He was born on 20 April 1726 in Lunéville. Between 1771 and 1778, Ferraris was commissioned by Empress Maria Theresa and Emperor Joseph II to create a detailed Carte-de-Cabinet of the Austrian Netherlands.[1] The maps were made on a scale 1:11,520,[2] and formed a collection of 275 hand-coloured and hand-drawn maps 0,90 × 1,40 m each. These were accompanied by twelve volumes of handwritten commentaries relating to topics of economic and military interest (rivers, bridges, forests, possibilities for military camps, etc.).[citation needed]
In 1777 and 1778,[citation needed] Ferraris issued a reduced version of the cabinet maps with a scale of 1:86,400 in 25 maps, issued for commercial sale ("carte marchande").[4]
The Ferraris maps were used to a great extent during the military operations of the French Revolutionary Wars and during the Napoleonic Wars. When the French invaded in 1792–1793, they took 400 copies of the map from a Brussels printer and seller. In 1794, they took the engraving plates to France so they could produce more maps for their own use and to prevent any enemy from acquiring copies. Louis Capitaine, a French engineer, copied it and produced 2 versions: one with 69 sheets and a smaller-scale version on six sheets, which was sold commercially. During the Waterloo Campaign, the Duke of Wellington had a copy of the six-sheet version, as it is probable that Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher also had a copy of the six-sheet version. Napoleon carried a copy of the full-scale Capitaine map while Gourgaud, an aide-de-camp to Napoleon, carried a copy of the Ferraris map. Both versions were very similar and about 40 years out of date (for instance, coal mines with their supporting infrastructure, which had developed around Charleroi in the interval between the map's drafting and 1815, were missing).[5]
Honours
The Brussels-based Flemish government building, housing parts of the Flemish ministry of Environment, Nature and Energy and the Flemish Ministry of Mobility and Public Works is named Graaf de Ferrarisgebouw after him.[6]