Jean-Baptiste Gramaye
Jean-Baptiste Gramaye was an early modern historian of the Southern Netherlands.
He studied law and became a professor at Leuven University. Later he was employed as court historian by Albert VII, Archduke of Austria. For five months in 1619 he was a prisoner in Barbary, an experience that changed the focus of his scholarship from the Low Countries to Africa.Works
- Andromede Belgica dicta Alberto Austriaco, Isabellae Clarae Eugeniae acta a Falconis alumnis, tertio ab inauguratis principibus die
- Asia, sive historia universalis Asiaticarum gentium et rerum domi forisque gestarum
- Gallo-Brabantia
- Bruxella cum suo comitatu
- Thenae et Brabantia ultra velpam quae olim Hasbaniae pars
- Arscotum Ducatus cum suis Baronatibus
- Historia Brabantica
- Antverpiae antiquitates
- Antiquitates illustrissimi ducatus Brabantiae
- Taxandria
- Flandria Franca
- Rerum Duacensium Libri Tres
- Africae illustratae libri decem
- Respublica Namurcensis, Hannoniae et Lutsenburgensis
- Antiquitates belgicae, published posthumously, 1708.