![]() Although sales of de Jode’s work were less than ideal, the work was evidently held in high regard, with several contemporary works citing its importance alongside the atlases of Mercator and Ortelius. Ortelius’ cunning plan would seem to have worked, as Plantin’s records suggest that very few copies were actually sold. De Jode did not gain all the necessary approbations until 1577, some seven years after the publication of the ‘Theatrum’, the first copies of the ‘Speculum’ being sold at Plantin’s shop in 1579. It has been suggested that Ortelius was responsible for delaying the publication of de Jode’s work, by using his extensive contacts to prevent de Jode’s atlas being granted the necessary approbations (or privileges), as Ortelius wished to protect his own work. The two, who made their living partly as map-sellers, were competitors and apparently not always on good terms. The ‘Speculum Orbis Terrarum’ was intended as competition for Abraham Ortelius’ ‘Theatrum Orbis Terrarum’. Gerard de Jode (1509–1591) was a cartographer and publisher. It also demonstrated the insignificance of humanity’s pursuit of earthly ambitions compared to the world (Brotton). Lutheran theologians saw the heart as the seat of human emotion, and thus central to understanding scripture. The world as heart was a Renaissance emblem embodying the effect of inner emotions on the physical world, but in the early sixteenth century it developed into a distinctly reformist symbol. De Jode was a Calvinist in Antwerp, at a time when the city and the Low Countries were caught in a violent struggle between the Spanish Catholic monarchy and the Protestant uprisings of the Reformation (Veldman). The projection had symbolic as well as practical uses. This example was prepared for his atlas, ‘Speculum Orbis Terrae’, in 1578.ĭe Jode’s map is drawn on a cordiform (or heart-shaped) projection, which was developed at the beginning of the sixteenth century as a reaction to the European discovery of the Americas, and the need for a more effective method of showing the surface of the newly enlarged world on a flat surface. De Jode’s world map was first published separately as ‘Nova Totius Terrarum Orbis Descriptio’ in 1571.
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