Article ID: CBB001553015

The Premedieval Origin of Portolan Charts: New Geodetic Evidence (2015)

unapi

Portolan charts are highly realistic medieval charts that show remarkably accurate coastlines of the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. They emerged suddenly, without any predecessors or a clear developmental path, in Italy during the thirteenth century. There is broad scholarly agreement that these charts are original creations of European medieval culture. However, corroborating evidence is lacking, and a convincing explanation of the method of their construction has so far not been provided. In this essay it is demonstrated by means of geodetic analysis that the overall shape of the coastlines corresponds closely to that on a modern map based on the Mercator projection. It is further demonstrated that this correspondence cannot possibly be due to chance. Consequently, the existence of a Mercator or Mercator-like map projection on portolan charts is incompatible with the assumed medieval origin of these charts. Portolan charts are far more sophisticated than has hitherto been recognized. Their construction was well beyond the capabilities of cartographers from either medieval Europe or the Arabic-Islamic world. This conclusion serves to reopen the question of the origins of the geometric data and the construction methods that until now have appeared to underlie medieval portolan charts.

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Authors & Contributors
Abee, Michele D.
Nicolai, Roel
Holzer, Gerhard
Valerie Newby
Kahlaoui, Tarek
Michienzi, Ingrid Houssaye
Journals
Imago Mundi: A Review of Early Cartography
Nieuw Archief voor Wiskunde
Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture
Early Science and Medicine: A Journal for the Study of Science, Technology and Medicine in the Pre-modern Period
Cartographica
Publishers
Brill
Faksimile-Verlag
Wiley-Blackwell
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Institut Océanographique
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Concepts
Cartography
Maps; atlases
Geography
Nautical charts
Portolan chart
Humanism
People
Mercator, Gerardus
Strubicz, Maciej
Ptolemy
Nunes, Pedro
Hondius, Jodocus
Time Periods
16th century
Renaissance
Medieval
Early modern
Modern
17th century
Places
Europe
Mediterranean region
Mediterranean Sea
Black Sea
North Africa
Middle and Near East
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