Henricus martellus biography channel
Henricus Martellus’s World Map at Yale (c. 1491 ...
Biography of Henricus Martellus Germanus
Amazon.com: Martellus World Map 1489 Nworld Map C1489 Of ...
- Henricus Martellus Germanus was a German-born Italian geographer and cartographer.
Imaging Technology Reveals 15th-century Cartographer’s World ...
Henricus Martellus and His Works - SpringerLink
- Henricus Martellus was probably Heinrich Hammer and assuredly was of German birth, since the referred to himself as “Germanus.” He is a mysterious personality of whom no mention has ever been found except for the remarkable maps that he signed with his full name.
Henricus Germanus, German cartographer, geographer | World ...
| world map history | Henricus Martellus was a German cartographer active in Florence from about 1459–1496. |
| christopher columbus map 1492 | Henricus Martellus Germanus (fl. |
| 1491 map of the world | The map, made by a German working in Florence named Henricus Martellus, has long been overlooked because fading obscured much of its text. |
L’Insularium illustratum d’Henricus Martellus - ResearchGate
- Henricus Martellus Germanus was a German-born Italian geographer and cartographer.
Mapas del mundo justo antes de 1492 - Documentalium
Henricus Martellus | German cartographer | Britannica
- The map of the German Henricus Martellus, published in , shows the shores of North Africa and of the Gulf of Guinea more or less correctly and was probably taken from numerous seamen’s charts.
Germanus, Henricus Martellus
(fl. Florence, Italy, [?])
geography.
Henricus Martellus was probably Heinrich Hammer and assuredly was of German birth, since the referred to himself as “Germanus.” He is a mysterious personality of whom no mention has ever been found except for the remarkable maps that he signed with his full name. It is established that he worked in Florence in the closing decades of the fifteenth century and was closely associated with the printer, engraver, and map publisher Francesco Rosselli.
Germanus’ contribution is in the maps that he drew, remarkable not only for their high artistic quality but also for the new geographical concepts that they represented. His works include two sets of maps drawn to illustrate Ptolemy’s Geography, five codices of an Insularium, or Book of Islands, and a large world map (43” by 75”)
Roberto Almagià states that Germanus was the first mapmaker to append to the traditional set of maps illustrating the work of Ptolemy