator, 1541 .

. . 1551 (St N., 1885); Van Ortroy, L'CEuvre eographi ue de Mercator . (C . R .

End of Article: GERARDUS [latinized form of GERHARD KREMER] MERCATOR (1512-1594)
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