
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It’s the map of the world we all recognise today, but until Gerard Mercator came up with his elegant solution in 1569, the question of how to turn the earth’s three dimensional sphere into a flat image had long flummoxed mapmakers. Nearly 500 years later, Mercator’s model is still the standard for modern mapmaking. What makes it so enduring?
Joining Rajan Datar to discuss the man who defined the way we see the world are geographer and explorer Nicholas Crane, philosopher Emily Thomas and professor of cartography Philippe De Maeyer.
Illustration: Portrait of Gerard Mercator, Flemish cartographer (born Gerard de Kremer, 1512 - 1594). Image credit: Stock Montage/Getty Images
By BBC World Service4.7
265265 ratings
It’s the map of the world we all recognise today, but until Gerard Mercator came up with his elegant solution in 1569, the question of how to turn the earth’s three dimensional sphere into a flat image had long flummoxed mapmakers. Nearly 500 years later, Mercator’s model is still the standard for modern mapmaking. What makes it so enduring?
Joining Rajan Datar to discuss the man who defined the way we see the world are geographer and explorer Nicholas Crane, philosopher Emily Thomas and professor of cartography Philippe De Maeyer.
Illustration: Portrait of Gerard Mercator, Flemish cartographer (born Gerard de Kremer, 1512 - 1594). Image credit: Stock Montage/Getty Images

7,695 Listeners

373 Listeners

879 Listeners

1,050 Listeners

5,548 Listeners

1,796 Listeners

3,238 Listeners

956 Listeners

870 Listeners

608 Listeners

281 Listeners

298 Listeners

1,767 Listeners

1,034 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

496 Listeners

309 Listeners

331 Listeners

164 Listeners

363 Listeners

3,176 Listeners

730 Listeners

1,598 Listeners