Martinus or Maarten van den Enden or van den Eynde[1] (30 October 1605, in Antwerp – after 20 June 1654) was a Flemish printer, publisher, bookseller and art dealer who was active in Antwerp in the early 17th century. He was a leading publisher of art works and was the first publisher of Anthony van Dyck's Icones Principum Virorum (referred to as the Iconographie), a series of prints with half-length portraits of eminent contemporaries.[2] By the middle of the 17th century he was a leading publisher of prints in Antwerp, along with Frans van den Wyngaerde, Gillis Hendricx and Joannes Meyssens.[3]
^Martinus van den Enden at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
^Maarten van den Enden at the British Museum
^Frans van den Wyngaerde at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
and 8 Related for: Martinus van den Enden the Elder information
Franciscus vandenEnden, in later life also known as 'Affinius' (Latinized form of 'VandenEnden') (c. 5 February 1602 – 27 November 1674) was a Flemish...
By the middle of the 17th century vanden Wyngaerde had become a leading publisher of prints in Antwerp, along with MartinusvandenEndentheElder, Gillis...
Clara van den Enden, the sister or daughter of the publisher MartinusvandenEndentheElder. His second wife died around 1653. It is not clear when and...
published by MartinusvandenEndentheElder in Antwerp. Cornelis de Wael - 19th and 20th Century Painters (Antwerp, 1592 – Rome, 1667) at the National Gallery...
the request of the publisher MartinusvandenEnden. This is the case with the Christ before Caiaphas engraved by Marinus Robyn van der Goes and the Christ...