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Amerigo Vespucci

Amerigo Vespucci (/vɛˈspi/;[1] Italian: [ameˈriːɡo veˈsputtʃi]; 9 March 1451 – 22 February 1512) was an Italian[2] merchant, explorer, and navigator from the Republic of Florence, from whose name the term "America" is derived.

Amerigo Vespucci
Posthumous portrait in the Giovio Series at the Uffizi in Florence, attributed to Cristofano dell'Altissimo, c. 1568
Born9 March 1451
Died22 February 1512 (aged 60)
Other namesAmérico Vespucio (Spanish)
Americus Vespucius (Latin)
Américo Vespúcio (Portuguese)
Occupation(s)Merchant, explorer, cartographer
Known forDemonstrating to Europeans that the New World was not Asia but a previously unknown fourth continent[a] Being whom the Americas are named after.
Signature

Between 1497 and 1504, Vespucci participated in at least two voyages of the Age of Discovery, first on behalf of Spain (1499–1500) and then for Portugal (1501–1502). In 1503 and 1505, two booklets were published under his name, containing colourful descriptions of these explorations and other alleged voyages. Both publications were extremely popular and widely read across much of Europe. Although historians still dispute the authorship and veracity of these accounts, at the time they were instrumental in raising awareness of the new discoveries and enhancing the reputation of Vespucci as an explorer and navigator.

Vespucci claimed to have understood, back in 1501 during his Portuguese expedition, that Brazil was part of a continent new to Europeans, which he called the "New World". The claim inspired cartographer Martin Waldseemüller to recognize Vespucci's accomplishments in 1507 by applying the Latinized form "America" for the first time to a map showing the New World. Other cartographers followed suit, and by 1532 the name America was permanently affixed to the newly discovered continents.

It is unknown whether Vespucci was ever aware of these honours. In 1505, he was made a citizen of Castile by royal decree and in 1508, he was appointed to the newly created position of piloto mayor (master navigator) for Spain's Casa de Contratación (House of Trade) in Seville, a post he held until his death in 1512.

Biography

 
Vespucci's birthplace in Florence, Italy

Vespucci was born on 9 March 1451, in Florence, a wealthy Italian city-state and a center of Renaissance art and learning.[3]

Family and education

 
Coats of arms of the House of Vespucci
 
Portrait of a young member of the Vespucci family, identified as Amerigo by Giorgio Vasari[citation needed]

Amerigo Vespucci was the third son of Nastagio Vespucci, a Florentine notary for the Money-Changers Guild, and Lisa di Giovanni Mini.[4] The family resided in the District of Santa Lucia d'Ognissanti along with other families of the Vespucci clan. Earlier generations of Vespucci had funded a family chapel in the Ognissanti church, and the nearby Hospital of San Giovanni di Dio was founded by Simone di Piero Vespucci in 1380. Vespucci's immediate family was not especially prosperous but they were politically well-connected. Amerigo's grandfather, also named Amerigo Vespucci, served a total of 36 years as the chancellor of the Florentine government, known as the Signoria; and Nastagio also served in the Signoria and in other guild offices.[4][5] More importantly, the Vespuccis had good relations with Lorenzo de' Medici, the powerful de facto ruler of Florence.[6][page needed]

Amerigo's two older brothers, Antonio and Girolamo, were sent to the University of Pisa for their education; Antonio followed his father to become a notary, while Girolamo entered the Church and joined the Knights Hospitaller in Rhodes.[7] Amerigo's career path seemed less certain; instead of following his brothers to the university, he remained in Florence and was tutored by his uncle, Giorgio Antonio Vespucci, a Dominican friar in the monastery of San Marco. Fortunately for Amerigo, his uncle was one of the most celebrated humanist scholars in Florence at the time and provided him with a broad education in literature, philosophy, rhetoric, and Latin. He was also introduced to geography and astronomy, subjects that played an essential part in his career. Amerigo's later writings demonstrated a familiarity with the work of the classic Greek cosmographers, Ptolemy and Strabo, and the more recent work of Florentine astronomer Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli.[6][page needed]

Early career

In 1478, Guido Antonio Vespucci led a Florentine diplomatic mission to Paris and invited his younger cousin, Amerigo Vespucci, to join him. Amerigo's role is not clear, but it was likely as an attache or private secretary. Along the way they had business in Bologna, Milan, and Lyon. Their objective in Paris was to obtain French support for Florence's war with Naples. Louis XI was noncommittal and the diplomatic mission returned to Florence in 1481 with little to show for their efforts.[8][9]

After his return from Paris, Amerigo worked for a time with his father and continued his studies in science.[5][page needed] In 1482, when his father died, Amerigo went to work for Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici, head of a junior branch of the Medici family. Although Amerigo was twelve years older, they had been schoolmates under the tutelage of Giorgio Antonio Vespucci. Amerigo served first as a household manager and then gradually took on increasing responsibilities, handling various business dealings for the family both at home and abroad.[10] Meanwhile, he continued to show an interest in geography, at one point buying an expensive map made by the master cartographer Gabriel de Vallseca.[5][page needed][9]

Seville

In 1488, Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco became dissatisfied with his Seville business agent, Tomasso Capponi. He dispatched Vespucci to investigate the situation and provide an assessment of a suggested replacement, Florentine merchant Gianotto Berardi. Vespucci's findings have been lost but Capponi returned to Florence around this time and Berardi took over the Medici business in Seville.[9][page needed] In addition to managing Medici's trade in Seville, Berardi had his own business in African slavery and ship chandlery.[6][page needed]

By 1492 Vespucci had settled permanently in Seville. His motivations for leaving Florence are unclear; he continued to transact some business on behalf of his Medici patrons but more and more he became involved with Berardi's other activities, most notably his support of Christopher Columbus's voyages. Barardi invested half a million maravedis in Columbus's first voyage, and he won a potentially lucrative contract to provision Columbus's large second fleet. However, profits proved to be elusive. In 1495, Berardi signed a contract with the crown to send 12 resupply ships to Hispaniola but then died unexpectedly in December without completing the terms of the contract.[11][12]

Vespucci was the executor of Berardi's will, collecting debts and paying outstanding obligations for the firm. Afterwards he was left owing 140,000 maravedis. He continued to provision ships bound for the West Indies, but his opportunities were diminishing; Columbus's expeditions were not providing the hoped-for profits, and his patron, Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco Medici, was using other Florentine agents for his business in Seville.[13][14]

Sometime after he settled in Seville, Vespucci married a Spanish woman, Maria Cerezo. Very little is known about her; Vespucci's will refers to her as the daughter of celebrated military leader Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba. Historian Fernández-Armesto speculates that she may have been Gonzalo's illegitimate offspring and a connection that would have been very useful to Vespucci. She was an active participant in his business and held power of attorney for Vespucci when he was away.[15]

Voyages and alleged voyages

 
Depiction of Vespucci's first encounter with Native Americans, alleged to have occurred in 1497 (De Bry engraving, c. 1592)

The evidence for Vespucci's voyages of exploration consists almost entirely of a handful of letters written by him or attributed to him.[16] Historians have differed sharply on the authorship, accuracy and veracity of these documents. Consequently, opinions also vary widely regarding the number of voyages undertaken, their routes, and Vespucci's roles and accomplishments.[17] Starting in the late 1490s Vespucci participated in two voyages to the New World that are relatively well-documented in the historical record. Two others have been alleged but the evidence is more problematical. Traditionally, Vespucci's voyages are referred to as the "first" through "fourth", even by historians who dismiss one or more of the trips.

Alleged voyage of 1497–1498

A letter, addressed to Florentine official Piero Soderini, dated 1504 and published the following year,[18] purports to be an account by Vespucci of a voyage to the New World, departing from Spain on 10 May 1497, and returning on 15 October 1498. This is perhaps the most controversial of Vespucci's voyages, as this letter is the only known record of its occurrence, and many historians doubt that it took place as described. Some question the authorship and accuracy of the letter and consider it to be a forgery.[19] Others point to the inconsistencies in the narrative of the voyage, particularly the alleged course, starting near Honduras and proceeding northwest for 870 leagues (about 5,130 km or 3,190 mi)—a course that would have taken them across Mexico to the Pacific Ocean.[20]

Certain earlier historians, including contemporary Bartolomé de las Casas, suspected that Vespucci incorporated observations from a later voyage into a fictitious account of this supposed first one, so as to gain primacy over Columbus and position himself as the first European explorer to encounter the mainland.[21][22] Others, including scholar Alberto Magnaghi, have suggested that the Solderini letter was not written by Vespucci at all, but rather by an unknown author who had access to the navigator's private letters to Lorenzo de' Medici about his 1499 and 1501 expeditions to the Americas,[22] which make no mention of a 1497 voyage. The Soderini letter is one of two attributed to Vespucci that were edited and widely circulated during his lifetime.[23]

Voyage of 1499–1500

 
Vespucci's second voyage depicted in the first known edition of his letter to Piero Soderini, published by Pietro Pacini in Florence c.1505

In 1499, Vespucci joined an expedition licensed by Spain and led by Alonso de Ojeda as fleet commander and Juan de la Cosa as chief navigator. Their intention was to explore the coast of a new landmass found by Columbus on his third voyage and in particular investigate a rich source of pearls that Columbus had reported. Vespucci and his backers financed two of the four ships in the small fleet.[24] His role on the voyage is not clear. Writing later about his experience, Vespucci gave the impression that he had a leadership role, but that is unlikely, due to his inexperience. Instead, he may have served as a commercial representative on behalf of the fleet's investors. Years later, Ojeda recalled that "Morigo Vespuche" was one of his pilots on the expedition.[25]

The vessels left Spain on 18 May 1499 and stopped first in the Canary Islands before reaching South America somewhere near present-day Suriname or French Guiana. From there the fleet split up: Ojeda proceeded northwest toward modern Venezuela with two ships, while the other pair headed south with Vespucci aboard. The only record of the southbound journey comes from Vespucci himself. He assumed they were on the coast of Asia and hoped by heading south they would, according to the Greek geographer Ptolemy, round the unidentified "Cape of Cattigara" and reach the Indian Ocean. They passed two huge rivers (the Amazon and the Para) which poured freshwater 25 miles (40 km) out to sea. They continued south for another 40 leagues (about 240 km or 150 mi) before encountering a very strong adverse current which they could not overcome. Forced to turn around, the ships headed north, retracing their course to the original landfall. From there Vespucci continued up the South American coast to the Gulf of Paria and along the shore of what is now Venezuela.[26] At some point they may have rejoined Ojeda but the evidence is unclear. In the late summer, they decided to head north for the Spanish colony at Hispaniola in the West Indies to resupply and repair their ships before heading home. After Hispaniola they made a brief slave raid in the Bahamas, capturing 232 natives, and then returned to Spain.[27]

Voyage of 1501–1502

 
First known depiction of cannibalism in the New World. Engraving by Johann Froschauer for an edition of Vespucci's Mundus Novus published in Augsburg in 1505

In 1501, Manuel I of Portugal commissioned an expedition to investigate a landmass far to the west in the Atlantic Ocean encountered unexpectedly by a wayward Pedro Álvares Cabral on his voyage around Africa to India. That land would eventually become present-day Brazil. The king wanted to know the extent of this new discovery and determine where it lay in relation to the line established by the Treaty of Tordesillas. Any land that lay to the east of the line could be claimed by Portugal. Vespucci's reputation as an explorer and presumed navigator had already reached Portugal, and he was hired by the king to serve as pilot under the command of Gonçalo Coelho.[28]

Coelho's fleet of three ships left Lisbon in May 1501. Before crossing the Atlantic they resupplied at Cape Verde, where they encountered Cabral on his way home from his voyage to India. This was the same expedition that had found Brazil on its outward-bound journey the previous year. Coelho left Cape Verde in June, and from this point Vespucci's account is the only surviving record of their explorations. On 17 August 1501 the expedition reached Brazil at a latitude of about 6° south. Upon landing it encountered a hostile band of natives who killed and ate one of its crewmen. Sailing south along the coast they found friendlier natives and were able to engage in some minor trading. At 23° S they found a bay which they named Rio de Janeiro because it was 1 January 1502. On 13 February 1502, they left the coast to return home. Vespucci estimated their latitude at 32° S but experts now estimate they were closer to 25° S. Their homeward journey is unclear since Vespucci left a confusing record of astronomical observations and distances travelled.[29]

Alleged voyage of 1503–1504

In 1503, Vespucci may have participated in a second expedition for the Portuguese crown, again exploring the east coast of Brazil. There is evidence that a voyage was led by Coelho at about this time but no independent confirmation that Vespucci took part.[30] The only source for this last voyage is the Soderini letter;[31] but several modern scholars dispute Vespucci's authorship of that letter and it is uncertain whether Vespucci undertook this trip. There are also difficulties with the reported dates and details in the account of this voyage.[32]

Return to Seville

 
Tomb of the Vespucci family in Ognissanti, Florence

By early 1505, Vespucci was back in Seville. His reputation as an explorer and navigator continued to grow and his recent service in Portugal did not seem to damage his standing with King Ferdinand. On the contrary, the king was likely interested in learning about the possibility of a western passage to India. In February, he was summoned by the king to consult on matters of navigation. During the next few months he received payments from the crown for his services and in April he was declared by royal proclamation a citizen of Castile and León.[33][34]

From 1505 until his death in 1512, Vespucci remained in service to the Spanish crown. He continued his work as a chandler, supplying ships bound for the Indies. He was also hired to captain a ship as part of a fleet bound for the "spice islands" but the planned voyage never took place. In March 1508, he was named chief pilot for the Casa de Contratación or House of Commerce which served as a central trading house for Spain's overseas possessions. He was paid an annual salary of 50,000 maravedis with an extra 25,000 for expenses. In his new role, Vespucci was responsible for ensuring that ships' pilots were adequately trained and licensed before sailing to the New World. He was also charged with compiling a "model map" based on input from pilots who were obligated to share what they learned after each voyage.[35]

Vespucci wrote his will in April 1511. He left most of his modest estate, including five household slaves, to his wife. His clothes, books, and navigational equipment were left to his nephew Giovanni Vespucci. He requested to be buried in a Franciscan habit in his wife's family tomb. Vespucci died on 22 February 1512.[36]

Upon his death, Vespucci's wife was awarded an annual pension of 10,000 maravedis to be deducted from the salary of the successor chief pilot.[37] His nephew Giovanni was hired into the Casa de Contratación where he spent his subsequent years spying on behalf of the Florentine state.[38]

Naming of America

A few days ago I wrote you at some length about my return from those new regions we searched for and found with the fleet, at the expense and by the command of the most serene King of Portugal, and which can properly be called a "New World", since our forebears had absolutely no knowledge of it, nor do any of those who are hearing about it today...On 7 August 1501,[b] we dropped our anchor off the shores of that new land, thanking God with solemn prayers and the celebration of the Mass. Once there, we determined that the new land was not an island but a continent...

— Amerigo Vespucci, Mundus Novus, Letter to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici (1502/1503)[41]
 
Allegory of the New World by Stradanus, depicting Vespucci that awakens the sleeping America

Vespucci's voyages became widely known in Europe after two accounts attributed to him were published between 1503 and 1505. The Soderini letter (1505) came to the attention of a group of humanist scholars studying geography in Saint-Dié, a small French town in the Duchy of Lorraine. Led by Walter Lud, the academy included Matthias Ringmann and Martin Waldseemüller. In 1506, they obtained a French translation of the Soderini letter as well as a Portuguese maritime map that detailed the coast of lands recently discovered in the western Atlantic. They surmised that this was the "new world" or the "antipodes" hypothesized by classical writers. The Soderini letter gave Vespucci credit for discovery of this new continent and implied that the Portuguese map was based on his explorations.[42]

In April 1507, Ringmann and Waldseemüller published their Introduction to Cosmography with an accompanying world map. The Introduction was written in Latin and included a Latin translation of the Soderini letter. In a preface to the Letter, Ringmann wrote

I see no reason why anyone could properly disapprove of a name derived from that of Amerigo, the discoverer, a man of sagacious genius. A suitable form would be Amerige, meaning Land of Amerigo, or America, since Europe and Asia have received women's names.[43]

A thousand copies of the world map were printed with the title Universal Geography According to the Tradition of Ptolemy and the Contributions of Amerigo Vespucci and Others. It was decorated with prominent portraits of Ptolemy and Vespucci and, for the first time, the name America was applied to a map of the New World.[44]

The Introduction and map were a great success and four editions were printed in the first year alone. The map was widely used in universities and was influential among cartographers who admired the craftsmanship that went into its creation. In the following years, other maps were printed that often incorporated the name America. In 1538, Gerardus Mercator used America to name both the North and South continents on his influential map. By this point the name had been securely fixed on the New World.[45]

Many supporters of Columbus felt that Vespucci had stolen an honour that rightfully belonged to Columbus. Most historians now believe that he was unaware of Waldseemüller's map before his death in 1512 and many assert that he was not even the author of the Soderini letter.[46]

Vespucci letters

 
Woodcut depicting Vespucci's first voyage to the New World, from the first known published edition of his 1504 letter to Piero Soderini
 
Vespucci finding the Crux constellation with an astrolabe during his 1499 voyage, event described in his Letter to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici. Print includes Vespucci's own allusion to a relevant passage in Dante's Purgatorio.

Knowledge of Vespucci's voyages relies almost entirely on a handful of letters written by him or attributed to him.[16] Two of these letters were published during his lifetime and received widespread attention throughout Europe. Several scholars now believe that Vespucci did not write the two published letters in the form in which they circulated during his lifetime. They suggest that they were fabrications based in part on genuine Vespucci letters.[47]

Mundus Novus (1503) was a letter written to Vespucci's former schoolmate and one-time patron, Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici. Originally published in Latin, the letter described his voyage to Brazil in 1501–1502 serving under the Portuguese flag. The document proved to be extremely popular throughout Europe. Within a year of publication, twelve editions were printed including translations into Italian, French, German, Dutch and other languages. By 1550, at least 50 editions had been issued.[48] 
Letter to Soderini (1505) was a letter ostensibly intended for Piero di Tommaso Soderini, the leader of the Florentine Republic. It was written in Italian and published in Florence around 1505.[49] It is more sensational in tone than the other letters and the only one to assert that Vespucci made four voyages of exploration. The authorship and the veracity of the letter have been widely questioned by modern historians. Nevertheless, this document was the original inspiration for naming the American continent in honour of Amerigo Vespucci.[50]

The remaining documents were unpublished manuscripts; handwritten letters uncovered by researchers more than 250 years after Vespucci's death. After years of controversy, the authenticity of the three complete letters was convincingly demonstrated by Alberto Magnaghi in 1924. Most historians now accept them as the work of Vespucci but aspects of the accounts are still disputed.[51]

Letter from Seville (1500) describes a voyage made in 1499–1500 while in the service of Spain. It was first published in 1745 by Angelo Maria Bandini.
Letter from Cape Verde (1501) was written in Cape Verde at the outset of a voyage undertaken for Portugal in 1501–1502. It was first published by Count Baldelli Boni in 1807. It describes the first leg of the journey from Lisbon to Cape Verde and provides details about Pedro Cabral's voyage to India which were obtained when the two fleets met by chance while anchored in the harbour at Cape Verde.
Letter from Lisbon (1502) is essentially a continuation of the letter started in Cape Verde. It describes the remainder of a voyage made on behalf of Portugal in 1501–1502. The letter was first published by Francesco Bartolozzi in 1789.
Ridolfi Fragment (1502) is part of a letter attributed to Vespucci but some of its assertions remain controversial. It was first published in 1937 by Roberto Ridolfi. The letter appears to be an argumentative response to questions or objections raised by the unknown recipient. A reference is made to three voyages made by Vespucci, two on behalf of Spain and one for Portugal.

Historiography

 
Portrait engraving of Vespucci by Crispijn van de Passe, which titles him "discoverer and conqueror of Brazilian land"

Vespucci has been called "the most enigmatic and controversial figure in early American history".[52] The debate has become known among historians as the "Vespucci question". How many voyages did he make? What was his role on the voyages and what did he learn? The evidence relies almost entirely on a handful of letters attributed to him. Many historians have analysed these documents and have arrived at contradictory conclusions.[16]

In 1515, Sebastian Cabot became one of the first to question Vespucci's accomplishments and express doubts about his 1497 voyage. Later, Bartolomé de las Casas argued that Vespucci was a liar and stole the credit that was due Columbus. By 1600, most regarded Vespucci as an impostor and not worthy of his honours and fame.[52] In 1839, Alexander von Humboldt after careful consideration asserted the 1497 voyage was impossible but accepted the two Portuguese-sponsored voyages. Humboldt also called into question the assertion that Vespucci recognized that he had encountered a new continent. According to Humboldt, Vespucci (and Columbus) died in the belief that they had reached the eastern edge of Asia. Vespucci's reputation was perhaps at its lowest in 1856 when Ralph Waldo Emerson called Vespucci a "thief" and "pickle dealer" from Seville who managed to get "half the world baptized with his dishonest name".[21]

 
Statue of Vespucci outside the Uffizi in Florence, Italy

Opinions began to shift somewhat after 1857 when Brazilian historian Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen wrote that everything in the Soderini letter was true. Other historians followed in support of Vespucci including John Fiske and Henry Harrisse.[citation needed]

In 1924, Alberto Magnaghi published the results of his exhaustive review of Vespucci's writings and relevant cartography. He denied Vespucci's authorship of the 1503 Mundus Novus and the 1505 Letter to Soderini, the only two texts published during his lifetime. He suggested that the Soderini letter was not written by Vespucci, but was cobbled together by unscrupulous Florentine publishers who combined several accounts – some from Vespucci, others from elsewhere. Magnaghi determined that the manuscript letters were authentic and based on them he was the first to propose that only the second and third voyages were true, and the first and fourth voyages (only found in the Soderini letter) were fabrications. While Magnaghi has been one of the chief proponents of a two-voyage narrative, Roberto Levellier was an influential Argentinian historian who endorsed the authenticity of all Vespucci's letters and proposed the most extensive itinerary for his four voyages.[53]

Other modern historians and popular writers have taken varying positions on Vespucci's letters and voyages, espousing two, three, or four voyages and supporting or denying the authenticity of his two printed letters. Most authors believe that the three manuscript letters are authentic while the first voyage as described in the Soderini letter draws the most criticism and disbelief.[citation needed]

A two-voyage thesis was accepted and popularized by Frederick J. Pohl (1944), and rejected by Germán Arciniegas (1955), who posited that all four voyages were truthful. Luciano Formisiano (1992) also rejects the Magnaghi thesis (acknowledging that publishers probably tampered with Vespucci's writings) and declares all four voyages genuine, but differs from Arciniegas in details (particularly the first voyage). Samuel Morison (1974) flatly rejected the first voyage but was noncommittal about the two published letters. Felipe Fernández-Armesto (2007) calls the authenticity question "inconclusive" and hypothesizes that the first voyage was probably another version of the second; the third is unassailable, and the fourth is probably true.[54]

Legacy

 
Amerigo Vespucci monument at El Chicó, Colombia

Vespucci's historical importance may rest more with his letters (whether or not he wrote them all) than his discoveries. Burckhardt cites the naming of America after him as an example of the immense role of the Italian literature of the time in determining historical memory.[55] Within a few years of the publication of his two letters, the European public became aware of the newly discovered continents of the Americas. According to Vespucci:

Concerning my return from those new regions which we found and explored...we may rightly call a new world. Because our ancestors had no knowledge of them, and it will be a matter wholly new to all those who hear about them, for this transcends the view held by our ancients, inasmuch as most of them hold that there is no continent to the south beyond the equator, but only the sea which they named the Atlantic and if some of them did aver that a continent there was, they denied with abundant argument that it was a habitable land. But that this their opinion is false and utterly opposed to the truth...my last voyage has made manifest; for in those southern parts I have found a continent more densely peopled and abounding in animals than our Europe or Asia or Africa, and, in addition, a climate milder and more delightful than in any other region known to us, as you shall learn in the following account.[56]

Notes

  1. ^ Europeans had long conceptualized the Afro-Eurasian landmass as divided into the same three continents known today: Europe, Asia, and Africa. When cosmographers realized that the New World was not connected to the Old (but before it was fully mapped), they considered the Americas a single, fourth continent.[citation needed]
  2. ^ The letter says 17 August 1501, although translators variously rendered it also as 7 August 1501, 10 August 1501, or 1 August 1501.[39][40]

References

  1. ^ "Vespucci". CollinsDictionary.com. HarperCollins. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  2. ^ Almagià, Roberto (8 December 2022). "Amerigo Vespucci". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  3. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 4.
  4. ^ a b Formisano 1992, pp. xix–xxvi.
  5. ^ a b c Pohl 1944.
  6. ^ a b c Fernández-Armesto 2007.
  7. ^ Pohl 1944, pp. 18.
  8. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 21–24.
  9. ^ a b c Arciniegas 1955.
  10. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 34–36.
  11. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 47–57.
  12. ^ Brinkbaumer & Hoges 2004, pp. 104–109.
  13. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 56–58.
  14. ^ Markham 1894, "Introduction".
  15. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 51–52.
  16. ^ a b c Diffie & Winius 1977, pp. 456–457.
  17. ^ Diffie & Winius 1977, pp. 458–459.
  18. ^ Almagià, Roberto. "Amerigo Vespucci". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  19. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 123–130.
  20. ^ Morison 1974, p. 308.
  21. ^ a b Morison 1974, p. 307.
  22. ^ a b Davies, A (1952). "The 'First' Voyage of Amerigo Vespucci in 1497–8". The Geographical Journal. 118 (3): 331–337. doi:10.2307/1790319. JSTOR 1790319.
  23. ^ Lehmann, Martin (2013). "Amerigo Vespucci and His Alleged Awareness of America as a Separate Land Mass". Imago Mundi. 65 (1): 17. doi:10.1080/03085694.2013.731201. S2CID 129472491. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  24. ^ Vigneras 1976, pp. 47–63.
  25. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 63–65.
  26. ^ Vigneras 1976, pp. 47–52.
  27. ^ Lester 2009, pp. 314–316.
  28. ^ Morison 1974, p. 280.
  29. ^ Morison 1974, pp. 280–284.
  30. ^ Ray 2004, p. 91.
  31. ^ Markham 1894, pp. 52–56.
  32. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 168–169.
  33. ^ Formisano 1992, pp. 103–105.
  34. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 169.
  35. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 169, 175–177.
  36. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 178–180.
  37. ^ Arciniegas 1955, pp. 283–284.
  38. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 179.
  39. ^ Canovai, Stanislao (1832). Viaggi di Amerigo Vespucci: con la vita, l'elogio e la dissertazione giustificativa di questo celebre navigatore, di Stanislao Canovai ... (in Italian). Dai torchi di A. Tofani. p. 158.
  40. ^ Bonari, Bruno (1 July 2013). Amerigo Vespucci (in Italian). Centro Tipografico Livornese editore. p. 222. ISBN 978-88-906956-8-1.
  41. ^ Wolfgang Haase, Meyer Reinhold (eds.), The Classical Tradition and the Americas, Walter de Gruyter, 1994, p. 54.
  42. ^ Lester 2009, pp. 342–352.
  43. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 185.
  44. ^ Lester, Toby (December 2009). "The Waldseemüller Map: Charting the New World". Smithsonian.
  45. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, pp. 185–186.
  46. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 190.
  47. ^ Diffie & Winius 1977, pp. 457–459.
  48. ^ Lester 2009, pp. 302–303.
  49. ^ Formisano 1992, p. xxii.
  50. ^ Lester 2009, pp. 346–349.
  51. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 112.
  52. ^ a b Morison 1974, p. 306.
  53. ^ Diffie & Winius 1977, p. 458.
  54. ^ Fernández-Armesto 2007, p. 128.
  55. ^ Burckhardt, Jacob (1944). The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy. London: Phaidon Press. pp. 92–93.
  56. ^ Vespucci 1504.

Bibliography

  • Arciniegas, Germán (1955). Amerigo and the New World: The Life and Times of Amerigo Vespucci. Translated by de Onís, Harriet. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0374902801.
  • Beazley, Charles Raymond (1911). "Vespucci, Amerigo" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). pp. 1053–1054.
  • Brinkbaumer, Klaus; Hoges, Clemens (2004). The Voyage of the Vizcaina. Translated by Streck, Annette. Harcourt. pp. 105–109. ISBN 978-0151011865.
  • Diffie, Bailey W.; Winius, George D. (1977). Foundations of the Portuguese Empire 1415–1580. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 456–462.
  • Edwards, Charles Lester; Vespucci, Amerigo (2009). Amerigo Vespucci. Viartis. ISBN 978-1906421021.
  • Fernández-Armesto, Felipe (2007). Amerigo: The Man Who Gave His Name to America. New York: Random House.
  • Formisano, Luciano (1992). Letters from a New World: Amerigo Vespucci's Discovery of America. New York: Marsilio. ISBN 0941419622.
  • Lester, Toby (2009). The Fourth Part of the World. New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-1416535317.
  • Magnaghi, Alberto (1924). Amerigo Vespucci: Studio critico, con speciale riguardo ad una nuova valutazione delle fonti e con documenti inediti tratti dal Codice Vaglienti. Rome: Treves.
  • Markham, Clements R. (1894). The Letters of Amerigo Vespucci, and Other Documents Illustrative of His Career. London: Hakluyt Society. ISBN 978-1108012867.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (1974). The European Discovery of America: The Southern Voyages, 1492–1616. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 276–312.
  • Ober, Frederick A. (1907). Amerigo Vespucci. New York & London: Harper & Brothers. ISBN 978-1503010727.
  • Pohl, Frederick J. (1944). Amerigo Vespucci: Pilot Major. New York: Columbia University Press. hdl:2027/mdp.39015003944751.
  • Ray, Kurt (2004). Amerigo Vespucci: Italian Explorer of the Americas. New York: The Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN 0823936155.
  • Schulz, Norbert; Vespucci, Amerigo (2007). Amerigo Vespucci, Mundus Novus (mit Zweittexten). MMO-Verlag. ISBN 978-3981114423.
  • Thomas, Hugh (2003). Rivers of Gold. New York: Random House. pp. 269–276. ISBN 0375502041.
  • Vespucci, Amerigo (1504). Mundus Novus: Letter to Lorenzo Pietro Di Medici. Translated by Northup, George Tyler. Princeton: Princeton University Press (published 1916). Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  • Vigneras, Louis-André (1976). The Discovery of South America and the Andalusian Voyages. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226856094.

External links

  • Canaday, James A. ""
  • Works by Amerigo Vespucci at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Amerigo Vespucci at Internet Archive
  • Vespucci, Amerigo. "Account of His First Voyage 1497 (Letter to Pier Soderini, Gonfalonier of the Republic of Florence)". Internet Modern History Sourcebook-Fordham University (U.S.)
  • Mason, Wyatt, 'I am America. (And So?)' "The New York Times", 12 December 2007.
  • Martin Waldseemüller, Franz Wieser (Ritter von), Edward Burke (trans), The Cosmographiæ Introductio of Martin Waldseemüller in facsimile: followed by the Four voyages of Amerigo Vespucci, The United States Catholic Historical Society, 1908.
  • 1507 Waldseemüller Map from the US Library of Congress
  • World Digital Library presentation of the 1507 Waldseemüller Map in the Library of Congress. This is the only known surviving copy of the wall map edition of which it is believed 1,000 copies were printed. Four originals of the 1507 globe gore map are in existence in Germany, UK and US.
  • High resolution images of works by and/or portraits of Amerigo Vespucci in .jpg and .tiff format.
  • Soderini Letters in Giovanni Battista Ramusio, Primo Volume delle Nauigationi et Viaggi (in Italian), Venetia, 1550, fol.138–140.

amerigo, vespucci, this, article, about, explorer, other, uses, disambiguation, italian, ameˈriːɡo, veˈsputtʃi, march, 1451, february, 1512, italian, merchant, explorer, navigator, from, republic, florence, from, whose, name, term, america, derived, posthumous. This article is about the explorer For other uses see Amerigo Vespucci disambiguation Amerigo Vespucci v ɛ ˈ s p uː tʃ i 1 Italian ameˈriːɡo veˈsputtʃi 9 March 1451 22 February 1512 was an Italian 2 merchant explorer and navigator from the Republic of Florence from whose name the term America is derived Amerigo VespucciPosthumous portrait in the Giovio Series at the Uffizi in Florence attributed to Cristofano dell Altissimo c 1568Born9 March 1451Florence Republic of FlorenceDied22 February 1512 aged 60 Seville Crown of CastileOther namesAmerico Vespucio Spanish Americus Vespucius Latin Americo Vespucio Portuguese Occupation s Merchant explorer cartographerKnown forDemonstrating to Europeans that the New World was not Asia but a previously unknown fourth continent a Being whom the Americas are named after SignatureBetween 1497 and 1504 Vespucci participated in at least two voyages of the Age of Discovery first on behalf of Spain 1499 1500 and then for Portugal 1501 1502 In 1503 and 1505 two booklets were published under his name containing colourful descriptions of these explorations and other alleged voyages Both publications were extremely popular and widely read across much of Europe Although historians still dispute the authorship and veracity of these accounts at the time they were instrumental in raising awareness of the new discoveries and enhancing the reputation of Vespucci as an explorer and navigator Vespucci claimed to have understood back in 1501 during his Portuguese expedition that Brazil was part of a continent new to Europeans which he called the New World The claim inspired cartographer Martin Waldseemuller to recognize Vespucci s accomplishments in 1507 by applying the Latinized form America for the first time to a map showing the New World Other cartographers followed suit and by 1532 the name America was permanently affixed to the newly discovered continents It is unknown whether Vespucci was ever aware of these honours In 1505 he was made a citizen of Castile by royal decree and in 1508 he was appointed to the newly created position of piloto mayor master navigator for Spain s Casa de Contratacion House of Trade in Seville a post he held until his death in 1512 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family and education 1 2 Early career 1 3 Seville 1 4 Voyages and alleged voyages 1 4 1 Alleged voyage of 1497 1498 1 4 2 Voyage of 1499 1500 1 4 3 Voyage of 1501 1502 1 4 4 Alleged voyage of 1503 1504 1 5 Return to Seville 2 Naming of America 3 Vespucci letters 4 Historiography 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBiography Vespucci s birthplace in Florence Italy Vespucci was born on 9 March 1451 in Florence a wealthy Italian city state and a center of Renaissance art and learning 3 Family and education Coats of arms of the House of Vespucci Portrait of a young member of the Vespucci family identified as Amerigo by Giorgio Vasari citation needed Amerigo Vespucci was the third son of Nastagio Vespucci a Florentine notary for the Money Changers Guild and Lisa di Giovanni Mini 4 The family resided in the District of Santa Lucia d Ognissanti along with other families of the Vespucci clan Earlier generations of Vespucci had funded a family chapel in the Ognissanti church and the nearby Hospital of San Giovanni di Dio was founded by Simone di Piero Vespucci in 1380 Vespucci s immediate family was not especially prosperous but they were politically well connected Amerigo s grandfather also named Amerigo Vespucci served a total of 36 years as the chancellor of the Florentine government known as the Signoria and Nastagio also served in the Signoria and in other guild offices 4 5 More importantly the Vespuccis had good relations with Lorenzo de Medici the powerful de facto ruler of Florence 6 page needed Amerigo s two older brothers Antonio and Girolamo were sent to the University of Pisa for their education Antonio followed his father to become a notary while Girolamo entered the Church and joined the Knights Hospitaller in Rhodes 7 Amerigo s career path seemed less certain instead of following his brothers to the university he remained in Florence and was tutored by his uncle Giorgio Antonio Vespucci a Dominican friar in the monastery of San Marco Fortunately for Amerigo his uncle was one of the most celebrated humanist scholars in Florence at the time and provided him with a broad education in literature philosophy rhetoric and Latin He was also introduced to geography and astronomy subjects that played an essential part in his career Amerigo s later writings demonstrated a familiarity with the work of the classic Greek cosmographers Ptolemy and Strabo and the more recent work of Florentine astronomer Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli 6 page needed Early career In 1478 Guido Antonio Vespucci led a Florentine diplomatic mission to Paris and invited his younger cousin Amerigo Vespucci to join him Amerigo s role is not clear but it was likely as an attache or private secretary Along the way they had business in Bologna Milan and Lyon Their objective in Paris was to obtain French support for Florence s war with Naples Louis XI was noncommittal and the diplomatic mission returned to Florence in 1481 with little to show for their efforts 8 9 After his return from Paris Amerigo worked for a time with his father and continued his studies in science 5 page needed In 1482 when his father died Amerigo went to work for Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de Medici head of a junior branch of the Medici family Although Amerigo was twelve years older they had been schoolmates under the tutelage of Giorgio Antonio Vespucci Amerigo served first as a household manager and then gradually took on increasing responsibilities handling various business dealings for the family both at home and abroad 10 Meanwhile he continued to show an interest in geography at one point buying an expensive map made by the master cartographer Gabriel de Vallseca 5 page needed 9 Seville In 1488 Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco became dissatisfied with his Seville business agent Tomasso Capponi He dispatched Vespucci to investigate the situation and provide an assessment of a suggested replacement Florentine merchant Gianotto Berardi Vespucci s findings have been lost but Capponi returned to Florence around this time and Berardi took over the Medici business in Seville 9 page needed In addition to managing Medici s trade in Seville Berardi had his own business in African slavery and ship chandlery 6 page needed By 1492 Vespucci had settled permanently in Seville His motivations for leaving Florence are unclear he continued to transact some business on behalf of his Medici patrons but more and more he became involved with Berardi s other activities most notably his support of Christopher Columbus s voyages Barardi invested half a million maravedis in Columbus s first voyage and he won a potentially lucrative contract to provision Columbus s large second fleet However profits proved to be elusive In 1495 Berardi signed a contract with the crown to send 12 resupply ships to Hispaniola but then died unexpectedly in December without completing the terms of the contract 11 12 Vespucci was the executor of Berardi s will collecting debts and paying outstanding obligations for the firm Afterwards he was left owing 140 000 maravedis He continued to provision ships bound for the West Indies but his opportunities were diminishing Columbus s expeditions were not providing the hoped for profits and his patron Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco Medici was using other Florentine agents for his business in Seville 13 14 Sometime after he settled in Seville Vespucci married a Spanish woman Maria Cerezo Very little is known about her Vespucci s will refers to her as the daughter of celebrated military leader Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba Historian Fernandez Armesto speculates that she may have been Gonzalo s illegitimate offspring and a connection that would have been very useful to Vespucci She was an active participant in his business and held power of attorney for Vespucci when he was away 15 Voyages and alleged voyages Depiction of Vespucci s first encounter with Native Americans alleged to have occurred in 1497 De Bry engraving c 1592 The evidence for Vespucci s voyages of exploration consists almost entirely of a handful of letters written by him or attributed to him 16 Historians have differed sharply on the authorship accuracy and veracity of these documents Consequently opinions also vary widely regarding the number of voyages undertaken their routes and Vespucci s roles and accomplishments 17 Starting in the late 1490s Vespucci participated in two voyages to the New World that are relatively well documented in the historical record Two others have been alleged but the evidence is more problematical Traditionally Vespucci s voyages are referred to as the first through fourth even by historians who dismiss one or more of the trips Alleged voyage of 1497 1498 A letter addressed to Florentine official Piero Soderini dated 1504 and published the following year 18 purports to be an account by Vespucci of a voyage to the New World departing from Spain on 10 May 1497 and returning on 15 October 1498 This is perhaps the most controversial of Vespucci s voyages as this letter is the only known record of its occurrence and many historians doubt that it took place as described Some question the authorship and accuracy of the letter and consider it to be a forgery 19 Others point to the inconsistencies in the narrative of the voyage particularly the alleged course starting near Honduras and proceeding northwest for 870 leagues about 5 130 km or 3 190 mi a course that would have taken them across Mexico to the Pacific Ocean 20 Certain earlier historians including contemporary Bartolome de las Casas suspected that Vespucci incorporated observations from a later voyage into a fictitious account of this supposed first one so as to gain primacy over Columbus and position himself as the first European explorer to encounter the mainland 21 22 Others including scholar Alberto Magnaghi have suggested that the Solderini letter was not written by Vespucci at all but rather by an unknown author who had access to the navigator s private letters to Lorenzo de Medici about his 1499 and 1501 expeditions to the Americas 22 which make no mention of a 1497 voyage The Soderini letter is one of two attributed to Vespucci that were edited and widely circulated during his lifetime 23 Voyage of 1499 1500 Vespucci s second voyage depicted in the first known edition of his letter to Piero Soderini published by Pietro Pacini in Florence c 1505 In 1499 Vespucci joined an expedition licensed by Spain and led by Alonso de Ojeda as fleet commander and Juan de la Cosa as chief navigator Their intention was to explore the coast of a new landmass found by Columbus on his third voyage and in particular investigate a rich source of pearls that Columbus had reported Vespucci and his backers financed two of the four ships in the small fleet 24 His role on the voyage is not clear Writing later about his experience Vespucci gave the impression that he had a leadership role but that is unlikely due to his inexperience Instead he may have served as a commercial representative on behalf of the fleet s investors Years later Ojeda recalled that Morigo Vespuche was one of his pilots on the expedition 25 The vessels left Spain on 18 May 1499 and stopped first in the Canary Islands before reaching South America somewhere near present day Suriname or French Guiana From there the fleet split up Ojeda proceeded northwest toward modern Venezuela with two ships while the other pair headed south with Vespucci aboard The only record of the southbound journey comes from Vespucci himself He assumed they were on the coast of Asia and hoped by heading south they would according to the Greek geographer Ptolemy round the unidentified Cape of Cattigara and reach the Indian Ocean They passed two huge rivers the Amazon and the Para which poured freshwater 25 miles 40 km out to sea They continued south for another 40 leagues about 240 km or 150 mi before encountering a very strong adverse current which they could not overcome Forced to turn around the ships headed north retracing their course to the original landfall From there Vespucci continued up the South American coast to the Gulf of Paria and along the shore of what is now Venezuela 26 At some point they may have rejoined Ojeda but the evidence is unclear In the late summer they decided to head north for the Spanish colony at Hispaniola in the West Indies to resupply and repair their ships before heading home After Hispaniola they made a brief slave raid in the Bahamas capturing 232 natives and then returned to Spain 27 Voyage of 1501 1502 First known depiction of cannibalism in the New World Engraving by Johann Froschauer for an edition of Vespucci s Mundus Novus published in Augsburg in 1505 In 1501 Manuel I of Portugal commissioned an expedition to investigate a landmass far to the west in the Atlantic Ocean encountered unexpectedly by a wayward Pedro Alvares Cabral on his voyage around Africa to India That land would eventually become present day Brazil The king wanted to know the extent of this new discovery and determine where it lay in relation to the line established by the Treaty of Tordesillas Any land that lay to the east of the line could be claimed by Portugal Vespucci s reputation as an explorer and presumed navigator had already reached Portugal and he was hired by the king to serve as pilot under the command of Goncalo Coelho 28 Coelho s fleet of three ships left Lisbon in May 1501 Before crossing the Atlantic they resupplied at Cape Verde where they encountered Cabral on his way home from his voyage to India This was the same expedition that had found Brazil on its outward bound journey the previous year Coelho left Cape Verde in June and from this point Vespucci s account is the only surviving record of their explorations On 17 August 1501 the expedition reached Brazil at a latitude of about 6 south Upon landing it encountered a hostile band of natives who killed and ate one of its crewmen Sailing south along the coast they found friendlier natives and were able to engage in some minor trading At 23 S they found a bay which they named Rio de Janeiro because it was 1 January 1502 On 13 February 1502 they left the coast to return home Vespucci estimated their latitude at 32 S but experts now estimate they were closer to 25 S Their homeward journey is unclear since Vespucci left a confusing record of astronomical observations and distances travelled 29 Alleged voyage of 1503 1504 In 1503 Vespucci may have participated in a second expedition for the Portuguese crown again exploring the east coast of Brazil There is evidence that a voyage was led by Coelho at about this time but no independent confirmation that Vespucci took part 30 The only source for this last voyage is the Soderini letter 31 but several modern scholars dispute Vespucci s authorship of that letter and it is uncertain whether Vespucci undertook this trip There are also difficulties with the reported dates and details in the account of this voyage 32 Return to Seville Tomb of the Vespucci family in Ognissanti Florence By early 1505 Vespucci was back in Seville His reputation as an explorer and navigator continued to grow and his recent service in Portugal did not seem to damage his standing with King Ferdinand On the contrary the king was likely interested in learning about the possibility of a western passage to India In February he was summoned by the king to consult on matters of navigation During the next few months he received payments from the crown for his services and in April he was declared by royal proclamation a citizen of Castile and Leon 33 34 From 1505 until his death in 1512 Vespucci remained in service to the Spanish crown He continued his work as a chandler supplying ships bound for the Indies He was also hired to captain a ship as part of a fleet bound for the spice islands but the planned voyage never took place In March 1508 he was named chief pilot for the Casa de Contratacion or House of Commerce which served as a central trading house for Spain s overseas possessions He was paid an annual salary of 50 000 maravedis with an extra 25 000 for expenses In his new role Vespucci was responsible for ensuring that ships pilots were adequately trained and licensed before sailing to the New World He was also charged with compiling a model map based on input from pilots who were obligated to share what they learned after each voyage 35 Vespucci wrote his will in April 1511 He left most of his modest estate including five household slaves to his wife His clothes books and navigational equipment were left to his nephew Giovanni Vespucci He requested to be buried in a Franciscan habit in his wife s family tomb Vespucci died on 22 February 1512 36 Upon his death Vespucci s wife was awarded an annual pension of 10 000 maravedis to be deducted from the salary of the successor chief pilot 37 His nephew Giovanni was hired into the Casa de Contratacion where he spent his subsequent years spying on behalf of the Florentine state 38 Naming of AmericaMain article Naming of the Americas A few days ago I wrote you at some length about my return from those new regions we searched for and found with the fleet at the expense and by the command of the most serene King of Portugal and which can properly be called a New World since our forebears had absolutely no knowledge of it nor do any of those who are hearing about it today On 7 August 1501 b we dropped our anchor off the shores of that new land thanking God with solemn prayers and the celebration of the Mass Once there we determined that the new land was not an island but a continent Amerigo Vespucci Mundus Novus Letter to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de Medici 1502 1503 41 Allegory of the New World by Stradanus depicting Vespucci that awakens the sleeping America Vespucci s voyages became widely known in Europe after two accounts attributed to him were published between 1503 and 1505 The Soderini letter 1505 came to the attention of a group of humanist scholars studying geography in Saint Die a small French town in the Duchy of Lorraine Led by Walter Lud the academy included Matthias Ringmann and Martin Waldseemuller In 1506 they obtained a French translation of the Soderini letter as well as a Portuguese maritime map that detailed the coast of lands recently discovered in the western Atlantic They surmised that this was the new world or the antipodes hypothesized by classical writers The Soderini letter gave Vespucci credit for discovery of this new continent and implied that the Portuguese map was based on his explorations 42 In April 1507 Ringmann and Waldseemuller published their Introduction to Cosmography with an accompanying world map The Introduction was written in Latin and included a Latin translation of the Soderini letter In a preface to the Letter Ringmann wrote I see no reason why anyone could properly disapprove of a name derived from that of Amerigo the discoverer a man of sagacious genius A suitable form would be Amerige meaning Land of Amerigo or America since Europe and Asia have received women s names 43 A thousand copies of the world map were printed with the title Universal Geography According to the Tradition of Ptolemy and the Contributions of Amerigo Vespucci and Others It was decorated with prominent portraits of Ptolemy and Vespucci and for the first time the name America was applied to a map of the New World 44 The Introduction and map were a great success and four editions were printed in the first year alone The map was widely used in universities and was influential among cartographers who admired the craftsmanship that went into its creation In the following years other maps were printed that often incorporated the name America In 1538 Gerardus Mercator used America to name both the North and South continents on his influential map By this point the name had been securely fixed on the New World 45 Many supporters of Columbus felt that Vespucci had stolen an honour that rightfully belonged to Columbus Most historians now believe that he was unaware of Waldseemuller s map before his death in 1512 and many assert that he was not even the author of the Soderini letter 46 Vespucci letters Woodcut depicting Vespucci s first voyage to the New World from the first known published edition of his 1504 letter to Piero Soderini Vespucci finding the Crux constellation with an astrolabe during his 1499 voyage event described in his Letter to Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de Medici Print includes Vespucci s own allusion to a relevant passage in Dante s Purgatorio Knowledge of Vespucci s voyages relies almost entirely on a handful of letters written by him or attributed to him 16 Two of these letters were published during his lifetime and received widespread attention throughout Europe Several scholars now believe that Vespucci did not write the two published letters in the form in which they circulated during his lifetime They suggest that they were fabrications based in part on genuine Vespucci letters 47 Mundus Novus 1503 was a letter written to Vespucci s former schoolmate and one time patron Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de Medici Originally published in Latin the letter described his voyage to Brazil in 1501 1502 serving under the Portuguese flag The document proved to be extremely popular throughout Europe Within a year of publication twelve editions were printed including translations into Italian French German Dutch and other languages By 1550 at least 50 editions had been issued 48 Letter to Soderini 1505 was a letter ostensibly intended for Piero di Tommaso Soderini the leader of the Florentine Republic It was written in Italian and published in Florence around 1505 49 It is more sensational in tone than the other letters and the only one to assert that Vespucci made four voyages of exploration The authorship and the veracity of the letter have been widely questioned by modern historians Nevertheless this document was the original inspiration for naming the American continent in honour of Amerigo Vespucci 50 The remaining documents were unpublished manuscripts handwritten letters uncovered by researchers more than 250 years after Vespucci s death After years of controversy the authenticity of the three complete letters was convincingly demonstrated by Alberto Magnaghi in 1924 Most historians now accept them as the work of Vespucci but aspects of the accounts are still disputed 51 Letter from Seville 1500 describes a voyage made in 1499 1500 while in the service of Spain It was first published in 1745 by Angelo Maria Bandini Letter from Cape Verde 1501 was written in Cape Verde at the outset of a voyage undertaken for Portugal in 1501 1502 It was first published by Count Baldelli Boni in 1807 It describes the first leg of the journey from Lisbon to Cape Verde and provides details about Pedro Cabral s voyage to India which were obtained when the two fleets met by chance while anchored in the harbour at Cape Verde Letter from Lisbon 1502 is essentially a continuation of the letter started in Cape Verde It describes the remainder of a voyage made on behalf of Portugal in 1501 1502 The letter was first published by Francesco Bartolozzi in 1789 Ridolfi Fragment 1502 is part of a letter attributed to Vespucci but some of its assertions remain controversial It was first published in 1937 by Roberto Ridolfi The letter appears to be an argumentative response to questions or objections raised by the unknown recipient A reference is made to three voyages made by Vespucci two on behalf of Spain and one for Portugal Historiography Portrait engraving of Vespucci by Crispijn van de Passe which titles him discoverer and conqueror of Brazilian land Vespucci has been called the most enigmatic and controversial figure in early American history 52 The debate has become known among historians as the Vespucci question How many voyages did he make What was his role on the voyages and what did he learn The evidence relies almost entirely on a handful of letters attributed to him Many historians have analysed these documents and have arrived at contradictory conclusions 16 In 1515 Sebastian Cabot became one of the first to question Vespucci s accomplishments and express doubts about his 1497 voyage Later Bartolome de las Casas argued that Vespucci was a liar and stole the credit that was due Columbus By 1600 most regarded Vespucci as an impostor and not worthy of his honours and fame 52 In 1839 Alexander von Humboldt after careful consideration asserted the 1497 voyage was impossible but accepted the two Portuguese sponsored voyages Humboldt also called into question the assertion that Vespucci recognized that he had encountered a new continent According to Humboldt Vespucci and Columbus died in the belief that they had reached the eastern edge of Asia Vespucci s reputation was perhaps at its lowest in 1856 when Ralph Waldo Emerson called Vespucci a thief and pickle dealer from Seville who managed to get half the world baptized with his dishonest name 21 Statue of Vespucci outside the Uffizi in Florence Italy Opinions began to shift somewhat after 1857 when Brazilian historian Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen wrote that everything in the Soderini letter was true Other historians followed in support of Vespucci including John Fiske and Henry Harrisse citation needed In 1924 Alberto Magnaghi published the results of his exhaustive review of Vespucci s writings and relevant cartography He denied Vespucci s authorship of the 1503 Mundus Novus and the 1505 Letter to Soderini the only two texts published during his lifetime He suggested that the Soderini letter was not written by Vespucci but was cobbled together by unscrupulous Florentine publishers who combined several accounts some from Vespucci others from elsewhere Magnaghi determined that the manuscript letters were authentic and based on them he was the first to propose that only the second and third voyages were true and the first and fourth voyages only found in the Soderini letter were fabrications While Magnaghi has been one of the chief proponents of a two voyage narrative Roberto Levellier was an influential Argentinian historian who endorsed the authenticity of all Vespucci s letters and proposed the most extensive itinerary for his four voyages 53 Other modern historians and popular writers have taken varying positions on Vespucci s letters and voyages espousing two three or four voyages and supporting or denying the authenticity of his two printed letters Most authors believe that the three manuscript letters are authentic while the first voyage as described in the Soderini letter draws the most criticism and disbelief citation needed A two voyage thesis was accepted and popularized by Frederick J Pohl 1944 and rejected by German Arciniegas 1955 who posited that all four voyages were truthful Luciano Formisiano 1992 also rejects the Magnaghi thesis acknowledging that publishers probably tampered with Vespucci s writings and declares all four voyages genuine but differs from Arciniegas in details particularly the first voyage Samuel Morison 1974 flatly rejected the first voyage but was noncommittal about the two published letters Felipe Fernandez Armesto 2007 calls the authenticity question inconclusive and hypothesizes that the first voyage was probably another version of the second the third is unassailable and the fourth is probably true 54 Legacy Amerigo Vespucci monument at El Chico Colombia Vespucci s historical importance may rest more with his letters whether or not he wrote them all than his discoveries Burckhardt cites the naming of America after him as an example of the immense role of the Italian literature of the time in determining historical memory 55 Within a few years of the publication of his two letters the European public became aware of the newly discovered continents of the Americas According to Vespucci Concerning my return from those new regions which we found and explored we may rightly call a new world Because our ancestors had no knowledge of them and it will be a matter wholly new to all those who hear about them for this transcends the view held by our ancients inasmuch as most of them hold that there is no continent to the south beyond the equator but only the sea which they named the Atlantic and if some of them did aver that a continent there was they denied with abundant argument that it was a habitable land But that this their opinion is false and utterly opposed to the truth my last voyage has made manifest for in those southern parts I have found a continent more densely peopled and abounding in animals than our Europe or Asia or Africa and in addition a climate milder and more delightful than in any other region known to us as you shall learn in the following account 56 Notes Europeans had long conceptualized the Afro Eurasian landmass as divided into the same three continents known today Europe Asia and Africa When cosmographers realized that the New World was not connected to the Old but before it was fully mapped they considered the Americas a single fourth continent citation needed The letter says 17 August 1501 although translators variously rendered it also as 7 August 1501 10 August 1501 or 1 August 1501 39 40 References Vespucci CollinsDictionary com HarperCollins Retrieved 27 April 2020 Almagia Roberto 8 December 2022 Amerigo Vespucci Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 29 December 2022 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 4 a b Formisano 1992 pp xix xxvi a b c Pohl 1944 a b c Fernandez Armesto 2007 Pohl 1944 pp 18 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 21 24 a b c Arciniegas 1955 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 34 36 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 47 57 Brinkbaumer amp Hoges 2004 pp 104 109 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 56 58 Markham 1894 Introduction Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 51 52 a b c Diffie amp Winius 1977 pp 456 457 Diffie amp Winius 1977 pp 458 459 Almagia Roberto Amerigo Vespucci Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 21 May 2021 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 123 130 Morison 1974 p 308 a b Morison 1974 p 307 a b Davies A 1952 The First Voyage of Amerigo Vespucci in 1497 8 The Geographical Journal 118 3 331 337 doi 10 2307 1790319 JSTOR 1790319 Lehmann Martin 2013 Amerigo Vespucci and His Alleged Awareness of America as a Separate Land Mass Imago Mundi 65 1 17 doi 10 1080 03085694 2013 731201 S2CID 129472491 Retrieved 21 May 2021 Vigneras 1976 pp 47 63 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 63 65 Vigneras 1976 pp 47 52 Lester 2009 pp 314 316 Morison 1974 p 280 Morison 1974 pp 280 284 Ray 2004 p 91 Markham 1894 pp 52 56 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 168 169 Formisano 1992 pp 103 105 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 169 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 169 175 177 Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 178 180 Arciniegas 1955 pp 283 284 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 179 Canovai Stanislao 1832 Viaggi di Amerigo Vespucci con la vita l elogio e la dissertazione giustificativa di questo celebre navigatore di Stanislao Canovai in Italian Dai torchi di A Tofani p 158 Bonari Bruno 1 July 2013 Amerigo Vespucci in Italian Centro Tipografico Livornese editore p 222 ISBN 978 88 906956 8 1 Wolfgang Haase Meyer Reinhold eds The Classical Tradition and the Americas Walter de Gruyter 1994 p 54 Lester 2009 pp 342 352 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 185 Lester Toby December 2009 The Waldseemuller Map Charting the New World Smithsonian Fernandez Armesto 2007 pp 185 186 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 190 Diffie amp Winius 1977 pp 457 459 Lester 2009 pp 302 303 Formisano 1992 p xxii Lester 2009 pp 346 349 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 112 a b Morison 1974 p 306 Diffie amp Winius 1977 p 458 Fernandez Armesto 2007 p 128 Burckhardt Jacob 1944 The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy London Phaidon Press pp 92 93 Vespucci 1504 BibliographyArciniegas German 1955 Amerigo and the New World The Life and Times of Amerigo Vespucci Translated by de Onis Harriet New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0374902801 Beazley Charles Raymond 1911 Vespucci Amerigo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed pp 1053 1054 Brinkbaumer Klaus Hoges Clemens 2004 The Voyage of the Vizcaina Translated by Streck Annette Harcourt pp 105 109 ISBN 978 0151011865 Diffie Bailey W Winius George D 1977 Foundations of the Portuguese Empire 1415 1580 University of Minnesota Press pp 456 462 Edwards Charles Lester Vespucci Amerigo 2009 Amerigo Vespucci Viartis ISBN 978 1906421021 Fernandez Armesto Felipe 2007 Amerigo The Man Who Gave His Name to America New York Random House Formisano Luciano 1992 Letters from a New World Amerigo Vespucci s Discovery of America New York Marsilio ISBN 0941419622 Lester Toby 2009 The Fourth Part of the World New York Free Press ISBN 978 1416535317 Magnaghi Alberto 1924 Amerigo Vespucci Studio critico con speciale riguardo ad una nuova valutazione delle fonti e con documenti inediti tratti dal Codice Vaglienti Rome Treves Markham Clements R 1894 The Letters of Amerigo Vespucci and Other Documents Illustrative of His Career London Hakluyt Society ISBN 978 1108012867 Morison Samuel Eliot 1974 The European Discovery of America The Southern Voyages 1492 1616 New York Oxford University Press pp 276 312 Ober Frederick A 1907 Amerigo Vespucci New York amp London Harper amp Brothers ISBN 978 1503010727 Pohl Frederick J 1944 Amerigo Vespucci Pilot Major New York Columbia University Press hdl 2027 mdp 39015003944751 Ray Kurt 2004 Amerigo Vespucci Italian Explorer of the Americas New York The Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 0823936155 Schulz Norbert Vespucci Amerigo 2007 Amerigo Vespucci Mundus Novus mit Zweittexten MMO Verlag ISBN 978 3981114423 Thomas Hugh 2003 Rivers of Gold New York Random House pp 269 276 ISBN 0375502041 Vespucci Amerigo 1504 Mundus Novus Letter to Lorenzo Pietro Di Medici Translated by Northup George Tyler Princeton Princeton University Press published 1916 Retrieved 27 April 2020 Vigneras Louis Andre 1976 The Discovery of South America and the Andalusian Voyages Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226856094 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amerigo Vespucci Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Vespucci Amerigo Canaday James A The Life of Amerigo Vespucci Works by Amerigo Vespucci at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Amerigo Vespucci at Internet Archive Vespucci Amerigo Account of His First Voyage 1497 Letter to Pier Soderini Gonfalonier of the Republic of Florence Internet Modern History Sourcebook Fordham University U S Mason Wyatt I am America And So The New York Times 12 December 2007 Martin Waldseemuller Franz Wieser Ritter von Edward Burke trans The Cosmographiae Introductio of Martin Waldseemuller in facsimile followed by the Four voyages of Amerigo Vespucci The United States Catholic Historical Society 1908 1507 Waldseemuller Map from the US Library of Congress TOPS Lecture at Library of Congress Drs France and Easton World Digital Library presentation of the 1507 Waldseemuller Map in the Library of Congress This is the only known surviving copy of the wall map edition of which it is believed 1 000 copies were printed Four originals of the 1507 globe gore map are in existence in Germany UK and US Online Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries High resolution images of works by and or portraits of Amerigo Vespucci in jpg and tiff format Soderini Letters in Giovanni Battista Ramusio Primo Volume delle Nauigationi et Viaggi in Italian Venetia 1550 fol 138 140 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amerigo Vespucci amp oldid 1141126224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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