Bland arbeten.
Encyclopédie ou dictionnaire universel raisonné des connaissances humaines.
Född 1716 10/6 på Djursholms sätesgård i Danderyds sn (Sthlm), död 1784 4/4 på Ältomta i Tensta sn (Upps.).
Kapten vid Amiralitetet och Ostindiska kompaniet. Kopparstickare. Son av befallningsmannen Gustaf E. och Ebba Catharina Fast. Ledamot av Vetenskapsakademien 1761.
Bland arbeten.
C. G. EKEBERG, Ostindisk resa, åren 1770 och 1771, Sthlm 1773: Charta öfver Gap Godt Hopp, kpst., och Utsigt af Bay Fals, kpst.
Hultmark, 1944.
fl. 1785-1809.
Holländsk kartograf i slutet av 1700-talet. Han gav 1792 ut en atlas med 36 kartor, en stor del av dessa var nyutgåvor av äldre kartografers arbeten.
A bookseller and publisher who reproduced a small number of maps copied from his predecessors.
Phillips.
Ingermanlandiae – Homanns Erben 1734
'Neapolis Regnum...' - Lotter ca 1770.
Keere, Pieter van den [Kaerius, Petrus]
Biografiska uppgifter:1571-c. 1646.
Pieter van den Keere was one of a number of refugees who fled from religious persecution in the Low Countries between the years 1570 and 1 590. He moved to London in 1584 with his sister who married Jodocus Hondius, also a refugee there, and through Hondius he undoubtedly learned his skills as an engraver and cartographer. In the course of a long working life he engraved a large number of individual maps for prominent cartographers of the day but he also produced an Atlas of the Netherlands (1617-22) and county maps of the British Isles which have become known as Miniature Speeds, a misnomer which calls for some explanation.
In about 1599 he engraved plates for 44 maps of the English and Welsh counties, the regions of Scotland and the Irish provinces. The English maps were based on Saxton, the Scottish on Ortelius and the Irish on the famous map by Boazio. These maps were not published at once in book form but there is evidence which suggests a date of issue (in Amsterdam) between 1605 and 1610 although at least one authority believes they existed only in proof form until 1617 when Willem Blaeu issued them with a Latin edition of Camden's Britannia. At this stage two maps were added, one of the British Isles and the other of Yorkshire, the latter derived from Saxton. To confuse things further the title page of this edition is signed 'Guilielmus noster Janssonius', which is the Latinized form of Blaeu's name commonly used up to 1619.
At some time after this the plates came into the possession of Speed's publishers, George Humble, who in 1627, the year in which he published a major edition of Speed's Atlas, also issued the Keere maps as a pocket edition. For these he used the descriptive texts of the larger Speed maps and thereafter they were known as Miniature Speeds. In fact, of the 63 maps in the Atlas, 40 were from the original van den Keere plates, reworked, 16 were reduced from Speed and 7 were additional. The publication was very popular and there were further re-issues up to 1676.