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Superb c.17th map of the Middle East extending from north Africa to Russia. French text edition of this famous map of the Middle East published by Hondius in the Mercator’s atlas. There is a very elaborate title surrounded by a … Read Full Description
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Superb c.17th map of the Middle East extending from north Africa to Russia.
French text edition of this famous map of the Middle East published by Hondius in the Mercator’s atlas. There is a very elaborate title surrounded by a strap work design with a circular portrait of Mehmed II on top and a scale of distances at bottom. Mehmed II was Ottoman Sultan who ruled from August 1444 to September 1446, and then later from February 1451 to May 1481. In Mehmed II’s first reign, he defeated the crusade led by János Hunyadi. When Mehmed I ascended the throne again in 1451 he strengthened the Ottoman navy and made preparations to attack Constantinople. At the age of 21, he conquered Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) and brought an end to the Byzantine Empire. Mehmed continued his conquests in Anatolia with its reunification and in Southeast Europe as far west as Bosnia. The shape of the Arabian Peninsula is corrected and the large lake [Laghi Adaia] east of Aden becomes an inlet of the sea.
From Hondius’s, Atlas sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati figura.
Jodocus Hondius I (1563 - 1612)
Born into a Protestant family in the County of Flanders, an area marked by both economic prosperity and religious turmoil. The persecution of Protestants by Spanish authorities during the Eighty Years’ War forced Hondius to seek refuge in England around 1583. In London, he established himself as an engraver of remarkable skill, producing scientific instruments, maps, and portraits. Among his earliest and most notable works is the famous 1593 map of Francis Drake’s circumnavigation, Vera Totius Expeditionis Navticae Descriptio D. Francisci Draci, which commemorated English maritime triumphs and reflected the growing European fascination with global exploration. While in London, Hondius also collaborated with the polymath Edward Wright and other English navigators, acquiring expertise in mathematical cartography and navigation. His exposure to English maritime expansion driven by both national ambition and Protestant identity helped shape his later vision of cartography as an instrument of exploration, commerce, and cultural expression.
In 1593, Hondius returned to the Low Countries, settling in Amsterdam, which was rapidly emerging as the cartographic centre of Europe. The Dutch Republic’s political stability, maritime power, and printing industry created an ideal environment for innovation in mapmaking. He quickly established a publishing house that combined technical excellence with an acute sense of the market. His output included wall maps, globes, and atlases that catered to scholars, merchants, and navigators alike. One of Hondius’s earliest major undertakings in Amsterdam was the production of terrestrial and celestial globes, modelled on those of Mercator and improved through new data from Dutch voyages to the East Indies. These globes not only demonstrated his technical virtuosity as an engraver but also reflected the global ambitions of the Dutch Republic, whose overseas ventures were redefining European geography. The combination of artistic skill, empirical accuracy, and patriotic sentiment made Hondius’s workshop one of the most influential in c.17th Europe.
In 1604 he acquired the copper plates of Gerard Mercator’s Atlas ,from Mercator’s grandson. Recognising the potential of this monumental but commercially neglected work, Hondius reissued it in 1606 under the title Gerardi Mercatoris Atlas, sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura. Hondius added thirty-six new maps of his own design, bringing the total to 143, and introduced stylistic and decorative enhancements that appealed to a wider audience. While preserving Mercator’s scholarly vision, Hondius transformed the Atlas into a commercial and cultural phenomenon. His edition was richly ornamented, featuring elaborate cartouches, allegorical figures, and maritime scenes that celebrated navigation and discovery. These embellishments were not mere decoration: they articulated a distinctly Dutch worldview, linking cartographic knowledge to economic prosperity and divine providence. By coupling Mercator’s scientific authority with the aesthetic sensibilities of the Dutch Golden Age, Hondius effectively redefined the modern atlas. The success of the 1606 edition ensured the continuation of Mercator’s intellectual legacy and established Hondius as the preeminent map publisher of his generation. Subsequent editions produced in Latin, French, and German extended his influence across Europe and laid the groundwork for the celebrated Mercator–Hondius–Janssonius Atlas series, continued after his death by his widow and sons.
Beyond his role as a publisher, Hondius was a master engraver whose artistry elevated cartographic illustration to new heights. His portraits of explorers, scientists, and theologians combined technical precision with expressive realism. The most famous of these is his 1596 engraving of Francis Drake, which became the canonical likeness of the English navigator. Hondius’s maps reflect an equally sophisticated aesthetic. His decorative borders featuring mythological figures, sailing ships, and sea monsters functioned as visual commentaries on the human relationship to the world. They transformed maps from purely functional documents into symbolic artefacts, embodying the intersection of knowledge, power, and imagination. His ability to fuse geographic accuracy with artistic beauty anticipated the Baroque synthesis of science and art, a hallmark of the c.17th worldview.
Hondius’s success owed much to the vibrant intellectual and commercial networks of the Dutch Republic. He collaborated with leading geographers such as Petrus Plancius, who supplied new geographic data from voyages to Asia, and with mathematicians and engravers who refined the techniques of projection and measurement. The expansion of the Dutch East and West India Companies created a steady demand for reliable maps, charts, and globes. Hondius’s workshop thus served as both a scientific laboratory and a commercial enterprise, exemplifying the synergy between exploration, capitalism, and knowledge that characterised early modern globalization. The competition between Hondius’s Atlas and Ortelius’s Theatrum Orbis Terrarum further fuelled the rapid development of cartographic publishing. By the early c.17th, Amsterdam had become the capital of European mapmaking, and Hondius was at its centre his name synonymous with quality, innovation, and authority.
Jodocus Hondius died in Amsterdam in 1612, but his legacy endured through his family and successors. His widow, Coletta van den Keere, and his sons Jodocus II and Henricus Hondius continued the publishing enterprise, issuing expanded editions of the Atlas throughout the c.17th. The Mercator–Hondius Atlas evolved into the Atlas Novus, later completed by Jan Janssonius, further cementing its status as the definitive cartographic corpus of the early modern period.
Brotton, Jerry, A History of the World in Twelve Maps (London: Allen Lane, 2012). Crane, Nicholas, Mercator: The Man Who Mapped the Planet (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2002). Keuning, Johannes, “The History of the Mercator–Hondius Atlas,” Imago Mundi, 3 (1939), 69–93. Koeman, Cornelis, Atlantes Neerlandici: Bibliography of Terrestrial, Maritime and Celestial Atlases and Pilot Books, Published in the Netherlands up to 1880, Vol. 1 (Amsterdam: Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, 1967). Schilder, Günter, Monumenta Cartographica Neerlandica, Vol. 2 (Alphen aan den Rijn: Canaletto, 1981). Shirley, Rodney W., The Mapping of the World: Early Printed World Maps, 1472–1700 (London: Holland Press, 1983).
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