Bosatlas


The Bosatlas is a Dutch atlas. Used in most schools, it remains the best selling atlas in the Netherlands.

History

The atlas was started by :nl:Pieter Roelf Bos|Pieter Roelf Bos, a Groningen teacher. The first atlas was published in 1877 with the name Bos' Schoolatlas der geheele aarde . Later editions were named Bosatlas. Bos continued to look after the production of the atlas until his death in 1902: his final production was the 15th edition. The last of his successors to take individual responsibility for the Atlas was F.J.Ormeling. Since 1981 responsibility for the atlas has been collectively attributed and it is the publisher's name that has been highlighted in the atlas and associated marketing material.
The reason for first publication was the introduction of geography in Dutch high schools. The maps were originally drawn by hand. The publisher was Jan Berend Wolters of Groningen, whose firm continues to publish the atlas as :nl:Noordhoff Uitgevers|Wolters-Noordhoff.

Variants

Different versions of the atlas are published, as follows.
In November 2009, a Frisian edition, De Bosatlas van Fryslân was published, completely dedicated to the Dutch province of Friesland, with historical and modern maps, aerophotography, background information on hundreds of topics and a complete set of topographical maps, scale.

Non-Dutch editions

Editions of the atlas have also been published in Belgium, France, Sweden and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The standard "Grote Bosatlas", although a world atlas, provides a greatly extended level of detail and variety in respect of the Netherlands. With the non-Dutch editions this greater level of national focus is switched away from the Netherlands in favour of the country for which the edition has been prepared.