Slide #304
TITLE: Sketch maps of the equatorial belt of the world
DATE: 1503-06/1516-22
AUTHOR: Bartolommeo Columbus and Alessandro Zorzi
DESCRIPTION: Christopher Columbus was marooned in Jamaica for almost
one year during his fourth voyage. From there on July 7, 1503, he wrote
a letter to King Ferdinand, reporting on his exploration of Nicaragua and
Panama. A copy of the letter was brought to Rome in 1506 by Columbus's brother,
Bartholomew [a.k.a. Bartolommeo], who had accompanied the Admiral on this
final voyage. Bartholomew was seeking the Pope's support to persuade the
King of Spain to grant a commission for colonizing and Christianizing the
Central American coast.
Alessandro Zorzi, a Venetian who gathered accounts of explorers and travelers,
was in Rome when Bartholomew arrived. Zorzi, assisted by Bartholomew, embellished
an Italian translation of Columbus's letter with these three sketch maps.
They appear as marginal illustrations and together comprise an equatorial
zone map of the world. These surviving examples were included in a geographical
manuscript written by Zorzi about 1522. The source of the delineation was
a 1503 Christopher Columbus chart of Central America. That chart, now lost,
had been with Bartholomew in 1506 and was reportedly seen by the contemporary
historian, Peter Martyr, in 1516.
The cartographical concepts are complicated and represent a retrogression
precipitated by the Columbus brothers' disappointment that no passage to
Asia could be found in Central America. Before the fourth voyage, they presumed
the New World was in fact a separate enormous island. Afterwards, however,
they reverted to the belief that the mainland they explored was part of
the Asian continent's eastern coast. The sketch maps clearly prove this
point. Places Columbus visited along the Honduran coast on the fourth voyage
are recorded on the first section as if they were on an Asian coastline
west of the West Indies but attached to South America. The names on this
coast are Cariai, Carambaru, Bastimentos, Retrete, and Belporto. On the
second portion, these same names appear again along an indisputably Asian
coastline.
The distance between Europe and Asia is grossly underestimated, a tenet
basic to Columbus' thinking. The landmass in the northwest of the first
section has a configuration similar to that in the Cantino map (Slide #310). This area has been interpreted variously as
representing either Columbus' concept of Cuba, the peninsula of Florida,
or perhaps the Asian mainland. Westward on the same continent, Columbus
inscribed names for China from ancient maps by Ptolemy Serica, Serici Montes
and Sinarum Situs. To the south Columbus imagined a narrow isthmus (Panama,
later to be discovered by Balboa). West of the isthmus, he labeled the sea,
Sinus Magnus, the classical name for the waters east of Asia. He even included
a strait through the isthmus to account for the sea route Marco Polo had
used to return from China two centuries earlier.
South America is called by Columbus Mondo Novo [The New World], a
term generally credited to Vespucci. The shape of the coastline reflects
the explorations of Columbus in 1498 and Ojeda in 1499. Among the few recorded
place-names, "the Sea of Fresh Water" designates the mouth of
the Orinoco.
The confusion experienced by the most well-informed minds in the early years
of discovery is underscored on these sketches. The pre-Columbian world,
represented by the Martellus map (Slide #256) and
the Behaim globe (Slide #258), was being forced to
accommodate a "fourth part" of that world, America. The three
"maplets" are treasured artifacts revealing the beliefs of Christopher
and Bartholomew Columbus.
Earlier, the conclusion was reached by historians Professor Franz R. von
Wieser, and accepted by Edward Gaylord Bourne and A. E. Nordenskiöld,
that these anonymous and undated sections of a world map were drawn by Bartholomew
Columbus to illustrate the voyage along the coast of Central America known
as Columbus' fourth voyage. The sketches are believed to represent the mature
conclusions of Christopher Columbus as to the proximity of his discoveries
to Asia. The circumstantial evidence to support this conclusion is strong.
It is on record that Bartholomew Columbus possessed a map of Central America.
The Sammel Codex in the Biblioteca Nazionale in Florence, Italy, relates
that Bartholomew Columbus brought a map and a description of Central America
to the Pope in Rome, to induce the latter to intercede with the King of
Spain to persuade that monarch to grant to Bartholomew a commission to colonize
and Christianize the Central American coast. Bartholomew Columbus gave another
copy of a map of Central America with a description of the coast to Brother
Hieronymous of St. John Lateran in Rome, who gave it together with the description
to Alexander of Strozzi [a.k.a. Alessandro Zorzi], a collector of travels
for the Biblioteca Nazionale in Florence. The library still possesses a
copy of this description as well as an extract from it made by Zorzi; but
both these manuscripts now lack the accompanying map, which was long supposed
to be lost.
It is certain, however, that Bartholomew and Christopher Columbus themselves
made a map of Central America, for Peter Martyr saw such a map at Burgos
in 1513 when it was in the possession of Fonseca, the President of the Indian
Council.
The three sketches here reproduced would seem to be that map, because, first,
they were found in the Florence edition, above referred to by von Wieser
as marginal drawings in a copy of Christopher Columbus's letter from Jamaica,
dated July 7, 1503 which is the Admiral's description of his fourth voyage;
and, second, the central point of the three maps, the identification of
North America with Asia, accords with the conception of Columbus set down
in the Jamaica letter.
Columbus' belief that he had been in Asia is revealed by the map and the
letter in various ways. The places which he visited in his fourth voyage,
according to the letter from Jamaica, are here placed on the map, sheet
one, as on the coast of Asia, namely Cariai, Carambaru, Bastimentos,
Retrete, and Belporto.
Columbus speaks of the river Ganges as being ten days' journey away, and
merely on the other side of a peninsula from where he then was, sheet two.
He mentions having reached the province of Mago, which borders on
Cathay. The inhabitants of a certain section he found going clothed
in large sheets of cotton; and he adds, "They tell me that more inland
toward Cathay they have them interwoven with gold." The Aurea
chersonesus, the modern Malay peninsula, sheet two, he contends is the Veragua,
which he visited, and the source of the gold which King Solomon used in
the building of the temple at Jerusalem. He points out that the Emperor
of Cathay wished wise men to be sent to him from Europe to instruct him
in the Christian faith; and he pledges himself to convey to their destination
all who would volunteer for such service.
The mathematical and astronomical foundation for the belief of Columbus
that he had been in Asia is to be found in the interesting inscription along
the west coast of Africa, sheet three, which reads: According to Marinus
and Columbus, from Cape St. Vincent [in Portugal] to Cattigara [in southeastern
China] is 225 degrees, or a difference in time of fifteen hours; according
to Ptolemy, 180 degrees, which is twelve hours. But if the inhabited part
of the world, from western Europe eastward to eastern Asia, extended 225
degrees, the unknown portion of the earth's surface, westward from Europe
to Asia, extended 135 degrees. To Columbus, therefore, the Atlantic
Ocean was 135 degrees wide. Here he rejects the world's greatest authority
in geographical matters, Ptolemy, who taught that it was 180 degrees eastward
from western Europe to eastern Asia, and that the Atlantic was 180 degrees
wide.
Following the Arabian astronomer, Alfragan, of the ninth century, Columbus
states in the letter from Jamaica that, "The world is not so large
as the vulgar suppose: a degree measures on the equator 56.67 miles".
He rejected the opinion of Ptolemy, who reckons the degree at the equator
as 62.5 miles. Columbus, therefore, was of the opinion that he could reach
Asia from Europe by sailing westward across the Atlantic for 135 degrees,
which, at the equator, with the degree at 56.67 miles (the actual length
of a degree of longitude at the equator is 69.65 statute miles, and the
actual distance from the shores of Spain westward to those of Asia is about
230 degrees), was 7,650 miles, instead of 11,250 miles as computed by Ptolemy.
Columbus thus owed his success to two fundamental errors, his underestimate
of the size of the earth and his overestimate of the portion already known.
It is curious that despite this rejection, the map's description of Ptolemy's
reckoning, Bartholomew Columbus drew the map according to Ptolemy's figures,
making the distance at the equator from western Europe to eastern Asia 180
degrees.
The belief in the connection of the new continent with Asia lasted for a
number of years after Columbus, and exercised considerable influence on
early American cartography (see Slides #311, 313,. 313.3, 316, 323, 326,
338). The close general resemblance between the southeastern coast of
China, as shown on the maps of the then contemporary editions of Ptolemy,
and the unfolding shoreline now known as the coast of the Gulf of Mexico,
must have been a source of confusion to the explorers and mapmakers of the
fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, when they tried to locate the new
discoveries reported from time to time in the west.
Mondo Novo [the New World], Columbus' name for the southern landmass
(South America), which he found on his third voyage, may be compared with
Waldseemüller's term "America", which the latter brought
forward in his pamphlet, Cosmographiæ Introductio, and inscribed
on his map of 1507 (Slide #312). Columbus' letter,
in which he uses the phrase Mondo Novo, and the map here reproduced, were
unknown to his contemporaries, while Waldseemüller's suggested name
of America, proposed in honor of Amerigo Vespucci, was given to the
public in a popular book and on a popular map. The latter term survived,
while the former was neglected. America had the added advantage of being
more euphonious than Mondo Novo.
India, with its two large rivers, the Ganges and the Indus, and with Calicut
on its western coast, though far from correct, is superior to the India
of the La Cosa map (Slide #308).
The suggestion of a strait, separating Mondo Novo from Asia, the
forerunner of the Panama Canal of the present day, is a necessity of the
geography of Marco Polo. Without the strait there would be no way apparent
on the map by which Marco Polo could have traversed the seas from the eastern
coast of China to the Indian Ocean, a voyage which he is known to have accomplished.
"These insignificant hasty sketches", says Professor Wieser, "possess
for us the value of priceless historical relics. They are not the remains
of the supposedly lost chart of Bartholomew Columbus . . . they are the
sole maps which date back to the great discoverer himself and reflect his
geographical ideas more truly than all other cartographical monuments."
These sketch maps are found in a collection of voyages known under the title
of Alberico. This collection is in four parts and is now in the Biblioteca
Nazionale in Florence, Italy. The collection was made by Alessandro Zorzi,
a Venetian. Along with the narratives there are found in the margins many
sketches of maps, plans, and items of interest. Among these are the three
sketch maps attributed to Bartholomew Columbus. There is also a manuscript
entitled Informatione di Bart° Colombo della Navigatione di ponente
et garbin di Beragua nel Mondo Novo, and an Italian version of Christopher
Columbus' letter of July 7th, 1503, under the heading Como Colombo navigo
per ponente et trovo l'Asia, et navigo per la Costa de India de l'equinotial
ver il Polo Arctico et arrivo nel Regnio del Cataio. The three sketch
maps are found at the bottoms of folios 56 verso, 57 recto, and 60 verso
in Codex 81. These folios are part of the text of the 7th of July letter.
This collection was first called to notice by Baldelli-Boni in 1827 in his
Il Milione di Marco Polo. Then Henry Harrisse printed the text of the
Informatione di Bart° Colombo in his Biblioteca Americana Vetustissima
in 1866, but he did not publish the three sketch maps. Apparently he did
not recognize in the three sketches the map of Bartholomew Columbus given
in Rome to Frate Hieronimo. The sketches are not found in the margin of
the Informatione but belong to the 7th of July letter which starts 19 pages
following the Informatione. Next, F. R. v. Wieser found the sketches and
published them in a monograph. Nordenskiöld gave the maps wide publicity
in his Periplus where he published the map sketches but not the Informatione
of Wieser. After Nordenskiöld, the sketches have been used repeatedly
by many scholars without questioning their origin with Bartholomew Columbus.
Recently, however, John Bigelow and Robert Almagia questioned that origin.
Bigelow combats Wieser's assumption that these maps are a copy of Columbus'
map of Beragua (Central America). Then he gives his view of the aims
of Columbus on his fourth voyage. According to Bigelow, Columbus' primary
objective on his fourth voyage was to discover gold-not to find a strait
leading into the Indian Ocean. Neither in Columbus' report on this voyage
nor in his letter of instructions is there any mention of a strait leading
to China or India. Next he treats about the passage of the map and the Informatione
from Bartholomew Columbus to the Frate Hieronimo, to Alessandro Zorzi, and
finally, by his hand into the Codex 81. Bigelow distinguishes between the
Bartholomew Columbus map and the map sketches; and between the descriptive
notes of Bartholomew Columbus, the Jerome descrition or version, and the
Zorzi Memorandum - the first two and the last three considered identical
by Wieser. Bigelow denies that the three map sketches are a reproduction
of the Bartholomew Columbus map, and that the Zorzi Memorandum comes
from Bartholomew. He also denies that the three map sketches constitute
one map. He makes one map of the African-Indian Ocean sections and a separate
map of the Mondo Novo section. Bigelow further makes a point that the three
map sketches are not marginal sketches but are an integral part of the text
of the Christopher Columbus letter. Finally, he concludes that the sketch
maps are the work of Alessandro Zorzi made between 1522 and 1525.
Almagia had almost finished his study when Bigelow's article was published,
consequently it is an independent work. Almagia, like Bigelow, notes that
Wieser thought that the three sketch maps were a map disegnio de litti di
tal terre mentioned in the Informatione. This conclusion Almagia does not
accept because the three sketch maps constitute a map of the equatorial
regions of the entire globe. Furthermore, Zorzi had a custom of placing
his sketches in direct relation with the corresponding text. However, in
this case the three sketch maps are in the margins, not of the Bartholomew
Columbus Informatione, but in the margins of the Christopher Columbus 7th
of July letter.
To cast additional light on the origin of the sketch maps Almagia calls
attention to other map sketches of the fourth voyage in a Ferrara Codex,
also made by Alessandro Zorzi. This Codex is older than the Alberico.
Its last entry is a letter of Girolamo Vianello da Burgos dated Dec. 23,1506.
It contains the Jamaica letter of Christopher Columbus but not the Informatione
of Bartholomew. These Ferrara Codex sketches Almagia terms cruder sketches
than those attributed to Bartholomew Columbus. On these Ferrare sketches
appear Catigara, Beragua, Ciab, Vestimete, Giorni 9 (between Ciab
and Ciguari), and Giorni 10 (between Ciguare and Gages f.). On sketch
47 V, Codex II, Biblioteca di Ferrara ailo appears the name of Mundus
Novus and the legend distatio ab egno ? g. 50.
From the existence of these sketches in the Ferrara Codex, Almagia
concludes that Zorzi, before he knew of the Informatione, already had the
germ of the sketches known as the Bartholomew Columbus maplets. Because
Zorzi graduated the maplets on 57 R, Florentine Codex, according to the
scale of Ptolemy's 180 degrees rather than according to Columbus' 225 degrees,
Almagia concludes Zorzi subscribed to the Ptolemy concepts. The sketch on
60 V of the Florentine Codex was an attempt to show the relation
of the coasts explored on the fourth voyage to the Antilles and to Mondo
Novo. The 51R Sinus Magnus and Cattigara are both added
conjecturally on the basis of Columbus' 7th of July letter. The other two
sketches, 56 V and 57 R, are perfected copies of the sketches in the Ferrara
Codex. They represent an attempt on Zorzi's part to show that the coasts
explored on the fourth voyage might be a part of Eastern Asia.
Almagia's conclusion is that there is nothing to authorize the belief that
the three map sketches are derived from Bartholomew Columbus, but in fact
they originate with Zorzi himself and represent, not the concepts of Columbus,
but those of Zorzi personally. He further adds in a footnote that Bartholomew
and Christopher Columbus had only a superficial and limited knowledge of
the geography of Ptolemy. According to G.E. Nunn, this last opinion hardly
seems justified. Both brothers were experienced cartographers. Columbus
knew Ptolemy's Geography well enough to be acquainted with Ptolemy's
correction of Marinus of Tyre's longitudes, a correction available nowhere
else except in Ptolemy's own work. Also there remains today, in the Columbina
Library in Seville, Columbus' own copy of Ptolemy's Geography edition
of Rome, 1478, with Christopher Columbus' own signature together with the
mystic triangle of letters he loved to use. It seems best to study these
sketches in a brief resume of Columbus' geographical conceptions and especially
of the aims of the fourth voyage and the alterations of the Columbus concept
as a result of that voyage. With this natural setting it will then be easier
to treat with the various points raised by Bigelow and Almagia.
Sometime before Columbus made his first voyage a new world map was made
by some unidentified cartographer. This map was a combination of Ptolemy's
world map with the descriptions from Marco Polo Travels. This map is best
known to us through the globe of Martin Behaim (Slide
#258). There are other examples in the Henricus Martellus Germanus map
(Slide #256) and the Laon globe (Slide
#259). Nunn agrees with De Lollis and Almagia that the maker of this
map was very probably Toscanelli, about 1475. Columbus' frequent mention
of Cypangu, Zaiton, Mangi, Gamba, Cattigara and the Ganges make evident
the influence of Marco Polo and his concepts. His identification of Cuba
as a part of the Asiatic mainland is an important part of his concept. He
modified the Ptolemy-Marco Polo combination of cartography with his 56.67
mile measure of an equatorial degree. This had the effect of placing Cypangu
and eastern Asia nearer to Europe on the map by way of the Atlantic than
it is in fact. This fundamental error was brought about by three factors:
(1) Ptolemy made his farthest east extend to 180 degrees from the Fortunate
islands (Canary Islands) meridian to Cattigara. This meridian on Ptolemy's
map was identical with the second meridian and fraction of degrees west
of the Sacrum Promontorium (Cape St. Vincent). Exact comparisons are impossible
for many reasons, but the part of the China coast very probably to be identified
with Cattigara (this assumes that Cattigara (Kattigara) is probably Hang-chow)
is 120 degrees east from Greenwich and 138 degrees east of the Ptolemy meridian.
Therefore Ptolemy's 180 degrees extent of his known world was an exaggeration
by 42 degrees.
(2) The new map represented by the Behaim globe and the Toscanelli letter
extended the mainland of Asia to 240 degrees east longitude. Toscanelli
placed the coast of Asia about 1/3 of the circumference of the earth west
of Europe. This extension was based on a misconception of the identity of
the lands of Cathay and Mangi as described by Marco Polo and therefore duplicated
the lands of far eastern Asia. This duplication extended the mainland of
Asia 102 degrees beyond the fact and placed Cypangu's east coast 30 degrees
farther to the east. This false extension to the east had the effect of
correspondingly reducing the true distance by way of the Atlantic between
Europe and eastern Asia.
(3) Columbus' false degree measure, while it only changed the longitudes
and not the distance by land between the prime Fortunate Islands meridian
and the far east, did have the effect of still further reducing the supposed
distance by way of the Atlantic between western Europe and eastern Asia.
LOCATION: Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Florence
Size: 4 x 6.5 inches (100 x 165 mm)
REREFENCES:
*Fite & Freeman, A Book of Old Maps , p.p. 15-16.
*Nebenzahl, K., Atlas of Columbus, pp. 38-39, Plate 12.
*Nunn, George E., "The Three Maplets Attributed to Bartholomew Columbus",
Imago Mundi, pp. 12-14.
*illustrated