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Español: Mapamundi del folio 200 vuelto del Códice de Roda, conservado en la Real Academia de la Historia (España), siglo X-XI, 232 folios (29 x 21 cm) en pergamino. Escritura visigótica. Escritura visigótica.
The map of Juan de la Cosa is a world map that includes the earliest known representation of the New World and the first depiction of the equator and the Tropic of Cancer on a nautical chart. The map is attributed to the Castilian navigator and cartographer, Juan de la Cosa , and was likely created in 1500.
As most surviving zonal maps are found illustrating Macrobius' Commentary on Cicero's Dream of Scipio (an excerpt of Cicero's De Re Publica), this type of map is sometimes called "Macrobian". In their simplest and most common form, Zonal mappae mundi are merely circles divided into five parallel zones, but several larger zonal maps with much ...
The Fra Mauro Map of the world. The map depicts Asia, Africa and Europe, with South at the top.. The Fra Mauro map is a map of the world made around 1450 by the Italian cartographer Fra Mauro, which is “considered the greatest memorial of medieval cartography."
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:36, 30 June 2019: 1,920 × 1,280 (837 KB): HombreDHojalata == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |Description={{es|1=Copia del Museo de la Catedral de El Burgo de Osma del mapa de los Comentarios al Apocalipsis de San Juan del Beato de Liébana.}} {{gl|1=Copia do Museo da Catedral de El Burgo de Osma do mapa dos Comentarios ó Apocalipsis ...
The Bianco map (1436). The Bianco World Map is a map created by Andrea Bianco, a 15th-century Venetian sailor and cartographer who resided on Chios.This map was a large piece of a nautical atlas including ten pages made of vellum (each measuring 26 × 38 cm).
The map was found in a convent in Ebstorf, northern Germany, in 1843. [2] It was a very large map, painted on 30 goatskins sewn together and measuring around 3.6 by 3.6 metres (12 ft × 12 ft) – a greatly elaborated version of the common medieval tripartite map (), centered on Jerusalem with east at the top.
The rhumb-line construction scheme and geographic lines in the Cantino planisphere. Adapted from Gaspar (2012), Plate 3. The Cantino planisphere is the earliest extant example of the so-called latitude chart, which was developed following the introduction of astronomical navigation, during the second half of the fifteenth century.