Gemma Frisius
He was born in Dokkum, Friesland (present-day Netherlands) of poor parents, who died when he
was young. He moved to Groningen and studied at the University in Leuven beginning in 1525. He received
the degree of MD in 1536 and remained on the faculty of medicine in Leuven for the rest of his life. His oldest
son, Cornelius Gemma, edited a posthumous volume of his work and continued to work with Ptolemaic
astrological models.
While still a student, Frisius set up a workshop to produce globes and mathematical instruments.
He became noted for the quality and accuracy of his instruments, which were praised by Tycho Brahe, among
others. In 1533, he described for the first time the method of triangulation still used today in surveying. Twenty
years later, he was the first to describe how an accurate clock could be used to determine longitude. Jean-
Baptiste Morin (1583–1656) did not believe that Frisius' method for calculating longitude would work,
remarking, "I do not know if the Devil will succeed in making a longitude timekeeper but it is folly for man to
try."[2]
Frisius created or improved many instruments, including the cross-staff, the astrolabe and the
astronomical rings. His students included Gerardus Mercator (who became his collaborator), Johannes Stadius,
John Dee, Andreas Vesalius and Rembert Dodoens.
Gemma Frisius's 1533 diagram introducing the idea of triangulation into the science of surveying.
Having established a baseline, eg the cities of Brussels and Antwerp, the location of other cities, eg
Middelburg, Ghent etc, can be found by taking a compass direction from each end of the baseline,
and plotting where the two directions cross. Note that this was only a theoretical presentation of the
concept — because of hills etc, it is in fact actually impossible to see Middelburg from either Brussels
or Antwerp! Nevertheless, the figure soon became well known all across Europe.