Background
Fligely was born in Janów Lubelski, Galicia, then part of the Duchy of Warsaw.
Fligely was born in Janów Lubelski, Galicia, then part of the Duchy of Warsaw.
Theresian Military Academy.
In 1853 he was appointed executive director of the k.k. institute of military geography. A pioneer in meridian arc measurement theory, Fligely provided for the triangulation of Hungary, Transylvania, and adjacent Wallachia, as well as for the creation of quality maps in the third land survey of the Austro-Hungarian lands from 1869 onwards. He decisively promoted modern cartography by the application of photogravure plates and the photographic reproduction of maps.
Fligely retired in 1872 and died in Vienna.
The northernmost point in Europe, Cape Fligely, reached by the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition in 1874, was named in his honour.