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Dragon's Tail (peninsula)

The Dragon's Tail is a modern name for the phantom peninsula in southeast Asia which appeared in medieval Arabian and Renaissance European world maps. It formed the eastern shore of the Great Gulf (Gulf of Thailand) east of the Golden Chersonese (Malay Peninsula), replacing the "unknown lands" which Ptolemy and others had thought surrounded the "Indian Sea".

Name edit

The peninsula known to modern cartographers as the "Dragon's Tail" or "Tiger's Tail"[1] appeared under various names on different maps.

History edit

 
Hubert Daunicht's reconstruction of the section of al-Khwārizmī's world map concerning the Indian Ocean. The Dragon's Tail, or the eastern opening of the Indian Ocean, which does not exist in Ptolemy's description, is traced in very little detail on the far right side of al-Khwārizmī's map.

Early history edit

The peninsula does not appear in any surviving manuscript of Ptolemy's Geography or other Greek geographers. Instead, it is first attested in the Ptolemaic-influenced Book of the Description of the Earth compiled by al-Khwārizmī around 833 AD. Ptolemy's map ended at 180°E of the Fortunate Isles without being able to explain what might lie on the imagined eastern shore of the Indian Ocean or beyond the lands of the Sinae and of Serica in Asia. Chinese Muslims traditionally credit the Companion Saʿd ibn Abi Waqqas with having missionized the country as early as the 7th century; the trading community was large enough that a large-scale massacre is recorded at Yangzhou in 760.[2][3] Merchants such as Soleiman showed Al-Khwārizmī that the Indian Ocean was not closed as Hipparchus and Ptolemy had held but opened either narrowly or broadly. Al-Khwārizmī left most of Ptolemy's eastern coast but the creation of the strait created a new peninsula, beyond which he placed the Sea of Darkness and the Island of the Jewel.[4][5]

Age of Discovery edit

 
The c. 1490 Martellus world map held by Yale University, the first Ptolemaic map in Europe to include the Dragon's Tail rather than leave the Indian Ocean landlocked
 
Martin of Bohemia's Erdapfel

Bartholomew Dias passed the Cape of Good Hope during a major storm in 1488; within a year or two, Martellus had published a world map showing the communication of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, creating an unconnected south point of Africa and transforming the eastern end of Ptolemy's shoreline into a great peninsula, similar to that described by Al-Khwārizmī.[6] The area was detailed with locations from Marco Polo and other travelers, including positions formerly related to Ptolemy's Golden Chersonese.[6] A similar peninsula then appeared on the Erdapfel globe drafted by Martin of Bohemia in 1492, just prior to Columbus's return. In the mid-16th century, António Galvão mentioned a map that had been purchased in 1428 by Dom Pedro, eldest son of John I, which described the Cape of Good Hope and included "the Strait of Magellan" under the name "Dragon's Tail" (Portuguese: Cola do dragam).[7][8] Some South American scholars have taken this at face value as evidence of early and thorough exploration of the Americas, but their claims have not been substantiated.[9][10]

 
The 1502 Cantino planisphere, showing the Dragon's Tail united with the Golden Chersonese.
 
Pietro Coppo's map (1520) is one of the last ones to show the Dragon's Tail.[11]

Christopher Columbus—at least initially—believed in the existence of the peninsula, whose position and attendant islands considerably shortened the expected distance from the African coast to East Asia.[12] He may have been guided directly by Martellus's maps.[13] Columbus considered himself to have arrived at Champa, which figured prominently in three inscriptions on Martellus's 1491 map, and cartographers began to draw discoveries in Central America on the eastern shore of the phantom peninsula.[12] Amerigo Vespucci also considered himself to have arrived at this peninsula rather than a new world.[14]

Another form of this peninsula appeared in the 1502 Cantino planisphere smuggled out of Portugal for the Duke of Ferrara.[15] The map has lost the Great Gulf and the peninsula continues to be too large, but it has merged with the Golden Chersonese as a single landform and bent more towards the east, apparently influenced by Arabic sources.[16]

The Portuguese were aware of the peninsula's likely nonexistence by shortly after the fall of Malacca, when Albuquerque acquired a large Javanese map of Southeast Asia.[17] The original was lost aboard the Froll de la Mar shortly afterwards[18] but a tracing by Francisco Rodrigues was sent in its place as part of a letter to the king.[note 1] Nonetheless, published maps continued to include it in different forms for another century.

Details edit

The southern end of the peninsula was generally known as the Cape of Cattigara.

Martellus's world maps include labels marking the areas of Upper India (India Superior), Champa (Ciamba Provincia), and Greater Champa (Ciamba Magna Provincia).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Albuquerque emphasized the particular trustworthiness of the information: "I discussed the reliability of this map with the pilot and Pero d'Alpoem so that they might fully inform Your Highness; you may take this pedaço de padram ["piece of map"] at face value and as being based on sound information, as it shows the genuine routes [the locals] follow on the way out and back."[18]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Siebold (2011).
  2. ^ Wan, Lei (2017). The earliest Muslim communities in China. Qiraat. Vol. 8. Riyadh: King Faisal Center for research and Islamic Studies. p. 11. ISBN 978-603-8206-39-3.
  3. ^ Qi, Dongfang (2010). . In Krahl, Regina; Guy, John; Wilson, J. Keith; Raby, Julian (eds.). Shipwrecked: Tang Treasures and Monsoon Winds. Washington, DC: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. pp. 221–227. ISBN 978-1-58834-305-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-05-04. Retrieved 2021-03-05.
  4. ^ al-Khwārizmī (c. 833).
  5. ^ Rapoport & Savage-Smith (2008), pp. 133–134.
  6. ^ a b Suárez (1999), p. 94.
  7. ^ Galvão (1563), p. 18.
  8. ^ Hakluyt (1862), p. 66.
  9. ^ Richardson (2003).
  10. ^ Lester (2009), p. 230.
  11. ^ "Prominent Istrians: Pietro Coppo". Istria on the Internet. Istrian American Charities Association, Inc.
  12. ^ a b Richardson (2011), p. 103.
  13. ^ Miller (2014).
  14. ^ Lester (2009), p. 316.
  15. ^ Suárez (1999), p. 94–95.
  16. ^ Suárez (1999), p. 95.
  17. ^ Sollewijn Gelpke (1995), p. 77.
  18. ^ a b Sollewijn Gelpke (1995), p. 80.

References edit

  • al-Khwārizmī (c. 833), The Book of the Description of the Earth.
  • Galvão, António (1563), Tratado... dos diuersos & desuayrados caminhos, por onde nos tempos passados a pimenta & especearia veyo da India às nossas partes, & assi de todos os descobrimentos antigos & modernos, que são feitos até a era de mil & quinhentos & cincoenta [Treatise on the Various and Sundry Ways that in Times Past Pepper and Spices Came from India to Our Parts & Also on All of the Discoveries Ancient & Modern Which Were Made up to the Year 1550] (PDF), Lisbon: Joam da Barreira. (in Portuguese)
  • Galvano, Antonio (1862) [Portuguese version 1563, original translation 1601], The Discoveries of the World, from Their First Original unto the Year of Our Lord 1555, Translated & edited by Richard Hakluyt, edited by C.R.D. Bethune, London: T. Richards for the Hakluyt Society. (in English and Portuguese)
  • Robert J. King, “Finding Marco Polo’s Locach”, Terrae Incognitae, vol.50, no.1, April 2018, pp.1-18.
  • Lester, Toby (2009), The Fourth Part of the World: The Epic Story of History's Greatest Map, London: Profile Books, ISBN 978-1-86197-803-5.
  • Miller, Greg (15 September 2014), "Uncovering Hidden Text on a 500-Year-Old Map that Guided Columbus", Wired.
  • Rapoport, Yossef; Savage-Smith, Emilie (2008), "The Book of Curiosities and a Unique Map of the World", in Talbert, Richard J.A.; Unger, Richard W. (eds.), Cartography in Antiquity and the Middle Ages: Fresh Perspectives, New Methods, Koninklijke Brill NV, ISBN 978-90-04-16663-9.
  • Richardson, William A.R. (2003), "South America on Maps before Columbus? Martellus's 'Dragon's Tail' Peninsula", Imago Mundi, vol. 55, pp. 25–37, doi:10.1080/0308569032000097477, S2CID 129171245.
  • Richardson, William A.R. (2011), "Terra Australis, Java la Grande, and Australia: Identity Problems and Fiction", in Scott, Anne M.; Hiatt, Alfred; McIlroy, Claire; Wortham, Christopher (eds.), European Perceptions of Terra Australis, Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, pp. 93–110, ISBN 9781409426059.
  • Siebold, Jim (2011), "#256: Martellus' World Maps", Cartographic Images, Oviedo: Henry Davis Consulting, retrieved 15 March 2015.
  • Sollewijn Gelpke, J.H.F. (1995), "Afonso de Albuquerque's Pre-Portuguese 'Javanese' Map, Partially Reconstructed from Francisco Rodrigues' Book", Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde, vol. 151, Leiden, pp. 76–99, doi:10.1163/22134379-90003056{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Suárez, Thomas (1999), Early Mapping of Southeast Asia, Singapore: Periplus Editions, ISBN 9781462906963.

External links edit

  • The c. 1489 Martellus world map & at Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book & MS Library

dragon, tail, peninsula, dragon, tail, modern, name, phantom, peninsula, southeast, asia, which, appeared, medieval, arabian, renaissance, european, world, maps, formed, eastern, shore, great, gulf, gulf, thailand, east, golden, chersonese, malay, peninsula, r. The Dragon s Tail is a modern name for the phantom peninsula in southeast Asia which appeared in medieval Arabian and Renaissance European world maps It formed the eastern shore of the Great Gulf Gulf of Thailand east of the Golden Chersonese Malay Peninsula replacing the unknown lands which Ptolemy and others had thought surrounded the Indian Sea Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Age of Discovery 3 Details 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Citations 7 References 8 External linksName editThe peninsula known to modern cartographers as the Dragon s Tail or Tiger s Tail 1 appeared under various names on different maps History edit nbsp Hubert Daunicht s reconstruction of the section of al Khwarizmi s world map concerning the Indian Ocean The Dragon s Tail or the eastern opening of the Indian Ocean which does not exist in Ptolemy s description is traced in very little detail on the far right side of al Khwarizmi s map Early history edit The peninsula does not appear in any surviving manuscript of Ptolemy s Geography or other Greek geographers Instead it is first attested in the Ptolemaic influenced Book of the Description of the Earth compiled by al Khwarizmi around 833 AD Ptolemy s map ended at 180 E of the Fortunate Isles without being able to explain what might lie on the imagined eastern shore of the Indian Ocean or beyond the lands of the Sinae and of Serica in Asia Chinese Muslims traditionally credit the Companion Saʿd ibn Abi Waqqas with having missionized the country as early as the 7th century the trading community was large enough that a large scale massacre is recorded at Yangzhou in 760 2 3 Merchants such as Soleiman showed Al Khwarizmi that the Indian Ocean was not closed as Hipparchus and Ptolemy had held but opened either narrowly or broadly Al Khwarizmi left most of Ptolemy s eastern coast but the creation of the strait created a new peninsula beyond which he placed the Sea of Darkness and the Island of the Jewel 4 5 Age of Discovery edit nbsp The c 1490 Martellus world map held by Yale University the first Ptolemaic map in Europe to include the Dragon s Tail rather than leave the Indian Ocean landlocked nbsp Martin of Bohemia s Erdapfel Bartholomew Dias passed the Cape of Good Hope during a major storm in 1488 within a year or two Martellus had published a world map showing the communication of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans creating an unconnected south point of Africa and transforming the eastern end of Ptolemy s shoreline into a great peninsula similar to that described by Al Khwarizmi 6 The area was detailed with locations from Marco Polo and other travelers including positions formerly related to Ptolemy s Golden Chersonese 6 A similar peninsula then appeared on the Erdapfel globe drafted by Martin of Bohemia in 1492 just prior to Columbus s return In the mid 16th century Antonio Galvao mentioned a map that had been purchased in 1428 by Dom Pedro eldest son of John I which described the Cape of Good Hope and included the Strait of Magellan under the name Dragon s Tail Portuguese Cola do dragam 7 8 Some South American scholars have taken this at face value as evidence of early and thorough exploration of the Americas but their claims have not been substantiated 9 10 nbsp The 1502 Cantino planisphere showing the Dragon s Tail united with the Golden Chersonese nbsp Pietro Coppo s map 1520 is one of the last ones to show the Dragon s Tail 11 Christopher Columbus at least initially believed in the existence of the peninsula whose position and attendant islands considerably shortened the expected distance from the African coast to East Asia 12 He may have been guided directly by Martellus s maps 13 Columbus considered himself to have arrived at Champa which figured prominently in three inscriptions on Martellus s 1491 map and cartographers began to draw discoveries in Central America on the eastern shore of the phantom peninsula 12 Amerigo Vespucci also considered himself to have arrived at this peninsula rather than a new world 14 Another form of this peninsula appeared in the 1502 Cantino planisphere smuggled out of Portugal for the Duke of Ferrara 15 The map has lost the Great Gulf and the peninsula continues to be too large but it has merged with the Golden Chersonese as a single landform and bent more towards the east apparently influenced by Arabic sources 16 The Portuguese were aware of the peninsula s likely nonexistence by shortly after the fall of Malacca when Albuquerque acquired a large Javanese map of Southeast Asia 17 The original was lost aboard the Froll de la Mar shortly afterwards 18 but a tracing by Francisco Rodrigues was sent in its place as part of a letter to the king note 1 Nonetheless published maps continued to include it in different forms for another century Details editThe southern end of the peninsula was generally known as the Cape of Cattigara Martellus s world maps include labels marking the areas of Upper India India Superior Champa Ciamba Provincia and Greater Champa Ciamba Magna Provincia See also editStrait of Magellan Golden Peninsula another semi phantom peninsula appeared in early and medieval world maps Notes edit Albuquerque emphasized the particular trustworthiness of the information I discussed the reliability of this map with the pilot and Pero d Alpoem so that they might fully inform Your Highness you may take this pedaco de padram piece of map at face value and as being based on sound information as it shows the genuine routes the locals follow on the way out and back 18 Citations edit Siebold 2011 Wan Lei 2017 The earliest Muslim communities in China Qiraat Vol 8 Riyadh King Faisal Center for research and Islamic Studies p 11 ISBN 978 603 8206 39 3 Qi Dongfang 2010 Gold and Silver Wares on the Belitung Shipwreck In Krahl Regina Guy John Wilson J Keith Raby Julian eds Shipwrecked Tang Treasures and Monsoon Winds Washington DC Arthur M Sackler Gallery Smithsonian Institution pp 221 227 ISBN 978 1 58834 305 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2021 05 04 Retrieved 2021 03 05 al Khwarizmi c 833 Rapoport amp Savage Smith 2008 pp 133 134 a b Suarez 1999 p 94 Galvao 1563 p 18 Hakluyt 1862 p 66 Richardson 2003 Lester 2009 p 230 Prominent Istrians Pietro Coppo Istria on the Internet Istrian American Charities Association Inc a b Richardson 2011 p 103 Miller 2014 Lester 2009 p 316 Suarez 1999 p 94 95 Suarez 1999 p 95 Sollewijn Gelpke 1995 p 77 a b Sollewijn Gelpke 1995 p 80 References edital Khwarizmi c 833 The Book of the Description of the Earth Galvao Antonio 1563 Tratado dos diuersos amp desuayrados caminhos por onde nos tempos passados a pimenta amp especearia veyo da India as nossas partes amp assi de todos os descobrimentos antigos amp modernos que sao feitos ate a era de mil amp quinhentos amp cincoenta Treatise on the Various and Sundry Ways that in Times Past Pepper and Spices Came from India to Our Parts amp Also on All of the Discoveries Ancient amp Modern Which Were Made up to the Year 1550 PDF Lisbon Joam da Barreira in Portuguese Galvano Antonio 1862 Portuguese version 1563 original translation 1601 The Discoveries of the World from Their First Original unto the Year of Our Lord 1555 Translated amp edited by Richard Hakluyt edited by C R D Bethune London T Richards for the Hakluyt Society in English and Portuguese Robert J King Finding Marco Polo s Locach Terrae Incognitae vol 50 no 1 April 2018 pp 1 18 Lester Toby 2009 The Fourth Part of the World The Epic Story of History s Greatest Map London Profile Books ISBN 978 1 86197 803 5 Miller Greg 15 September 2014 Uncovering Hidden Text on a 500 Year Old Map that Guided Columbus Wired Rapoport Yossef Savage Smith Emilie 2008 The Book of Curiosities and a Unique Map of the World in Talbert Richard J A Unger Richard W eds Cartography in Antiquity and the Middle Ages Fresh Perspectives New Methods Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978 90 04 16663 9 Richardson William A R 2003 South America on Maps before Columbus Martellus s Dragon s Tail Peninsula Imago Mundi vol 55 pp 25 37 doi 10 1080 0308569032000097477 S2CID 129171245 Richardson William A R 2011 Terra Australis Java la Grande and Australia Identity Problems and Fiction in Scott Anne M Hiatt Alfred McIlroy Claire Wortham Christopher eds European Perceptions ofTerra Australis Farnham Ashgate Publishing pp 93 110 ISBN 9781409426059 Siebold Jim 2011 256 Martellus World Maps Cartographic Images Oviedo Henry Davis Consulting retrieved 15 March 2015 Sollewijn Gelpke J H F 1995 Afonso de Albuquerque s Pre Portuguese Javanese Map Partially Reconstructed from Francisco Rodrigues Book Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde vol 151 Leiden pp 76 99 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003056 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Suarez Thomas 1999 Early Mapping of Southeast Asia Singapore Periplus Editions ISBN 9781462906963 External links editThe c 1489 Martellus world map amp its negative at Yale University s Beinecke Rare Book amp MS Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dragon 27s Tail peninsula amp oldid 1206874223, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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