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[[File:Cometa qui anno Christi 1742 apparuit ex observationibus a die 13 Marty usque ad 15 Aprilis by Matthäus Seutter.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Hand-colored [[engraving]] of text and celestial sphere by Matthäus Seutter, ca. 1742]]
[[File:Cometa qui anno Christi 1742 apparuit ex observationibus a die 13 Marty usque ad 15 Aprilis by Matthäus Seutter.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Hand-colored [[engraving]] of text and celestial sphere by Matthäus Seutter, ca. 1742]]
'''Georg Matthäus Seutter''' (1647–1756) was one of the most important and prolific [[Germany|German]] [[map]] [[publisher]]s of the 18th century.
'''Georg Matthäus Seutter''' (1647–1756) was one of the most important and prolific [[Germany|German]] [[map]] [[publisher]]s of the 18th century.

Revision as of 18:35, 21 June 2012

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Hand-colored engraving of text and celestial sphere by Matthäus Seutter, ca. 1742

Georg Matthäus Seutter (1647–1756) was one of the most important and prolific German map publishers of the 18th century.

Seutter started his career as an apprentice brewer. Apparently uninspired by the beer business, Seutter left his apprenticeship and moved to Nuremberg where he apprenticed as an engraver under the tutelage of the prominent J. B. Homann. Sometime in the early 18th century Seutter left Homann to establish his own independent cartographic publishing firm in Augsburg. Though he struggled in the early years of his independence, Seutter’s engraving skill and commitment to diversified map production eventually gained him a substantial following. Most of Seutter’s maps were heavily based upon, if not copies of, earlier work done by the Homann and Delisle firms.[citation needed] By 1732 Seutter was one of the most prolific publishers of his time and was honored by the German Emperor Charles VI with the title of “Imperial Geographer”. Suetter continued to publish until his death, at the height of his career, in 1757.

The Seutter firm continued under Seutter’s wastrel son Albrecht Carl until his death in 1762. Following Albrecht’s death, the firm was divided between the established Probst firm and the emerging firm of Tobias Conrad Lotter. Lotter, Matthäus Seutter’s son in law, was a master engraver and worked on behalf of the Seutter firm. Lotter would eventually become one of the most prominent cartographers of his day.

[1]==References== Ritter, M. Seutter, Probst and Lotter: An Eighteenth-Century Map Publishing House in Germany., "Imago Mundi", Vol. 53, (2001), pp. 130–135.)

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