Johannes Enschedé (1708-1780)

Johannes Enschedé (10 July 1708 in Haarlem 21 October 1780 in Haarlem) was a Dutch printer, owner of Royal Joh. Enschedé and collector.[1]

Johannes Enschedé aged 60, by Cornelis van Noorde

Enschedé belonged to the family that owned the company currently known as Royal Joh. Enschedé (founded by Izaak Enschedé)[2] and owned the company.

On 23 December 1736 he married Helena Hoefnagel (Haarlem 12 December 1714 Haarlem 20 July 1781) daughter of Adriaan Hoefnagel and Sara Brinckhorst. Johannes had three sons, which joined him in the printing business: Johannes, Jacobus and Abraham. Johannes Enschedé collected old books, and was one of the people who tried to defend the opinion that the Haarlem book printer Coster was the original inventor of the bookprinting. He was member of Teylers Tweede Genootschap (Teylers Second or Scientific Society) from the founding in 1778 until his death.

References and footnotes

gollark: "If a result is returned it is not guaranteed to correspond to the computer's actual coordinates as shown by (for example) F3, as available GPS hosts may use alternative coordinate systems, or be misconfigured or malicious, but in most cases the results should be accurate."
gollark: https://wiki.computercraft.cc/Gps.locate
gollark: I added a warning to the gps.locate page about GPS reliability.
gollark: No I have not.
gollark: You can exploit real-world GPS/GNSS too, which is really cool. With SDRs it's not even that expensive!
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.