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Rutter (nautical)

A rutter is a mariner's handbook of written sailing directions. Before the advent of nautical charts, rutters were the primary store of geographic information for maritime navigation.

It was known as a periplus ("sailing-around" book) in classical antiquity and a portolano ("port book") to medieval Italian sailors in the Mediterranean Sea. Portuguese navigators of the 16th century called it a roteiro, the French a routier, from which the English word "rutter" is derived. In Dutch, it was called a leeskarte ("reading chart"), in German a Seebuch ("sea book"), and in Spanish a derrotero.[1]

History edit

Before the advent of nautical charts in the 14th century, navigation at sea relied on the accumulated knowledge of navigators and pilots. Plotting a course at sea required knowing the direction and distance between point A and point B. Knowledge of where places lay relative to each other was acquired by mariners during their long experience at sea.[citation needed]

The earliest peripluses of classical antiquity were not necessarily written as practical navigational handbooks. Some were more akin to an adventure travelogue, to celebrate a famous voyage. Others were disguised as such, notably the Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax from the 4th century BCE, which described the harbors and landmarks along the north African coast west of the Nile delta. Still others were designed as commercial guides for merchants, such as the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, written around 100 CE by a Greek merchant in Egypt, as a guide to the market ports of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean.

The re-emergence of maritime commerce in the Mediterranean Sea during the Middle Ages (12th–13th centuries), spearheaded by Italian ports like Amalfi, Pisa, Genoa and Venice, led to the rise of a new set of handbooks, known as portolani ("port books"), designed for the practical use of mariners. These were likely first compiled by professional mariners and pilots, probably as a mnemonic set of notes for their own personal use.[2] These notes were probably passed secretly within their profession ranks, from master to apprentice. Only a few of these Italian handbooks were made public, and even fewer have survived to this day. The most complete surviving portolano is the famous Il compasso da navigare, written c. 1250 and published in Genoa in 1296.

In their sailing instructions, Medieval portolan handbooks distinguished between various types of routes, e.g. per starea (coastal cabotage), per peleggio (open-sea sailing between two points). Portolan handbooks expressed their sailing directions in terms of compass rose points and distances. The reliance on the magnetic compass (an instrument that only really began being used for navigation in the 13th century,[3]) distinguishes the Medieval portolano from the earlier Classical periplus.

It is believed[by whom?] that the nautical charts that suddenly emerged in Genoa, Venice, Majorca and other maritime centers after the late 13th century were constructed from the written information contained in contemporary written pilot handbooks, hence the term portolan charts.[4] The wealth of detail contained in portolano handbooks is reflected in the portolan charts, stunningly accurate even by modern standards.

Handbooks often contained a wealth of information beyond sailing directions. For instance, they frequently had detailed physical descriptions of shorelines, harbors, islands, channels, notes about tides, landmarks, reefs, shoals and difficult entries, instructions on how to use navigational instruments to determine position and plot routes, calendars, astronomical tables, mathematical tables and calculation rules (notably the rule of marteloio), lists of customs regulations at different ports, medical recipes, instructions on ship repair, etc.[5] As a result, the nautical chart never fully replaced the handbook, but remained supplementary to it.

Among notable rutters is the Grand Routier, written by the French pilot Pierre Garcie, c. 1483 and published in 1502–03, which focused on the shores of the Bay of Biscay and the English Channel, and its peculiarities. Translated into English as the Rutter of the Sea in 1528, it was reprinted many times, and remained the pre-eminent rutter used by English sailors for decades.[6]

Another frequently used rutter was the work Portolano by Pietro Coppo, published in Venice in 1528, which included a collection of sea charts and the description of Christopher Columbus's discovery of America.[7] Coppo was among the last to consider North America an archipelago.[8]

Perhaps the most dramatic rutter was the 1595 Reysgheschrift by Dutch sailor Jan Huygen van Linschoten. Having sailed to Asia aboard Portuguese ships, Linschoten publicized the sailing directions (roteiros) to the East Indies that had been assiduously kept secret by the Portuguese for nearly a century. The publication of Linschoten's rutter was a sensation, and it launched the race by Dutch and English companies for the East Indies.[9]

Notable rutters edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kemp, Peter, ed. (1993). The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 242. ISBN 0192820842.
  2. ^ Taylor, (1956: p. 103); Parry (1963: p. 85).
  3. ^ Aczel (2001)
  4. ^ Brown (1949: p. 103), Taylor (1956: pp. 111–12). See also Lanman (1987) and Campbell (1987, 2011)
  5. ^ Edson (2007: 51)
  6. ^ Waters (1985: p. 241); also Markham (1880: p. 355). The first English edition (1528) of Garcie was entitled The Rutter of the Sea, with the laws of the yle of Auleron and translated by Robert Copeland. Copies of the third edition (1541) contained "A rutter of the northe, compyled by Rychard Proude".
  7. ^ "Prominent Istrians: Pietro Coppo". Istria on the Internet. Istrian American Charities Association, Inc. Archived from the original on November 26, 2014.
  8. ^ Channing, Edward; et al., eds. (1886). Narrative and Critical History of America ...: Spanish explorations and settlements in America from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century. Houghton, Mifflin and co. p. 128.
  9. ^ Koeman (1985), Schmidt (2001: p. 153)
  10. ^ "Book of the position of the coasts and the form of our sea, the Mediterranean". Uncovered in Patrick Gautier Dalché (1995) Carte marine et portulan au XIIe siècle. Le Liber de existencia rivieriarum et forma maris nostri Mediterranei, Pise, circa 1200 Paris: Boccard.
  11. ^ Motzo, B.R. (1947) Il compasso da navigare: opera italiana della metà del secolo XIII. Pref. e testo del Codice Hamilton 396, Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia della Università di Cagliari, pp. 1–137.
  12. ^ Breusing, A. (1876) Das Seebuch von Karl Koppmann. Bremen: Kühtmann. online
  13. ^ Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis, 1892 edition, Lisbon: Imprensa Nacional.online
  14. ^ Matthew Boyd Goldie, 'An Early English Rutter: The Sea and Spatial Hermeneutics in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries', Speculum, 90 (2015), doi:10.1017/S0038713415001396
  15. ^ Livro de Marinharia: tratado da agulha de marear. Roteiros, sondas, e outros conhecimentos relativos á navegação, first pub. 1903, Lisbon: Libanio da Silva. online
  16. ^ Originally published separately in 1595, the rutter Reysgheschrift was reprinted in 1596 as the second part of Linschoten's Itinerario (1596). In the 1598 English translation, the rutter was inserted as the Third Book.

External links edit

  • A Sea of Books, specialized virtual multilingual library on early maritime literature, bringing together many titles from online institutional repositories.
  • RUTTER Project, ERC-funded academic project focusing on early modern rutters and related literature.

Sources edit

  • Aczel, A. D. (2001). The Riddle of the Compass: the invention that changed the world. New York: Harcourt.
  • Brown, L. A. (1979) [1949]. The Story of Maps. New York: Dover.
  • Campbell, T. (1987). (PDF). In Harley, J. B.; Woodward, D. (eds.). The History of Cartography. Vol. 1: Cartography in Prehistoric, Ancient, and Medieval Europe and the Mediterranean. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 371–463. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-05.
  • Campbell, T. (2011). . Archived from the original on 2024-03-21.
  • Cotter, C. H. (1983). "A Brief History of Sailing Directions". Journal of Navigation. 36 (2): 249–251. doi:10.1017/S0373463300024966.
  • Edson, E. (2007). The World Map, 1300–1492: the persistence of tradition and transformation. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Koeman, C. (1985). "Jan Huygen van Linschoten". Revista da Universidade de Coimbra. 32: 27–47.
  • Lanman, J. T. (1987). On the Origin of Portolan Charts. Chicago: Newberry.
  • Markham, A. H., ed. (1880). The Voyages and Works of John Davis, the Navigator. London: Hakluyt.
  • Nordenskiöld, Adolf Erik (1897). Periplus: An Essay on the Early History of Charts and Sailing Directions. Translated by Bather, Frances A. Stockholm: Norstedt.
  • Parry, J. H. (1981) [1963]. The Age of Reconnaissance: Discovery, exploration and settlement, 1450 to 1650. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Schmidt, B. (2001). Innocence Abroad: the Dutch imagination and the New World, 1570–1670. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Stevenson, E. L. (1911). Portolan charts; their origin and characteristics: with a descriptive list of those belonging to the Hispanic society of America. New York: Knickerbocker Press.
  • Taylor, E. G. R. (1951). "The Oldest Mediterranean Pilot". Journal of Navigation. 4 (1): 81–85. doi:10.1017/S0373463300048785.
  • Taylor, E. G. R. (1971) [1956]. The Haven-Finding Art: A history of navigation from Odysseus to Captain Cook. London: Hollis and Carter.
  • Waters, D. W. (1985). "English navigational books, charts and globes printed down to 1600". Revista da Universidade de Coimbra. 33: 239–257.

rutter, nautical, portolano, redirects, here, nautical, chart, portolan, chart, rutter, mariner, handbook, written, sailing, directions, before, advent, nautical, charts, rutters, were, primary, store, geographic, information, maritime, navigation, known, peri. Portolano redirects here For the nautical chart see Portolan chart A rutter is a mariner s handbook of written sailing directions Before the advent of nautical charts rutters were the primary store of geographic information for maritime navigation It was known as a periplus sailing around book in classical antiquity and a portolano port book to medieval Italian sailors in the Mediterranean Sea Portuguese navigators of the 16th century called it a roteiro the French a routier from which the English word rutter is derived In Dutch it was called a leeskarte reading chart in German a Seebuch sea book and in Spanish a derrotero 1 Contents 1 History 2 Notable rutters 3 See also 4 References 5 External links 6 SourcesHistory editBefore the advent of nautical charts in the 14th century navigation at sea relied on the accumulated knowledge of navigators and pilots Plotting a course at sea required knowing the direction and distance between point A and point B Knowledge of where places lay relative to each other was acquired by mariners during their long experience at sea citation needed The earliest peripluses of classical antiquity were not necessarily written as practical navigational handbooks Some were more akin to an adventure travelogue to celebrate a famous voyage Others were disguised as such notably the Periplus of Pseudo Scylax from the 4th century BCE which described the harbors and landmarks along the north African coast west of the Nile delta Still others were designed as commercial guides for merchants such as the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea written around 100 CE by a Greek merchant in Egypt as a guide to the market ports of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean The re emergence of maritime commerce in the Mediterranean Sea during the Middle Ages 12th 13th centuries spearheaded by Italian ports like Amalfi Pisa Genoa and Venice led to the rise of a new set of handbooks known as portolani port books designed for the practical use of mariners These were likely first compiled by professional mariners and pilots probably as a mnemonic set of notes for their own personal use 2 These notes were probably passed secretly within their profession ranks from master to apprentice Only a few of these Italian handbooks were made public and even fewer have survived to this day The most complete surviving portolano is the famous Il compasso da navigare written c 1250 and published in Genoa in 1296 In their sailing instructions Medieval portolan handbooks distinguished between various types of routes e g per starea coastal cabotage per peleggio open sea sailing between two points Portolan handbooks expressed their sailing directions in terms of compass rose points and distances The reliance on the magnetic compass an instrument that only really began being used for navigation in the 13th century 3 distinguishes the Medieval portolano from the earlier Classical periplus It is believed by whom that the nautical charts that suddenly emerged in Genoa Venice Majorca and other maritime centers after the late 13th century were constructed from the written information contained in contemporary written pilot handbooks hence the term portolan charts 4 The wealth of detail contained in portolano handbooks is reflected in the portolan charts stunningly accurate even by modern standards Handbooks often contained a wealth of information beyond sailing directions For instance they frequently had detailed physical descriptions of shorelines harbors islands channels notes about tides landmarks reefs shoals and difficult entries instructions on how to use navigational instruments to determine position and plot routes calendars astronomical tables mathematical tables and calculation rules notably the rule of marteloio lists of customs regulations at different ports medical recipes instructions on ship repair etc 5 As a result the nautical chart never fully replaced the handbook but remained supplementary to it Among notable rutters is the Grand Routier written by the French pilot Pierre Garcie c 1483 and published in 1502 03 which focused on the shores of the Bay of Biscay and the English Channel and its peculiarities Translated into English as the Rutter of the Sea in 1528 it was reprinted many times and remained the pre eminent rutter used by English sailors for decades 6 Another frequently used rutter was the work Portolano by Pietro Coppo published in Venice in 1528 which included a collection of sea charts and the description of Christopher Columbus s discovery of America 7 Coppo was among the last to consider North America an archipelago 8 Perhaps the most dramatic rutter was the 1595 Reysgheschrift by Dutch sailor Jan Huygen van Linschoten Having sailed to Asia aboard Portuguese ships Linschoten publicized the sailing directions roteiros to the East Indies that had been assiduously kept secret by the Portuguese for nearly a century The publication of Linschoten s rutter was a sensation and it launched the race by Dutch and English companies for the East Indies 9 Notable rutters editPeriplus of Pseudo Scylax 4th century BCE Greek Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 100 CE Egyptian Greek Periplus of the Euxine Sea 160 CE by Arrian Greek Liber de existencia riveriarum et Forma Maris Nostri Mediterranei c 1160 1200 Pisan 10 Il compasso da navigare 1296 Genoese 11 Grant Routtier et pilotage de la mer c 1483 by Pierre Garcie French Cornaro Atlas c 1489 Venetian Das Seebuch late 15th century published by Karl Koppmann Low German 12 Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis c 1509 by Duarte Pacheco Pereira Portuguese 13 Paston s Rutter c 1468 the earliest English language rutter preserved in London British Library MS Lansdowne 285 fols 136 40 14 Arabic nautical corpus late 15th early 16th century including the works of Aḥmad ibn Majid and Sulayman al Mahri on all technical aspects of stellar navigation throughout the Indian Ocean Livro de Marinharia c 1514 by Joao de Lisboa Portuguese 15 Reysgheschrift vande navigatien der Portugaloysers in Orienten 1595 Jan Huygen van Linschoten Dutch 16 See also editPeriplus Portolan chart Roteiro navigation References edit Kemp Peter ed 1993 The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press p 242 ISBN 0192820842 Taylor 1956 p 103 Parry 1963 p 85 Aczel 2001 Brown 1949 p 103 Taylor 1956 pp 111 12 See also Lanman 1987 and Campbell 1987 2011 Edson 2007 51 Waters 1985 p 241 also Markham 1880 p 355 The first English edition 1528 of Garcie was entitled The Rutter of the Sea with the laws of the yle of Auleron and translated by Robert Copeland Copies of the third edition 1541 contained A rutter of the northe compyled by Rychard Proude Prominent Istrians Pietro Coppo Istria on the Internet Istrian American Charities Association Inc Archived from the original on November 26 2014 Channing Edward et al eds 1886 Narrative and Critical History of America Spanish explorations and settlements in America from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century Houghton Mifflin and co p 128 Koeman 1985 Schmidt 2001 p 153 Book of the position of the coasts and the form of our sea the Mediterranean Uncovered in Patrick Gautier Dalche 1995 Carte marine et portulan au XIIe siecle Le Liber de existencia rivieriarum et forma maris nostri Mediterranei Pise circa 1200 Paris Boccard Motzo B R 1947 Il compasso da navigare opera italiana della meta del secolo XIII Pref e testo del Codice Hamilton 396 Annali della Facolta di Lettere e Filosofia della Universita di Cagliari pp 1 137 Breusing A 1876 Das Seebuch von Karl Koppmann Bremen Kuhtmann online Esmeraldo de Situ Orbis 1892 edition Lisbon Imprensa Nacional online Matthew Boyd Goldie An Early English Rutter The Sea and Spatial Hermeneutics in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries Speculum 90 2015 doi 10 1017 S0038713415001396 Livro de Marinharia tratado da agulha de marear Roteiros sondas e outros conhecimentos relativos a navegacao first pub 1903 Lisbon Libanio da Silva online Originally published separately in 1595 the rutter Reysgheschrift was reprinted in 1596 as the second part of Linschoten s Itinerario 1596 In the 1598 English translation the rutter was inserted as the Third Book External links editA Sea of Books specialized virtual multilingual library on early maritime literature bringing together many titles from online institutional repositories RUTTER Project ERC funded academic project focusing on early modern rutters and related literature Sources editAczel A D 2001 The Riddle of the Compass the invention that changed the world New York Harcourt Brown L A 1979 1949 The Story of Maps New York Dover Campbell T 1987 Portolan charts from the late thirteenth century to 1500 PDF In Harley J B Woodward D eds The History of Cartography Vol 1 Cartography in Prehistoric Ancient and Medieval Europe and the Mediterranean Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 371 463 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 11 05 Campbell T 2011 A critical re examination of early portolan charts with a reassessment of their replication and seaboard function Archived from the original on 2024 03 21 Cotter C H 1983 A Brief History of Sailing Directions Journal of Navigation 36 2 249 251 doi 10 1017 S0373463300024966 Edson E 2007 The World Map 1300 1492 the persistence of tradition and transformation Baltimore MD The Johns Hopkins University Press Koeman C 1985 Jan Huygen van Linschoten Revista da Universidade de Coimbra 32 27 47 Lanman J T 1987 On the Origin of Portolan Charts Chicago Newberry Markham A H ed 1880 The Voyages and Works of John Davis the Navigator London Hakluyt Nordenskiold Adolf Erik 1897 Periplus An Essay on the Early History of Charts and Sailing Directions Translated by Bather Frances A Stockholm Norstedt Parry J H 1981 1963 The Age of Reconnaissance Discovery exploration and settlement 1450 to 1650 Berkeley University of California Press Schmidt B 2001 Innocence Abroad the Dutch imagination and the New World 1570 1670 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Stevenson E L 1911 Portolan charts their origin and characteristics with a descriptive list of those belonging to the Hispanic society of America New York Knickerbocker Press Taylor E G R 1951 The Oldest Mediterranean Pilot Journal of Navigation 4 1 81 85 doi 10 1017 S0373463300048785 Taylor E G R 1971 1956 The Haven Finding Art A history of navigation from Odysseus to Captain Cook London Hollis and Carter Waters D W 1985 English navigational books charts and globes printed down to 1600 Revista da Universidade de Coimbra 33 239 257 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rutter nautical amp oldid 1220912276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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