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Gilles Robert de Vaugondy Gilles Robert de Vaugondy (1688–1766) was a French geographer and cartographer.
De Vaugondy was born in 1688 and at some point obtained the position of court geographer to Louis XV. Gilles Robert was a grandson of the cartographer Nicolas Sanson, from whom he inherited, among other things, copper engravings of maps.[1]
No cartographic products by De Vaugondy are known, other than those which he produced together with his son Didier Robert de Vaugondy. They were considered leading French cartographers for a large part of the eighteenth century.[2] They produced maps, globes and in 1757 their Atlas universel. Where possible this was based on the latest map material produced by surveyors. They could also call on the French Navy for materials.[3] The De Vaugondys calculated accurate latitude and longitude for many points on their maps.
In 1760 his son succeeded him as court geographer. Gilles Robert died in 1766.