In 1601, Zangrius engraved portraits of Infante Isabella, her husband Archduke Albrecht Habsburg, the governor of the Low Countries, and Justus Lipsius.
The depictions of womanly costumes were engraved based on the tables created by Julius Goltzius, which can be found in the following publication: Jean Jacques Boissard, Habitvs Variarvm Orbis gentium.
The historical background for the coming into existence of the armorial chart was the 6 March 1598 edict of the Spanish king Philip II who detached the Low Countries in his testament from Spain and gave independence to the Netherlands on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter Infante Isabella to archduke Albrecht Habsburg who served as the governor of the province since 1596.
As Albrecht Habsburg died in 1621 without heirs, the country returned to the Spanish crown, as was stated in the treaty.
F. J. van Ettro maintained: "Particularly noteworthy about this chart is, that the metals gold and silver, and the colours red, blue, green and black, are rendered according to the same system of hatching by means of dots and stripes, as is being used to this day in modern heraldry" (op.
Thus, it almost seems evident that Petra Sancta or de la Colombière modeled their systems after Zangrius' hatching table.
Albvm Amicorvm Habitibvs Mvliervm Omniv[m] Natoinv[m] Evropae, tvm Tabvlis as Scvtis Vacvis in aes Incisis Adonatvm, Vt quisque et sÿmbola et insignia sua gentilitia in ÿs depingi commode curare possit; Lovanii Apud Ioannem Baptistam Zangrium.