The year 1539 is an important one in the cartographic history of the North. In this year Olaus Magnus, a Swedish ecclesiastic, published his map of the Northern Countries, Carta Marina, which was printed on nine sheets and ranked among the largest maps yet made. When we start looking around for likely sources or models for Olaus' map, we run into a number of problems. He had travelled widely in Sweden and visited Norway and thus was far better informed about this region than his predecessors, as is amply proved by the superiority of his map to all previous maps of Scandinavia. When we come to the shape of Iceland it has been suggested that Olaus might have spoken to Iceland voyagers in the seaports of Northern Germany and the Netherlands, from them he could have picked up knowledge of many sorts. The ocean in Carta Marina is provided with number of whales, monsters and ships but inland we see pictures from national life and nature. Olaus' version of Iceland was quick to become the dominant one and was closely followed by many cartographers throughout the 16th century and into the 17th.
The German Sebastian Münster was one of the first cartographers to follow Olaus' example. In his updated edition of Ptolemy's Geographia and in his most famous book, Cosmographia, we find a map of the Northern countries loosely based on Carta Marina. It is rather unsightly done and the only place-name is Heckl'berg (Hekla). The older map shown here is from an edition of Geographia (1545) with a name in Latin, Septentrionales regiones, but the younger one is from Cosmographia with a long name in German: Gemeine beschreibung aller Mittnächtigen Länder/ Schweden/ Gothen/ Nordwegien/ Deñmarck/ rc.