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Henricus Martellus Germanus

Henricus Martellus Germanus (fl. 1480-1496) was a German cartographer active in Florence between 1480 and 1496. His surviving cartographic work includes manuscripts of Ptolemy's Geographia, manuscripts of Insularium illustratum (a descriptive atlas of island maps), and two world maps which were the first to show a passage around the southern tip of Africa into the Indian Ocean. His world maps summarize geographical knowledge at the outset of the Age of Discovery and "epitomize the best of European cartography at the end of the fifteenth century."[1]

Map of the world by Henricus Martellus Germanus, preserved in the British Library
Map of the world by Henricus Martellus Germanus, preserved at Yale University

Biography

Very little is known about the life of Henricus Martellus Germanus. Even his name and place of birth have been the subject of much speculation. In the fifteenth century it was common for scholars and artisans to adopt a Latinized version of their birth name. This was the case with Martellus. Germanus is the Latin word for Germany and it is the clearest indication of his origin. Some authors have assumed his birth name must have been "Heinrich Hammer" (the German translation of Henricus Martellus), but there is no documentary proof. It is possible that he was from Nuremberg, a center of the German Renaissance but, again, no direct evidence.[2]

At the time, Florence was home to a significant population of German immigrants working as craftsmen and artisans, so Martellus's presence in the city would not have been remarkable. He was active in Florence between 1480 and 1496, spending at least some of that time in the workshop of Francesco Rosselli.[3][4]

Nothing is known of his education or experience, although his work shows some influence of Nicolaus Germanus, another German cartographer active in Florence.[5] His own assertion that he traveled extensively suggests that perhaps he was a merchant.[6]

Works

The surviving cartographic works attributed to Martellus include two world maps, manuscripts of Ptolemy's Geographia, and manuscripts of Insularium illustratum (a descriptive atlas of island maps).[7]

World maps

Between around 1489 and 1491, he produced at least one world map which is remarkably similar to the terrestrial globe produced by Martin Behaim around 1492, the Erdapfel. Both show novel adaptations of the existing Ptolemaic model, opening a passage south of Africa and creating an enormous new peninsula east of the Golden Chersonese (Malaysia). Both possibly derive from maps created around 1485 in Lisbon by Bartolomeo Columbus.[citation needed]

A manuscript world map, measuring 201 by 122 centimetres (79 in × 48 in) in size, was rediscovered in the 1960s[8] and donated to Yale's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.[9] An inscription in the lower left corner states: "Although Strabo and Ptolemy and the majority of the ancients were most assiduous in describing the world we, however, bring together in this picture and carefully show in their true places the new knowledge that escaped their diligence and remained unknown to them".[10] Another world map by Henricus Martellus Germanus is in the British Library's collection.[11]

A 2014 multispectral imaging project led by Chet van Duzer revealed many previously illegible details of the map, including a depiction of a porcupine in northern Asia, references to mythological peoples such as the Hippopodes and the Panotti, and a surprising amount of information about the interior of Africa – knowledge that likely originated with the Ethiopian delegation to the 1441 Council of Florence.[12]

Ptolemy's Geographia

Around 1480, Martellus produced his earliest known work, a manuscript of Ptolemy's Geographia. This first version followed the standard Ptolemaic model, a traditional world map and twenty-six regional maps using a trapezoidal projection. A later version was produced for his patron, Camillo Maria Vitelli. In addition to the traditional maps, Martellus added a number of new maps (tabulae modernae) including maps of Mediterranean islands, Asia Minor, northern Europe, the British Isles and a nautical map of the north African coast. In a preface he claims his maps contain all the ports and coasts newly discovered by the Portuguese.[13]

Insularium illustratum

Martellus also produced an Insularium illustratum ("Illustrated Book of Islands") of which five manuscripts are extant, plus one working copy in the Biblioteca Laurentiana. It contains an illustrated description of islands of the Aegean Sea, mostly copied from a previous work by Cristoforo Buondelmonti. Buondelmonti's isolario (island book) had been copied many times during the 15th-century but Martellus added other Mediterranean islands such as Corsica, Sardinia and Sicily to his version, and he was the first to add islands outside of the Mediterranean, including Britain and Ireland. He was also the first to add several regional maps and a world map. In particular, the British Library manuscript contains his most important, detailed, and widely reproduced world map.[14][15]

Influence

Martellus' map served as one source for the Waldseemüller map of 1507. The overall layout was similar, and Martin Waldseemüller used the same projection as Martellus, the pseudo-cordiform projection. Both cartographers added decorative wind-heads in the borders of their maps, and both also took advantage of the extra space in the lower corners of the maps created by the swooping lines of the projection to add text blocks in those corners. The shape of northern Africa is the same on both maps; that is, it is Ptolemaic with a sharp northwestern corner. The shape of eastern Asia is also similar on the two maps, with a huge peninsula jutting southwestward into the Indian Ocean, and Japan is in precisely the same position on the two maps, at the eastern edge.[16]


He has been identified with an Arrigho di Federigho who authored the first translation into German of Bocaccio's Decamerone. According to this theory, the surname Martellus comes from the Martelli family, to which Henricus/Arrigho was linked.[17]

 
Henricus Martellus, explanatory inscription on his world map of 1491

Notes

  1. ^ Edson 2007, p. 219
  2. ^ Van Duzer 2019, p. 3
  3. ^ Van Duzer 2019, p. 3
  4. ^ Edson 2007, pp. 215-220
  5. ^ Van Duzer 2019, p. 3
  6. ^ Edson 2007, pp. 215-220
  7. ^ Van Duzer 2019, p. 4
  8. ^ Urbanus, Jason (Jan–Feb 2016). "Reading the Invisible Ink". Archaeology. 69 (1): 9–10. ISSN 0003-8113. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  9. ^ Hammer, Heinrich. "Map of the world of Christopher Columbus". Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Yale University. Retrieved 31 August 2017.; Chet Van Duzer, Henricus Martellus's World Map at Yale (c. 1491): Multispectral Imaging, Sources, and Influence, Berlin, Springer International Publishing, 2018.
  10. ^ ETSI STRABO AC PTOLEMEUS ET PLERIQUE VETERUM DESCRIBENDI ORBIS FUERE STUDIOSISSIMI NOVORUM TAMEN DILIGENTIA QUEDAM AB EIS TANQUAM INCOGNITA PRETERMISSA ADINVENIT QUE NOS HOC PICTURE AD VERAM LOCORUM SCIENTIAM EXPRIMENDAM STUDIOSE IUNXIMUS
  11. ^ British Library
  12. ^ Miller, Greg (8 October 2018). "A 500-year-old map used by Columbus reveals its secrets". National Geographic. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  13. ^ Edson 2007, pp. 215-220
  14. ^ Van Duzer 2019, pp. 9-18
  15. ^ Bouloux, Nathalie (2012). "L'Insularium Illustratum d'Henricus Martellus". The Historical Review / La Revue Historique. IX: 77–94. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
  16. ^ Chet Van Duzer, "Waldseemüller's World Maps of 1507 and 1516: Sources and Development", The Portolan, No.1, Winter 2012, p.12.
  17. ^ Rezension von L. Böninger: Die deutsche Einwanderung nach Florenz (2006)

References

  • Davies, Arthur (1977). "Behaim, Martellus and Columbus". The Geographical Journal. 143 (3): 451–459. doi:10.2307/634713. JSTOR 634713 – via JSTOR.
  • Edson, Evelyn (2007). The World Map 1300-1492. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 215–219. ISBN 978-0801885891.
  • Lester, Toby (2009). The Fourth Part of the World. New York: Free Press. ISBN 9781416535317.
  • Marques, Alfredo Pinheiro (1992). "Martellus, Henricus". In Bedini, Silvio A. (ed.). The Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. Simon and Schuster.
  • Meurer, Peter H. (2007). "Cartography in the German Lands, 1450–1650". In Woodward, David (ed.). The History of Cartography, Volume 3: Cartography in the European Renaissance, Part 2 (PDF). University of Chicago. pp. 1183–1188. ISBN 978-0-226-90734-5.
  • Van Duzer, Chet (2019). Henricus Martellus's world map at Yale (c. 1491) : multispectral imaging, sources, and influence. Cham, Switzerland. ISBN 978-3-319-76840-3. OCLC 1047959884.
  • Wolff, Hans (1992). "The Conception of the World on the Eve of the Discovery of America". In Wolff, Hans (ed.). America : Early Maps of the New World. Munich: Prestel. pp. 13–14. ISBN 3791312324.

External links

  • Arthur Davies: Behaim, Martellus and Columbus, The Geographical Journal, Vol. 143, No. 3 (Nov., 1977), pp. 451-459
  • Alexander O. Vietor: A Pre-Columbian Map of the World, Circa 1489, Imago Mundi, Vol. 17, 1963 (1963), pp. 95-96
  • An essay on the world maps created by Henricus Martellus Germanus 2006-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Recent findings via multispectral imaging: , Hidden secrets of Yale's 1491 world map revealed via multispectral imaging press release by Yale University.

henricus, martellus, germanus, 1480, 1496, german, cartographer, active, florence, between, 1480, 1496, surviving, cartographic, work, includes, manuscripts, ptolemy, geographia, manuscripts, insularium, illustratum, descriptive, atlas, island, maps, world, ma. Henricus Martellus Germanus fl 1480 1496 was a German cartographer active in Florence between 1480 and 1496 His surviving cartographic work includes manuscripts of Ptolemy s Geographia manuscripts of Insularium illustratum a descriptive atlas of island maps and two world maps which were the first to show a passage around the southern tip of Africa into the Indian Ocean His world maps summarize geographical knowledge at the outset of the Age of Discovery and epitomize the best of European cartography at the end of the fifteenth century 1 Map of the world by Henricus Martellus Germanus preserved in the British Library Map of the world by Henricus Martellus Germanus preserved at Yale University Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 2 1 World maps 2 2 Ptolemy s Geographia 2 3 Insularium illustratum 3 Influence 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditVery little is known about the life of Henricus Martellus Germanus Even his name and place of birth have been the subject of much speculation In the fifteenth century it was common for scholars and artisans to adopt a Latinized version of their birth name This was the case with Martellus Germanus is the Latin word for Germany and it is the clearest indication of his origin Some authors have assumed his birth name must have been Heinrich Hammer the German translation of Henricus Martellus but there is no documentary proof It is possible that he was from Nuremberg a center of the German Renaissance but again no direct evidence 2 At the time Florence was home to a significant population of German immigrants working as craftsmen and artisans so Martellus s presence in the city would not have been remarkable He was active in Florence between 1480 and 1496 spending at least some of that time in the workshop of Francesco Rosselli 3 4 Nothing is known of his education or experience although his work shows some influence of Nicolaus Germanus another German cartographer active in Florence 5 His own assertion that he traveled extensively suggests that perhaps he was a merchant 6 Works EditThe surviving cartographic works attributed to Martellus include two world maps manuscripts of Ptolemy s Geographia and manuscripts of Insularium illustratum a descriptive atlas of island maps 7 World maps Edit Between around 1489 and 1491 he produced at least one world map which is remarkably similar to the terrestrial globe produced by Martin Behaim around 1492 the Erdapfel Both show novel adaptations of the existing Ptolemaic model opening a passage south of Africa and creating an enormous new peninsula east of the Golden Chersonese Malaysia Both possibly derive from maps created around 1485 in Lisbon by Bartolomeo Columbus citation needed A manuscript world map measuring 201 by 122 centimetres 79 in 48 in in size was rediscovered in the 1960s 8 and donated to Yale s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library 9 An inscription in the lower left corner states Although Strabo and Ptolemy and the majority of the ancients were most assiduous in describing the world we however bring together in this picture and carefully show in their true places the new knowledge that escaped their diligence and remained unknown to them 10 Another world map by Henricus Martellus Germanus is in the British Library s collection 11 A 2014 multispectral imaging project led by Chet van Duzer revealed many previously illegible details of the map including a depiction of a porcupine in northern Asia references to mythological peoples such as the Hippopodes and the Panotti and a surprising amount of information about the interior of Africa knowledge that likely originated with the Ethiopian delegation to the 1441 Council of Florence 12 Ptolemy s Geographia Edit Around 1480 Martellus produced his earliest known work a manuscript of Ptolemy s Geographia This first version followed the standard Ptolemaic model a traditional world map and twenty six regional maps using a trapezoidal projection A later version was produced for his patron Camillo Maria Vitelli In addition to the traditional maps Martellus added a number of new maps tabulae modernae including maps of Mediterranean islands Asia Minor northern Europe the British Isles and a nautical map of the north African coast In a preface he claims his maps contain all the ports and coasts newly discovered by the Portuguese 13 Insularium illustratum Edit Martellus also produced an Insularium illustratum Illustrated Book of Islands of which five manuscripts are extant plus one working copy in the Biblioteca Laurentiana It contains an illustrated description of islands of the Aegean Sea mostly copied from a previous work by Cristoforo Buondelmonti Buondelmonti s isolario island book had been copied many times during the 15th century but Martellus added other Mediterranean islands such as Corsica Sardinia and Sicily to his version and he was the first to add islands outside of the Mediterranean including Britain and Ireland He was also the first to add several regional maps and a world map In particular the British Library manuscript contains his most important detailed and widely reproduced world map 14 15 Influence EditMartellus map served as one source for the Waldseemuller map of 1507 The overall layout was similar and Martin Waldseemuller used the same projection as Martellus the pseudo cordiform projection Both cartographers added decorative wind heads in the borders of their maps and both also took advantage of the extra space in the lower corners of the maps created by the swooping lines of the projection to add text blocks in those corners The shape of northern Africa is the same on both maps that is it is Ptolemaic with a sharp northwestern corner The shape of eastern Asia is also similar on the two maps with a huge peninsula jutting southwestward into the Indian Ocean and Japan is in precisely the same position on the two maps at the eastern edge 16 He has been identified with an Arrigho di Federigho who authored the first translation into German of Bocaccio s Decamerone According to this theory the surname Martellus comes from the Martelli family to which Henricus Arrigho was linked 17 Henricus Martellus explanatory inscription on his world map of 1491Notes Edit Edson 2007 p 219 Van Duzer 2019 p 3 Van Duzer 2019 p 3 Edson 2007 pp 215 220 Van Duzer 2019 p 3 Edson 2007 pp 215 220 Van Duzer 2019 p 4 Urbanus Jason Jan Feb 2016 Reading the Invisible Ink Archaeology 69 1 9 10 ISSN 0003 8113 Retrieved 11 January 2021 Hammer Heinrich Map of the world of Christopher Columbus Beinecke Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Yale University Retrieved 31 August 2017 Chet Van Duzer Henricus Martellus s World Map at Yale c 1491 Multispectral Imaging Sources and Influence Berlin Springer International Publishing 2018 ETSI STRABO AC PTOLEMEUS ET PLERIQUE VETERUM DESCRIBENDI ORBIS FUERE STUDIOSISSIMI NOVORUM TAMEN DILIGENTIA QUEDAM AB EIS TANQUAM INCOGNITA PRETERMISSA ADINVENIT QUE NOS HOC PICTURE AD VERAM LOCORUM SCIENTIAM EXPRIMENDAM STUDIOSE IUNXIMUS British Library Miller Greg 8 October 2018 A 500 year old map used by Columbus reveals its secrets National Geographic Retrieved 26 August 2019 Edson 2007 pp 215 220 Van Duzer 2019 pp 9 18 Bouloux Nathalie 2012 L Insularium Illustratum d Henricus Martellus The Historical Review La Revue Historique IX 77 94 Retrieved 30 September 2016 Chet Van Duzer Waldseemuller s World Maps of 1507 and 1516 Sources and Development The Portolan No 1 Winter 2012 p 12 Rezension von L Boninger Die deutsche Einwanderung nach Florenz 2006 References EditDavies Arthur 1977 Behaim Martellus and Columbus The Geographical Journal 143 3 451 459 doi 10 2307 634713 JSTOR 634713 via JSTOR Edson Evelyn 2007 The World Map 1300 1492 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 215 219 ISBN 978 0801885891 Lester Toby 2009 The Fourth Part of the World New York Free Press ISBN 9781416535317 Marques Alfredo Pinheiro 1992 Martellus Henricus In Bedini Silvio A ed The Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia Vol 2 Simon and Schuster Meurer Peter H 2007 Cartography in the German Lands 1450 1650 In Woodward David ed The History of Cartography Volume 3 Cartography in the European Renaissance Part 2 PDF University of Chicago pp 1183 1188 ISBN 978 0 226 90734 5 Van Duzer Chet 2019 Henricus Martellus s world map at Yale c 1491 multispectral imaging sources and influence Cham Switzerland ISBN 978 3 319 76840 3 OCLC 1047959884 Wolff Hans 1992 The Conception of the World on the Eve of the Discovery of America In Wolff Hans ed America Early Maps of the New World Munich Prestel pp 13 14 ISBN 3791312324 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henricus Martellus Germanus Arthur Davies Behaim Martellus and Columbus The Geographical Journal Vol 143 No 3 Nov 1977 pp 451 459 Alexander O Vietor A Pre Columbian Map of the World Circa 1489 Imago Mundi Vol 17 1963 1963 pp 95 96 An essay on the world maps created by Henricus Martellus Germanus Archived 2006 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Recent findings via multispectral imaging presentation by Chet van Duzer Hidden secrets of Yale s 1491 world map revealed via multispectral imaging press release by Yale University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henricus Martellus Germanus amp oldid 1130731744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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