Claes Janszoon Visscher (1587 – 19 June 1652) was a Dutch Golden Age draughtsman, engraver, mapmaker, and publisher.
Biography
Visscher, who was born and died in Amsterdam, was also known as Nicolas Joannes Piscator[1] or Nicolas Joannis Visscher II, after his father who lived ca. 1550–1612.[2] He learned the art of etching and printing from his father, and helped grow the family printing and mapmaking business to one of the largest in his time. It was a family business; his son Nicolaes Visscher I (1618–1679), and his grandson Nicolaes Visscher II (1649–1702) were also mapmakers in Amsterdam on the Kalverstraat.[3] The times were with the Visschers for other reasons; due to the Protestant reformation, the older Bibles with their "Roman Catholic" illustrations were seen as outdated and apocryphal, but to liven up the new Protestant Bibles for the less well-read clergy, the Visschers produced illustrated maps and even landscapes of the places in the Bible. This became a very successful family business, with collaboration with many respected draughtsmen of the day. A new translation of the Bible was underway in the Netherlands, and until then, the new German translation done by Johannes Piscator, published in 1602–1604, was translated into Dutch.[4] Though probably not a relative, his Bible translation was accepted by the Dutch Staten-General in 1602, which only lent more publicity and authenticity to the "Fisher" name.
The trademark of the Visschers was a fisherman, after their name (thus the Latin nickname Piscator). A small fisherman would be strategically placed somewhere near water. If the subject was a landscape without a stream or pond, then often a figure walking with a fishing rod can be seen. Their map plates were reused for a century by other printers who unknowingly copied the entire plates, including the tell-tale fishermen. Observant scholars are thus able to trace the provenance of Bibles, maps, and landscapes from these signs.
Aside from Bibles, Claes Visscher II primarily etched and published landscapes, portraits, and maps. He etched over 200 plates and his maps included elaborate original borders. Visscher died in 1652.[5] He was a publisher of prints by Esaias van de Velde, and David Vinckboons, and was a big influence on Roelant Roghman[6] and on his sister Geertruyd.[7]
Gallery
-
Detail of a map from 1630 with the "Fisher logo". The signature is both the fisherman drawing and the text "by C.J.Visscher in the Kalverstraet in Amsterdam.
-
Claes Jansz Visscher - detail Kerck tot Sloten.png
Fisher added to print of drawing by Geertruydt Roghman.
-
-
1618 map of Paris by Claes Janszoon Visscher
-
1652 world map by Claes Janszoon Visscher
References
External links
|
People |
|
|
Notable works |
- Itinerario (1596 book)
- Historia Naturalis Brasiliae (1648 book)
- An embassy from the East-India Company of the United Provinces (1665 book)
- Illustrations of Japan (book)
- Oud en Nieuw Oost-Indiën (1724 book)
- Leo Belgicus
- Mercator's 1569 World Map
- Atlas Cosmographicae (Mercator's 1596 World Atlas)
- Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (Theatre of the Orb of the World, 1570)
- Maris Pacifici (1589)
- Speculum Orbis Terrarum (1578)
- Mercator-Hondius Atlas
- Atlas Blaeu-Van der Hem
- Atlas Maior
- Atlas van Loon
- Spieghel der Zeevaerdt (Mariner's Mirror)
- Atlas de Wit
- Atlas Minor
- Atlas Novus
- Beudeker Collection
- Blaeu Atlas of Scotland
- Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht
- Klencke Atlas
- Speculum Orbis Terrae (1593)
- Civitates Orbis Terrarum (1572–1618)
- Tasman Map (c. 1644)
- Plenilunii Lumina Austriaca Philippica (Van Langren's map of the Moon, 1645)
- Harmonia Macrocosmica
- Dutch-created constellations (include: Apus, Camelopardalis, Chamaeleon, Cancer Minor, Columba, Crux, Dorado, Gallus, Grus, Hydrus, Indus, Jordanus, Monoceros, Musca / Apis, Musca Borealis / Apes, Phoenix, Tigris, Triangulum Australe, Tucana, Volans)
|
Main centres |
|
General |
|
Related |
- Search for the Northeast Passage
- Search for the Northwest Passage
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Svalbard (cartography of Svalbard/Spitsbergen)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Jan Mayen (cartography of Jan Mayen)
- European exploration and mapping of Southern Africa
- Search for the Great Southern Land/Great Unknown South Land (Terra Australis Nondum Cognita/Terra Australis Incognita)
- European maritime exploration of Australia (Janszoon voyage of 1605–06, Brouwer Route, Hartog's Plate, Eendrachtsland, Anthoonij van Diemens Landt, Nova Hollandia/Nieuw Holland)
- European land exploration of Australia
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Australasia (cartography of Australasia)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Nova Hollandia (cartography of Australia / New Holland)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Tasmania/Van Diemen's Land (cartography of Tasmania)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of the Australian continent (cartography of the Australian continent)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of the Australian mainland (cartography of the Australian mainland)
- Dutch discovery, exploration and mapping of Nova Zeelandia (cartography of New Zealand / Nova Zeelandia)
- Dutch exploration and mapping of Taiwan/Formosa (cartography of Taiwan/Formosa)
- Dutch exploration and mapping of the East Indies (cartography of the East Indies)
- Dutch exploration and mapping of Southern Africa (cartography of Southern Africa)
- Dutch exploration and mapping of South Africa (cartography of South Africa)
- Dutch exploration and mapping of the Americas
- Dutch exploration and mapping of the Pacific
- Dutch discovery and exploration of Easter Island
- VOC cartography (cartography in the VOC World)
- WIC/GWIC cartography (cartography in the WIC/GWIC World)
- Dutch colonial cartography
- Science and technology in the Dutch Republic (Golden Age of Dutch science and technology)
|
Influences |
|
Influenced |
- History of cartography (First true atlas in the modern sense, 1570)
- History of geography (First undisputed non-Indigenous discovery, exploration and mapping of Australasia, including the Australian continent and New Zealand, excluding New Guinea, 1606–1646)
- History of geodesy and surveying (First published systematic uses of the triangulation method in modern surveying and mapmaking, 1533–1615)
- History of navigation (First published use of the Mercator projection for maritime navigation, 1569; Discovery of the Brouwer Route, 1611)
- History of hydrography (First printed nautical atlas in the modern sense, 1584)
- History of selenography / lunar cartography (First published scientific map of the Moon with a topographical nomenclature, 1645)
- History of uranography / celestial cartography (First documented systematic mapping of the far southern sky, 1595–1599)
- History of astronomy (88 modern constellations / IAU-recognized constellations)
- History of cosmography
|
Depictions in art1 |
|
Field of studies |
- Notable scholars
- Bibliography
- Atlantes Neerlandici (book)
- Monumenta Cartographica Neerlandica (book)
- Grote Atlas van de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (book)
- Grote Atlas van de West-Indische Compagnie (book)
- Caert-Thresoor: Tijdschrift voor de Geschiedenis van de Kartografie (journal)
- Explokart (research programme at Utrecht University)
- Brussels Map Circle (previously the Brussels International Map Collectors' Circle)
- Australia on the Map (history and heritage division of the Australasian Hydrographic Society)
|
|
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.