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ORTELIUS (ORTELS, WORTELS), ABRAHAM

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 332 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ORTELIUS (ORTELS, WORTELS), ABRAHAM  , next to Mercator the greatest geographer of his age, was born at Antwerp on the 14th of
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April 1527, and died in the same city on the 4th of
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July 1598 . He was of German origin, his
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family coming from Augsburg . He travelled extensively in western
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Europe, especially in the
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Netherlands; south and west Germany (e.g . 156o, 1575, 1578); France (1559-156o, &c.); England and Ireland (1577), and Italy (1578, and perhaps twice or thrice between 1550 and 1558) . Beginning as a map-engraver (in 1547 he enters the Antwerp gild of St Luke as afsetter
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van Karten), his early career is that of a business man, and most of his journeys before I 56o are for commercial purposes (such as his yearly visits to the
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Frankfort
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fair) . In 156o, however, when travelling with Gerhard Kremer (Mercator) to Trier,
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Lorraine and
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Poitiers, he seems. to have been attracted, largely by Mercator's influence, towards the career of a scientific geographer; in particular he now devoted himself, at his friend's
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suggestion, to the compilation of that
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atlas or Theatre of the
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World by which he became famous . In 1564 he completed a mappemonde, which afterwards appeared in the Theatrum . He also published a map of
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Egypt in 1565 a plan of Britenburg Castle on the coast of Holland, and perhaps a map of
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Asia, before the appearance of his
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great
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work . In 1570 (May 20) was issued, by Gilles Coppens de Diest at Antwerp, Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, the " first
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modern atlas " (of 53 maps) . Three Latin
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editions of this (besides a Flemish, a French and a German) appeared before the end of 1572; twenty-five editions came out before Ortelius'
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death in 1598; and several others were published subsequently, for the vogue continued till about 1612 . Most of the maps were admittedly reproductions (a list of 87 authors is given by Ortelius himself), and many discrepancies of delineation or nomenclature occur . Errors, of course, abound, both in general conceptions and in detail; thus South
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America is very faulty in outline, and in Scotland the Grampians lie between the Forth and the Clyde; but, taken as a whole, this atlas with its accompanying text was a monument of rare erudition and industry .

Its immediate precursor and prototype was a collection of

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thirty-eight maps of
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European lands, and of Asia, Africa, Tartary and Egypt, gathered together by the
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wealth and enterprise, and through the agents, of Ortelius' friend and
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patron, Gilles Hooftman, lord of Cleydael and Aertselaer: most of these were printed in Rome, eight or nine only in Belgium . In 1573 Ortelius published seventeen supplementary maps under the title of Additamentum Theatri Orbis Terrarum . By this time he had formed a
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fine collection of coins, medals and antiques, and this produced (also in 1573, published by Philippe Galle of Antwerp) his Deorum dearumque capita . . . ex Museo Ortelii (reprinted in Gronovius, Thes . Gr . Ant. vol. vii.) . In 1575 he was appointed geographer to the king of Spain, Philip II., on the recommendation of Arius Montanus; who vouched for his orthodoxy (his family, as early as 1535, had fallen under suspicion of
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Protestant-ism) . In 1578 he laid the basis of a critical treatment of ancient geography by his Synonymia geographica (issued by the Plantin press at Antwerp and republished as Thesaurus geographicus in 1596) . In 1584 he brought out his Nomenclator Ptolemaicus, his Parergon (a series of maps illustrating ancient
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history, sacred and secular), and his Itinerarium per nonnullas Galliae Belgicae partes (published at the Plantin press, and reprinted in Hegenitius, Itin . Frisio-Holl.), a record of a journey in Belgium and the Rhineland made in 1575 . Among his last
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works were an edition of Caesar (C . I .

Caesaris omnia quae extant,

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Leiden, Raphelingen, 1593), and the Aurei saeculi imago, sive Germanorum veterum vita (Philippe Galle, Antwerp, 1596) . He also aided
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Welser in his edition of the Peutinger Table in 1598 . In 1596 he received a presentation from Antwerp city, similar to that afterwards bestowed on Rubens; his death and
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burial (in St Michael's Abbey church) in 1598 were marked by public mourning . See Emmanuel van Meteren, Historia Belgica (Amsterdam, 1670) ; General Wauwermans, Histoire de l'ecole cartographique beige et anversoise (Antwerp, 1895), and article " Ortelius " in Biographie nationale (Belgian), vol. xvi . (Brussels, 1901); J . H . Hessels, Abrahami Ortelii epistulae (Cambridge, England, 1887); Max Rooses, Ortelius et Plantin (188o) ; Genard, " Genealogie d'Ortelius," in the Bulletin de la
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Soc. roy. de Geog. d'Anvers (188o and 1881) . (C . R .

End of Article: ORTELIUS (ORTELS, WORTELS), ABRAHAM
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