![]() ![]() Variants on Mercator's arctic islands continued to appear in various forms well into the 17th century, until the discoveries of Spitzbergen and other Arctic islands began to disprove the speculation. ![]() The channel between the islands, possibly Mercator's interpretation of Davis Strait, was described as having violent currents. ![]() Two of those islands are visible here, one unnamed, and the other just north of Norway, labeled Pigmei hic habitant, for Mercator's assertion that it was the home of a race of female pygmies. It was this small projection, later refined in his 1595 Arctic map, that introduced Mercator's idea of four arctic islands surrounding an open Arctic sea, at the center of which was a great whirlpool. To rectify this, he included a polar projection as in inset on the map. When Mercator published his great wall map introducing the famous Mercator Projection in 1659, he recognized the essential problem with his map was that it massively distorted the polar regions. This is one of the earliest maps to illustrate Gerard Mercator's speculative Arctic Islands. Frisland continued to appear in many forms on maps until the 18th century, when it merged with speculations that Greenland was actually two islands separated by an undiscovered channel. There is debate about the origins of Friesland, with some speculating that it a mismapping of the southern part of Greenland and other suggesting it is a double mapping of Iceland. Frisland probably first appeared on the 1561 Zeno map, but was copied by numerous subsequent cartographers including, as here, Ortelius. The king of Estotiland, seeing that his guests sailed safely with the aid of an instrument (the compass), persuaded them to make a maritime expedition to another land to the south called 'Drogeo.' While Zeno's cartography was influential in the 16th and 17th centuries, modern scholarships suggests that Nicolo's work was mostly a fictional Venetian attempt to co-opt the achievements of the Genoese navigator, Christopher Columbus.ĭrawing from both the Olaus Magnus and Zeno, Ortelius here includes both Iceland and Friesland. The language that he spoke and his subjects shared no similarity to that of the Vikings. The king of this country possessed books written in Latin, which he did not understand. Most subsequent cartographers associated Estotiland with Labrador based upon Zeno's description, … the fishing vessel 'Frise' was blown westward by a storm, and arrived at a land named 'Estotiland,' whose inhabitants traded with 'Engroenelandt.' This country, 'Estotiland,' was very fertile, and had mountains inland. This is one of the few maps to depict Estotiland and Droegeo, both drawn from the narrative of the Zeno brothers, supposedly written in the 14th century, before Columbus, but actually published by the Venetian merchant and statesman Nicolo Zeno in 1561. The map covers the northern regions from the English Channel to the just south of the North Pole and from America to Russia, including England, Scandinavia, Finland, Denmark, Iceland, and Greenland, as well as parts of America (Estotiland), the apocryphal island of Friesland, and Mercator's speculative Arctic islands.Ĭartographically Ortelius drew from a number of interesting sources including Olaus Magnus's 1539 map of Scandinavia ( Carta marina et Descriptio Septentrionalium Terrarium) for Scandinavia and Iceland Nicolo Zeno's arctic map 1561 ( Septentrionalium Partium Nova Tabula) for Estotiland, Iceland, Greenland, Icaria, and Friesland Anthony Jenkinson's 1562 map of Russia to fill in the north coast of Russia, and Gerard Mercator's world maps of 15 for the high Arctic. One of Abraham Ortelius' most interesting maps, this is his 1572 map of the Arctic, here in its rare second state. Minnesota - North Dakota - South Dakota.Massachusetts - Connecticut - Rhode Island. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |