Leonardo's world map
Leonardo's world map is a map drawn in the "octant projection" in approximately 1514, found among the papers of Leonardo da Vinci. It features an early use of the name America. The map incorporates information from the travels of Amerigo Vespucci, published in 1503 and 1505.[1] Additionally, the map accurately shows the Arctic as an ocean and Antarctica as a continent of about the correct size.
The likelihood that the map, found among Leonardo da Vinci's papers preserved in Windsor, was drawn by Leonardo himself has not been completely accepted by scholars.[2] According to Major, who published the map in 1865 and defended its authenticity, the date indicated would be doubtful also because Florida is drawn as an island with the name of TERRA FLORIDA, while in maps Cosa 1500 and the Cantino of 1502 it appears as a peninsula, whence Major deduced that it should be earlier than 1514. In fact Ferdinand Columbus mentions the Island before 1492 "and upon returning they found the island of flowers .." [1]
Description
Da Vinci developed the concept of dividing the surface of the globe into eight spherical equilateral triangles, each section bounded by the Equator and two meridians separate by 90°. This was the first map of this type.[3] Some critics believe that the existing map was not really an autograph work, since the precision and expertise in the drawing does not reflect the usual high standards of da Vinci. They suggest that it was probably done by a trusted employee or copyist at Leonardo's workshop. Da Vinci's authorship would be demonstrated by Christopher Tyler in his paper entitled "Leonardo da Vinci’s World Map",[3] in which he provides examples of derivative maps in a similar projection to da Vinci's. The map was originally documented by R. H. Major in his work Memoir on a mappemonde by Leonardo da Vinci, the earliest map Being Known hitherto container containing the name of America [1] Grothe.[4]
The eight triangles are configured as two four-leaf clovers side by side, with the earth poles in the center of each clove. One of the sides of the eight triangles (the one opposite the center of the pseudo clover), forms one fourth of the equator, the remaining two (those that converge to the center of the pseudo clover) forming the two meridians that, combined with the equator, dissect the globe into eight octants.
The name of "Florida" (Terra Florida), correctly placed opposite Cuba although in form of "an island", was probably used for the first time on Leonardo's globe, one year after Ponce de Leon's expedition to Florida.[5]
Authorship
Leonardo's map authorship it is not universally accepted, with some authors being completely against any minimal contribution from him, either in the map or in the type of projection used; among them, Henry Harrisse (1892),[6] or Eugène Müntz (1899 - citing Harrisse authority from 1892).[7]
Other scholars explicitly accept the authorship of both (map and projection:"..the eight of a supposed globe represented in a plane.."), completely as Leonardo's work, describing the octant projection as the first of this type, among them, R. H. Major (1865) in his work Memoir on a mappemonde by Leonardo da Vinci, being the earliest map hitherto known containing the name of America,[1] Grothe,[4] the "Enciclopedia universal ilustrada europeo-americana" (1934),[8] Snyder in his book Flattening the Earth (1993),[9] Christopher Tyler in his paper (2014) Leonardo da Vinci’s World Map,[3] José Luis Espejo in his book (2012) Los mensajes ocultos de Leonardo Da Vinci,[10] or David Bower in his work (2012) The unusual projection for one of John Dee's maps of 1580.[11]
Others also accept explicitly the authorship of both (the map and its projection) as authentic, although leaving open the question of Leonardo's direct hand, giving the authorship of the work to one of his disciples as Nordenskiöld states in his book Facsimile-Atlas (1889) confirmed by Dutton (1995) and many others: "..on account of the remarkable projection..not by Leonardo himself, but by some ignorant clerk.",[12] or Keunig (1955) being more precise: "..by one of his followers at his direction..".[13]
See also
- Bernard J. S. Cahill
- Codex Atlanticus
- Cahill–Keyes projection
- Octant projection
- Waterman butterfly projection
- Waterman polyhedron
- World map
References
- ^ a b c d Major, Richard Henry (1865). Memoir on a mappemonde by Leonardo da Vinci, being the earliest map hitherto known containing the name of America, now in the Royal Collection at Windsor (pdf). London: J.B. Nicholls and Sons. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
- ^ Muntz, p. 317.
- ^ a b c Tyler, Christopher. Leonardo da Vinci's World Map.
- ^ a b Grothe, Hermann (1874). Leonardo da Vinci als Ingenieur and Philosoph (pdf). Berlin: Berlin: Nicolaische. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
- ^ Emerson David Fite; Archibald Freeman (1926). A Book of Old Maps: Delineating American History from the Earliest Days Down to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Arno Press.
- ^ Henry Harrisse (1872). Bibliotheca Americana Vetustissima: A Description of Works Relating to America Published Between the Years 1492 and 1551. Librairie Tross.
- ^ Eugène Müntz (8 May 2012). Leonardo da Vinci. Parkstone International. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-1-78160-387-1.
- ^ Enciclopedia universal ilustrada europeo-americana:"..así el mapa de leonardo en ocho segmentos estaba destinado a un globo..". J. Espasa. 1934.
- ^ Snyder, John P. (1997). Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections. University of Chicago Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-226-76747-5.
- ^ Google-Books: José Luis Espejo Pérez (2012). Los mensajes ocultos de Leonardo Da Vinci. Editorial Base. pp. 60–67. ISBN 978-84-15706-00-7.
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has generic name (help) - ^ Bower, David I. (February 2012), "The unusual projection for one of John Dee's maps of 1580" (PDF), The Cartographic Journal, 49 (1): 55–61, doi:10.1179/1743277411y.0000000015.
- ^ Geoffrey H. Dutton (1999). A Hierarchical Coordinate System for Geoprocessing and Cartography. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-64980-9.
- ^ Keuning, Johannes (January 1955), "The history of geographical map projections until 1600", Imago Mundi, 12 (1): 1–24, doi:10.1080/03085695508592085, JSTOR 1150090.