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The Ostrich Egg Globe is a hollow terrestrial globe made from the conjoined lower halves of two ostrich eggs. [1] The map carved on the globe is an extremely close, [1] if not identical, [2] match to the Hunt–Lenox Globe, a copper globe reliably dated to about 1510. The owner [2] of the Ostrich Egg Globe, Stefaan Missinne, claims that it was ...
The_Ostrich_Egg_Globe_map,_1504.png (783 × 393 pixels, file size: 790 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Until the Ostrich Egg Globe was offered for sale in 2012 at the London Map Fair held at the Royal Geographical Society, [4] the only known historical use of this phrase in the Latin form "HIC SVNT DRACONES" (i.e., hic sunt dracones, 'here are dragons') was the Hunt-Lenox Globe dating from 1508. [5]
The Lenox Globe. The Hunt–Lenox Globe or Lenox Globe, dating from about 1508, [1] is the second- or third-oldest known terrestrial globe, after the Erdapfel of Martin Behaim (1492) and the Ostrich Egg Globe (claimed [2] 1504). The Hunt-Lenox Globe is housed by the Rare Book Division of the New York Public Library. [1]
Pages in category "16th-century maps and globes" The following 43 pages are in this category, out of 43 total. ... Ostrich Egg Globe; P. Padrão Real; Peter Martyr map;
Since the discovery of the Ostrich Egg Globe, Stefaan Missinne has written a book [8] in which he argues that the authorship of the design of the map is Leonardo's. [verification needed] In contrast the cartographic content is by a third hand. The manuscript world map intended to be glued has been attributed to Melzi, because of the type of ...
A similar grapefruit-sized globe made from two halves of an ostrich egg was found in 2012 and is believed to date from 1504. It may be the oldest globe to show the New World. Stefaan Missine, who analyzed the globe for the Washington Map Society journal Portolan, said it was "part of an important European collection for decades."
Mundus Novus depicted on the Ostrich Egg Globe in 1504. ... Some maps, e.g., the 1506 Contarini–Rosselli map and the 1508 Johannes Ruysch map, bowing to Ptolemaic ...