Early maps of Iceland are compelling, they are often embellished with sea monsters and pictorials. Modern maps of the country are equally interesting because of the unique shape and terrain of the island. Iceland, with its glaciers and volcanoes, is accurately nicknamed the “Land of Fire and Ice.” The maps of Iceland featured in this post are dated from the 16th to the 20th centuries.
In 1539 the Swedish cartographer Olaus Magnus created the Carta Marina. The Carta Marina was the first detailed map of Scandinavia, with more place-names than earlier maps of the region. Many of the sea monsters shown on later maps of Iceland were derived from Magnus’s map. An image of a 1572 edition of the Carta Marina is featured below.
The map below was published in the Theatrum Orbis Terrarum by Abraham Ortelius. The map was created by the Icelandic cartographer, mathematician, and clergyman Bishop Gudbrandur Thorlaksson. Thorlaksson, pictured above, served as the Bishop of Holar from 1570 to 1627. The historian and author Halldór Hermannsson made the following statement about Gudbrandur Thorlaksson in his book Two cartographers, Guðbrandur Thorláksson and Thórðour Thorláksson:
Bishop Thorlaksson was the first to determine scientifically the latitude of any place in Iceland.
Illustrations on the map show polar bears floating on icebergs, Mount Hekla erupting, and sea monsters. Descriptions of the sea monsters are provided on the back. The following is a description of the whale named The Steipereidur:
The Steipereidur, the tamest of whales; it fights other whales on behalf of fishermen. Public laws forbid anyone to harm it. It is a hundred cubits long.
This map was included in an atlas published by the Venetian cartographer Giovanni Francesco Camocio. The atlas, titled Insole Famose Porti… includes a collection of maps related to the Ottoman-Venetian War, which lasted from 1570 to 1573. In addition to maps of the principal islands of the Mediterranean, the atlas also includes maps of England and Ireland and the map of Iceland shown below.
The map of Iceland below is from a world atlas titled Hand-boeck : of Cort Begrijp der Caerten. The atlas was printed in 1609 by the Dutch publisher and bookseller Barent Langenes.
The following map was created by the Venetian mapmaker Tomaso Porcacchi. The map is from Porcacchi’s pocket size atlas L’isole piv Famos del Mondo. The atlas was published in several editions from 1572 to 1686.
This map was published by Willem Janszoon Blaeu in Le Theatre du Monde, ou, Novvel Atlas. The Dutch cartographer Joris Carolus created the map. During the Eighty Years War Joris Carolus was severely injured at the Siege of Ostend. He later became a noted cartographer, explorer, and author of a book on navigational charts and sailing directions.
The Icelandic geographer and geologist Thorvaldur Thoroddsen explored the topography of Iceland from 1881 to 1898. The map below was published in 1905. It was based on Thoroddsen’s 17 years of research. The uninhabited areas of Iceland were not thoroughly surveyed until the 19th century. Thorvaldur Thoroddsen wrote the following statement in an article that he prepared for the Geographical Journal:
That Iceland has never previously been thoroughly examined is due to a variety of causes, its vast extent, its peculiar physical features, the sparse population, the unfavorable climatic conditions, the limited portion of the year during which it is possible to carry on investigations.
This map was made by the Icelandic geologist Helgi Pjeturss in 1908. In addition to his geological research, Dr. Pjeturss was also active in the study of astrobiology, a field of study that examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life.
Shown above is a Landsat satellite image of the northern coast of Iceland. The image, known as the Icelandic Tiger, was published as part of an Earth as Art program by the Earth Resources Observation and Science Center at USGS. The Icelandic Tiger is part of a collection that is exhibited in the hallway outside of the Geography and Map Division. The exhibit features Landsat images of places throughout the world.
I have featured a few of the maps of Iceland from the collections of the Library of Congress. There are many others that I would like to include; however, I am unable to in a short blog post. The sources listed below provide more information about the cartographic history of Iceland.
Learn More:
Learn more about antique maps of Iceland in Maps of Iceland : antique maps of Iceland, 1482 to 1850 by Reynir Finndal Gretarsson.
Read additional information about the cartographic history of Iceland and view maps dated from 1544 to 1951 on a site prepared by the National and University Library of Iceland here.
Comments (2)
Very cool.
Your gift of wisdom, of history, is appreciated very much! Thank you!