1507 Waldseemuller World Map

1507 Waldseemuller World Map. 1507 Martin Waldseemuller World Map Print Antique World Map, Old World Maps, Old Maps, Antique Martin Waldseemuller publishes a book & 2 maps-a set of globe gores and a world map Martin Waldseemüller's World Map of 1507, the FIRST map to use the name "America" to label the New WorldThis highly significant map of the world eluded examination by modern scholars for nearly four hundred years until its re-discovery in 1901 by the Jesuit historian, Joseph Fisher, in the library of Prince von Waldburg zu Wolfegg-Waldsee at the Castle of Wolfegg, Württemberg Germany

Medieval World map 1507 Huge Waldseemuller map of by RobertsMaps
Medieval World map 1507 Huge Waldseemuller map of by RobertsMaps from www.etsy.com

German Chancellor Angela Merkel officially transferred the map to the Library of Congress in April 2007 Martin Waldseemuller publishes a book & 2 maps-a set of globe gores and a world map

Medieval World map 1507 Huge Waldseemuller map of by RobertsMaps

Map Courtesy Library of Congress, Geography and Map DivisionMap of the world, circa 1507 A.D. Martin Waldseemüller's 1507 world map grew out of an ambitious project in St Dié, France, during the first decade of the sixteenth century

This is a detail of the 1507 world map by Martin Waldseemuller, the first map known to use the. Waldseemüller's map represented a revolutionary new geography: it was the first map, printed or manuscript, to depict clearly a separate Western Hemisphere, separated from Asia, with the Pacific as a separate ocean. The Waldseemüller map or Universalis Cosmographia ("Universal Cosmography ") is a printed wall map of the world by the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller, originally published in April 1507.

tropicalia "Mapa Waldseemuller 1507, a maior descoberta cartográfica do século 21". Dié, France, during the first decade of the sixteenth century Dié, near Strasbourg, France, during the first decade of the sixteenth century, to document and update new geographic knowledge derived from the discoveries of the late fifteenth and the first years of the sixteenth centuries.