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         Mercator Gerardus:     more books (18)
  1. Gerardus Mercator: Father of Modern Mapmaking (Signature Lives: Scientific Revolution series) by Heinrichs, Ann, 2008-01-01
  2. Belgian Scientists: Gerardus Mercator, Andreas Vesalius, François D'aguilon, Ilya Prigogine, Henri Debehogne, Paul Otlet, Chaïm Perelman
  3. 1512 Births: Gerardus Mercator, James V of Scotland, Galeazzo Alessi, Jerónimo Zurita Y Castro, Adrianus Turnebus, Rodrigo de Quiroga
  4. Leuven Alumni Before 1968: Desiderius Erasmus, Gerardus Mercator, Pope Adrian Vi, Otto Von Habsburg, Michael Baius, Malachi Martin
  5. German Cartographers: Gerardus Mercator, Martin Waldseemüller, Sebastian Münster, Georg Joachim Rheticus, Hartmann Schedel, Johann Homann
  6. 1594 Deaths: Gerardus Mercator, Thomas Kyd, Giovanni Pierluigi Da Palestrina, Martin Frobisher, Philippe de Carteret I, Tintoretto
  7. Gerardus Mercator: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Ann T. Marsden, 2001
  8. Flemish Cartographers: Gerardus Mercator, Abraham Ortelius, Orthellius Family, Jodocus Hondius, Michael Van Langren, Gerard de Jode
  9. Mercator Atlas 1595: Atlas Sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura (Facsimile) by Gerardus Mercator, 1978
  10. Inscriptions des compartiments de la Carte de G. Mercator, intituleÌe: Ad usum Navigantium, editeÌe en 1569. by Gerardus. Mercator, 2010-04-27
  11. Atlas sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura (Latin Edition) by Gerardus Mercator, 2000-10
  12. LITERARUM LATINARUM, QUAS ITALICAS, CURSORIASQUE VOCANT SCRIBENDARUM RATIO. by Gerardus Mercator, 1970
  13. MERCATOR, GERHARD (1512-1594): An entry from Gale's <i>World of Earth Science</i>
  14. Introduction of the Mercator World Map Revolutionizes Nautical Navigation: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Ann T. Marsden, 2001

1. Famous Belgians - Gerardus Mercator
Gerardus Mercator. Gerardus Mercator (15121594), Latin name of GerhardKremer, was a Flemish cartographer, geographer and mathematician
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Tielemans/hp33marc.htm
Gerardus Mercator
Gerardus Mercator (1512-1594), Latin name of Gerhard Kremer, was a Flemish cartographer, geographer and mathematician best known for his mapping work, especially the Mercator projection, which used straight lines to indicate latitude and longitude. He was born in Rupelmonde. In 1537 he produced his first map. Mercator studied in Leuven, Belgium, under Gemma Frisius, and in 1552 he became a mapmaker and lecturer at the University of Dvisburg. His map of Europe (published in 1554) was the best of its kind for many decades. He produced a map of the British Isles in 1564 and in the same year was made court cosmographer to Duke William of Cleve. In 1568 he devised and produced a system of map projection, now called Mercator projection. This system represents meridians by parallel lines and parallels of latitude by straight lines intersecting the meridians at right angles. Only four copies of this map are known to exist. Mercator's great Atlas (begun in 1569), in which he sought to describe the creation and history of the world, was printed in its unfinished state by his son in 1595.

2. Biographies Info Science : Mercator Gerardus
Translate this page nouvelle recherche, mercator gerardus Mathématicien et géographe flamand(Rupelmonde, 1512 - 1594). Mercator, de son vrai nom Gerhard
http://www.infoscience.fr/histoire/biograph/biograph.php3?Titre=Mercator Gerardu

3. Gerardus Mercator - Encyclopedia Article From Britannica.com
Search Gerardus Mercator at Britannica.com for the Web's best sites, news and magazine articles, and related products.
http://www.britannica.com/seo/g/gerardus-mercator

4. Liste Des Biographies
Translate this page Marcello Marey Etienne Jules Marius Simon Maupertuis Pierre Louis Moreau de MaxwellJames Clerk Mendeleïev Dmitri Ivanovitch mercator gerardus Monge Gaspard
http://www.infoscience.fr/histoire/biograph/biograph_list.php3?Typ=M

5. Navis.gr - Millennial Minds
Back to Home Page, Millennial Minds. COLUMBUS Christopher, MAGELLAN Ferdinand, CaptainJames Cook, Vasco da Gama. mercator gerardus, MORSE Samuel, MARCONI Guglielmo,
http://www.navis.gr/men/remamen.htm
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M illennial M inds
COLUMBUS Christopher
MAGELLAN Ferdinand Captain James Cook Vasco da Gama ...
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6. Famous People
Translate this page Colin Mach Ernst Marconi Guglielmo Markov Andrei Maupertuis Pierre Maxwell JamesMayer Goeppert Meer Simon Meitner Lise mercator gerardus Michelson Albert
http://www.aldebaran.cz/famous/list_mno.html
M N O Maclaurin Colin
Mach Ernst

Marconi Guglielmo

Markov Andrei
... Odkazy

7. Gerardus Mercator
Gerardus mercator gerardus Mercator (15121594) Frontispiece to Mercator'sAtlas sive Cosmographicae, 1585-1595. Courtesy of the
http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blmercator.htm
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Gerardus Mercator
Gerardus Mercator (1512-1594)
Frontispiece to Mercator's Atlas sive Cosmographicae, 1585-1595.
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rare Book Division, Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection.
A map projection is used to portray all or part of the round Earth on a flat surface. This cannot be done without some distortion. For example, the basic Mercator projection is unique; it yields the only map on which a straight line drawn anywhere within its bounds shows a particular type of direction, but distances and areas are grossly distorted near the map's polar regions. It was introduced by Geradus Mercator in 1569. Gerardus Mercator
The Mercator projection was developed in 1569 by Gerardus Mercator as a navigation tool.

8. Gerardus Mercator - Wikipedia
Other languages Deutsch Nederlands. Gerardus Mercator. From Wikipedia,the free encyclopedia. Mercator.jpg. Gerardus Mercator (March
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerardus_Mercator
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Gerardus Mercator
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gerardus Mercator March 5 December 2 ) was a famous Flemish cartographer , remembered for the Mercator projection named after him. Born Gerard de Cremere (or Kremer) in Rupelmonde . "Mercator" is the Latinized form of his name. It means "seller" or "marketer". Educated in 's-Hertogenbosch and at the University of Louvain . He travelled extensively, which provoked a keen interest in geography . He returned to Louvain and worked with Gemma Frisius and Gaspar Myrica . They worked together from to to construct a terrestrial globe . Later, Mercator produced a map of

9. Gerardus Mercator - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
Friends of Acapedia Gerardus Mercator. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.Mercator.jpg. Gerardus Mercator (March 5, 1512 December
http://acapedia.org/aca/Gerardus_Mercator
var srl33t_id = '4200';

10. Renaissance To Modern
Gerardus Mercator Mercator, Gerardus Gerhard Kremer mercator gerardus GerardusMercator Mercator projection Gerardus Mercator, Biography of and his Map
http://members.aol.com/TeacherNet/Ren.html
Renaissance to Modern
The gorgeous photo of the Longleat House in Wiltshire, is shown courtesy of Mr. Lester at Tulane: Period and Style for Designers, I and II.
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Medieval, Renaissance, Reformation: Western Civilization

11. Mercator
Gerardus Mercator. The Mercator projection takes its name from GerardusMercator, a 16thCentury Dutch mapmaker who devised a flat
http://octopus.gma.org/surfing/imaging/mercator.html
Gerardus Mercator
The Mercator projection takes its name from Gerardus Mercator, a 16th-Century Dutch mapmaker who devised a flat map that represents latitude and longitude as perpendicular lines. While this particular map projection suffers from making the North and South Poles vastly larger than they actually are, it does offer sailors the practical opportunity to chart an accurate course by drawing straight lines on a map.

12. Walking Tree Press
mercator gerardus Mercator, 1512 1594. Considered by many to be thegreatest cartographer of early modern times, Gerardus Mercator
http://www.walkingtree.com/mercator.html
MERCATOR
Gerardus Mercator, 1512 - 1594 Considered by many to be the greatest cartographer of early modern times, Gerardus Mercator was born Gerhard Kremer of German parents in the town of Rapelmonde near Antwerp on March 5, 1512. Like many other intellectuals of his time, very early in his life he Latinized his German name, which meant 'merchant,' and changed it to the name by which we know him. Mercator means 'world trader.'
Mercator was one of the first mapmakers to cut up maps and bind them inside boards, later coining the term 'atlas' to refer to such collections of maps. He is best-known to us today for his celebrated cylindrical world map projection, first used in 1569, which enabled navigators to plot a long course in straight lines. One of the most revolutionary inventions in the history of cartography, Mercator's projection has greatly influenced our image of the world.
Contact us at post@walkingtree.com

13. Hamburgisches UB, JS 111
Translate this page Postmodum vero accidit, quod prenominatus mercator gerardus venit in civitatem dictamSlu o z, et inveniens ibi in plateis unum virum Anglicum, quem impeciit
http://www.rrz.uni-hamburg.de/hamburgisches_ub/quellen/js/js111.htm
Das virtuelle Hamburgische Urkundenbuch
in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Staatsarchiv der Freien und Hansestadt Hamburg
JS 111
Homepage Regestenliste
Regest:
A = olim StA HH, seit 1842 nicht mehr vorhanden. Beschreibung: Druck:
Hanserecesse, 1. Abt., Die Recesse und andere Akten der Hansetage von 1256 - 1430, bearbeitet von Karl Koppmann, Bd. 1, Leipzig 1870, S. 92 - 95 [danach hier], nach J. M. Lappenberg (Hrsg.), Urkundliche Geschichte, Bd. 2, S. 412. Honestis viris et discretis, proconsulibus et consulibus civitatis Honborgh, litera presentetur.
Honestis viris et morum virtutibus eruditis, proconsulibus et consulibus civitatis Honborgh, aldermanni Theutonicorum omnesque mercatores regis Romanorum de Almania Brugis exsistentes, cum omni integritate amicicie et honoris as eorum beneplacita benevolos et paratos. Circumspectioni vestre presentibus duximus enodandum, quod hoc anno ipso die Ascensionis Domini alias preteriti venit quidam cogge sive navis magna de Gripeswolde ad partes Flandrie ad terminum, ad quem naves ibidem solent convenire, dictum vulgariter in dat Swen, in quo quidem coggone erat unus mercator de Gripeswolde, nomine Gerardus Robenoghe. Et obviaverunt illi quaedam naves de Anglia exsistentes et de partibus Flandrie venientes ex termino predicto et eadem die, et reduxerunt dictum coggonem secum ad mare, et spoliaverunt eundem omnis bonis inhabitis, eisdem placitis et habere volentibus a) et postmodum dimiserunt coggonem predictum. Deinde Fransoni supervenientes ad se receperunt coggonem sepedictum cum omnibus bonis supermansis

14. Mercator, Gerardus [Gerhard Kremer]
First map maker to ever use latitude and longitude to make maps for navigating the seas is profiled by this science resource. Catalog of the Scientific Community. mercator, gerardus Gerhard Kremer
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/mercator_ger.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Mercator, Gerardus [Gerhard Kremer]
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Rupelmonde, Flanders, 5 Mar 1512
Died: Duisberg, Germany, 2 Dec 1594
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Artisan, Cleric
His father was a poor shoemaker. However, Mercator was reared by an uncle, who was an affluent ecclesiastic.
The uncle's financial status was the one that determined
Mercator's circumstances.
3. Nationality
Birth: Rupelmonde, Flanders
Career: Germany
Death: Duisberg, Germany
4. Education
Schooling: Louvain, M.A.
His uncle, Gisbert Mercator, sent him to school at 'sHertogenbosch at the House of the Bretheren of the Common Life, probably as preparation to enter the priesthood.
1530, entered University of Louvain, principal studies were philosophy and theology. I assume B.A.
1532, M.A., Louvain. After graduation he studied mathematics and astronomy privately under Gemma Frisius, and acquired engraving skills.
5. Religion

15. Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica. mercator, gerardus. Encyclopædia Britannica Article
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=53380

16. New Life For A 400-Year-Old Atlas By Gerardus Mercator--An Interview With The Pu
Lost until recently, gerardus mercator's legendary 16thcentury Europe atlas is now published in English by famed 16-th century cartographer gerardus mercator (inventor of the mercator Projection, which allowed sailorsfor
http://www.frugalfun.com/mercator.html
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New Life for a 400-Year-Old Atlas by Gerardus MercatorAn Interview with the Publisher of the English-Language Edition Lost until recently, Gerardus Mercator's legendary 16th-century Europe atlas is now published in English. Below is an Interview with the Publisher of the English-Language Edition. by Shel Horowitz The Mercator Atlas of Europe is an amazing and unusual book. Its publisher describes it as, "The Mercator Atlas of Europe: 17 facsimile prints from a long- lost 16th-century atlas by Mercator and a richly illustrated large format book, enclosed in a linen portfolio and laminated slipcase." But that's only part of the story. This elegant volume not only includes a facsimile of an atlas by famed 16-th century cartographer Gerardus Mercator (inventor of the Mercator Projection, which allowed sailorsfor the first timeto plot a straight-line course on a map), but also contains several scholarly monographs, as well as numerous full-color ancient maps from Mercator, his sons, and many of his contemporaries. The maps representing the original atlas are presented as unbound, fold-out sheets, separated by country or region. Shel Horowitz, editor of Global Arts Review and Global Travel Review, talked with Liz Oakley of Walking Tree Press, the book's American publisher.

17. Information On Gerardus Mercator
This page provides free information about gerardus mercator he invented the mercator projection of maps of the globe (15121594) syn mercator, gerardus mercator, Gerhard Kremer
http://www.wkonline.com/d/Gerardus_Mercator.html
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Type it and go! 1 definition for Gerardus Mercator From WordNet (r) 1.7 Gerardus Mercator n : Flemish geographer who lived in Germany; he invented the Mercator projection of maps of the globe (1512-1594) [syn: Mercator Gerardus Mercator Gerhard Kremer You can find more information on Gerardus Mercator in these books: Atlas sive Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura Avg. Rating: (out of 5)
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18. Mercator_Gerardus
gerardus mercator. As a new name he chose mercator, the Latin for 'merchant'and gave himself the full name of gerardus mercator de Rupelmonde.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Mercator_Gerardus.html
Gerardus Mercator
Born: 5 March 1512 in Rupelmonde, Flanders (now Belgium)
Died: 2 Dec 1594 in Duisburg, Duchy of Cleves (now Germany)
Click the picture above
to see five larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Gerard Mercator 's parents were Hubert and Emerentia Kremer. Hubert Kremer worked the land and also was a cobbler, that is a shoemaker. Hubert and Emerentia were people of lowly status but Hubert had an brother Gisbert who had been educated at Louvain University and was a priest in Rupelmonde. It was in the hospice of St Johann in Rupelmonde, where Gisbert was a priest, that Gerard was born. He was the seventh child of Hubert and Emerentia who, a few weeks after the birth, returned to their home town of Gangelt. For the first five years of his life Gerard and his parents lived in difficult conditions in Gangelt. The family income was insufficient to provide for more than the basic needs of life and most of their diet consisted of bread for they could afford little else. Hubert had leased a house in Rupelmonde in 1511, shortly before Gerard's birth, and in 1518 they journeyed from Gangelt to Rupelmonde to begin a new life. Gerard began attending school in Rupelmonde shortly after the family came to live there. At school he studied Latin, religion and arithmetic. By the time he was seven years old he was able to speak and to read Latin fluently. Gisbert's influence meant that it was natural for Gerard and his brothers to aim at a career in the Church and indeed that was the route that his two eldest brothers took. Conditions in Rupelmonde began to deteriorate in the early 1520s, however, with huge increases in taxes to fund the war between the Habsburgs and France. The reformation, begun by Luther, escalated into revolution in 1525. The harsh times and the hard work that he put in to try to support his family took their toll on Hubert who died in 1526 or 1527. His brother Gisbert became Gerard's guardian.

19. Mercator_Gerardus
Biography of Gerard mercator (15121594) gerardus mercator. Born 5 March 1512 in Rupelmonde, Flanders (now Belgium)
http://www-groups.cs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Mercator_Gerardus.html
Gerardus Mercator
Born: 5 March 1512 in Rupelmonde, Flanders (now Belgium)
Died: 2 Dec 1594 in Duisburg, Duchy of Cleves (now Germany)
Click the picture above
to see five larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Gerard Mercator 's parents were Hubert and Emerentia Kremer. Hubert Kremer worked the land and also was a cobbler, that is a shoemaker. Hubert and Emerentia were people of lowly status but Hubert had an brother Gisbert who had been educated at Louvain University and was a priest in Rupelmonde. It was in the hospice of St Johann in Rupelmonde, where Gisbert was a priest, that Gerard was born. He was the seventh child of Hubert and Emerentia who, a few weeks after the birth, returned to their home town of Gangelt. For the first five years of his life Gerard and his parents lived in difficult conditions in Gangelt. The family income was insufficient to provide for more than the basic needs of life and most of their diet consisted of bread for they could afford little else. Hubert had leased a house in Rupelmonde in 1511, shortly before Gerard's birth, and in 1518 they journeyed from Gangelt to Rupelmonde to begin a new life. Gerard began attending school in Rupelmonde shortly after the family came to live there. At school he studied Latin, religion and arithmetic. By the time he was seven years old he was able to speak and to read Latin fluently. Gisbert's influence meant that it was natural for Gerard and his brothers to aim at a career in the Church and indeed that was the route that his two eldest brothers took. Conditions in Rupelmonde began to deteriorate in the early 1520s, however, with huge increases in taxes to fund the war between the Habsburgs and France. The reformation, begun by Luther, escalated into revolution in 1525. The harsh times and the hard work that he put in to try to support his family took their toll on Hubert who died in 1526 or 1527. His brother Gisbert became Gerard's guardian.

20. Mercator_Nicolaus
There is some reason to confuse Nicolaus mercator with gerardus mercatorsince Nicolaus also worked on gerardus mercator's map projection.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Mercator_Nicolaus.html
Nicolaus Mercator
Born: 1620 in Eutin, Schleswig-Holstein, Denmark (now Germany)
Died: 14 Jan 1687 in Paris, France
Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Nicolaus Mercator entered the University of Rostock in 1632. He received a degree in 1641, then went to Leiden for a short period. After his return to Rostock in 1642 he was appointed to a post in the university. In 1648 Nicolaus moved to the University of Copenhagen but, after working there for six years, he had to leave when the university was closed due to the plague. From this time on things were not too good for him. He went to England in 1660 attempting to bring in some money and did some private tutoring. He was recognised in England however since he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1666. This was on the strength of a pendulum clock which Mercator designed to work at sea and thus be used to determine longitude. He also made measurements of air pressure for the Royal Society. In 1682 he moved to France, this time with a specific position, namely to design the waterworks at Versailles.

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