The Waldseemüller Map: Charting the New World
Two obscure 16th-century German scholars named the American continent and changed the way people thought about the world
- By Toby Lester
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
When Ringmann came across the New World letter, he was immersed in a careful study of Ptolemy's Geography, and he recognized that Vespucci, unlike Columbus, appeared to have sailed south right off the edge of the world that Ptolemy had mapped. Thrilled, Ringmann printed his own version of the New World letter in 1505—and to emphasize the southness of Vespucci's discovery, he changed the work's title from New World to On the Southern Shore Recently Discovered by the King of Portugal, referring to Vespucci's sponsor, King Manuel.
Not long afterward, Ringmann teamed up with a German cartographer named Martin Waldseemüller to prepare a new edition of Ptolemy's Geography. Sponsored by René II, the Duke of Lorraine, Ringmann and Waldseemüller set up shop in the little French town of St. Dié, in the mountains just southwest of Strasbourg. Working as part of a small group of humanists and printers known as the Gymnasium Vosagense, the pair developed an ambitious plan. Their edition would include not only 27 definitive maps of the ancient world, as Ptolemy had described it, but also 20 maps showing the discoveries of modern Europeans, all drawn according to the principles laid out in the Geography—a historical first.
Duke René seems to have been instrumental in inspiring this leap. From unknown contacts he had received yet another Vespucci letter, also falsified, describing his voyages and at least one nautical chart depicting the new coastlines explored to date by the Portuguese. The letter and the chart confirmed to Ringmann and Waldseemüller that Vespucci had indeed discovered a huge unknown land across the ocean to the west, in the Southern Hemisphere.
What happened next is unclear. At some time in 1505 or 1506, Ringmann and Waldseemüller decided that the land Vespucci had explored was not a part of Asia. Instead, they concluded that it must be a new, fourth part of the world.
Temporarily setting aside their work on their Ptolemy atlas, Ringmann and Waldseemüller threw themselves into the production of a grand new map that would introduce Europe to this new idea of a four-part world. The map would span 12 separate sheets, printed from carefully carved wood blocks; when pasted together, the sheets would measure a stunning 4 1/2 by 8 feet—creating one of the largest printed maps, if not the largest, ever produced to that time. In April of 1507, they began printing the map, and would later report turning out 1,000 copies.
Much of what the map showed would have come as no surprise to Europeans familiar with geography. Its depiction of Europe and North Africa derived directly from Ptolemy; sub- Saharan Africa derived from recent Portuguese nautical charts; and Asia derived from the works of Ptolemy and Marco Polo. But on the left side of the map was something altogether new. Rising out of the formerly uncharted waters of the Atlantic, stretching almost from the map's top to its bottom, was a strange new landmass, long and thin and mostly blank—and there, written across what is known today as Brazil, was a strange new name: America.
Libraries today list Martin Waldseemüller as the author of the Introduction to Cosmography, but the book does not actually single him out as such. It includes opening dedications by both him and Ringmann, but these refer to the map, not the text—and Ringmann's dedication comes first. In fact, Ringmann's fingerprints are all over the work. The book's author, for instance, demonstrates a familiarity with ancient Greek—a language that Ringmann knew well but Waldseemüller did not. The author embellishes his writing with snatches of verse by Virgil, Ovid and other classical writers—a literary tic that characterizes all of Ringmann's writing. And the one contemporary writer mentioned in the book was a friend of Ringmann's.
Ringmann the writer, Waldseemüller the mapmaker: the two men would team up in precisely this way in 1511, when Waldseemüller printed a grand map of Europe. Accompanying the map was a booklet titled Description of Europe, and in dedicating his map to Duke Antoine of Lorraine, Waldseemüller made clear who had written the book. "I humbly beg of you to accept with benevolence my work," he wrote, "with an explanatory summary prepared by Ringmann." He might just as well have been referring to the Introduction to Cosmography.
Why dwell on this arcane question of authorship? Because whoever wrote the Introduction to Cosmography was almost certainly the person who coined the name "America"—and here, too, the balance tilts in Ringmann's favor. The famous naming-of-America paragraph sounds a lot like Ringmann. He's known, for example, to have spent time mulling over the use of feminine names for concepts and places. "Why are all the virtues, the intellectual qualities and the sciences always symbolized as if they belonged to the feminine sex?" he would write in a 1511 essay. "Where does this custom spring from: a usage common not only to the pagan writers but also to the scholars of the church? It originated from the belief that knowledge is destined to be fertile of good works....Even the three parts of the old world received the name of women."
Ringmann reveals his hand in other ways. In both poetry and prose he regularly amused himself by making up words, by punning in different languages and by investing his writing with hidden meanings. The naming-of-America passage is rich in just this sort of wordplay, much of which requires a familiarity with Greek. The key to the whole passage, almost always overlooked, is the curious name Amerigen (which Ringmann quickly Latinizes and then feminizes to come up with America). To get Amerigen, Ringmann combined the name Amerigo with the Greek word gen, the accusative form of a word meaning "earth," and by doing so coined a name that means—as he himself explains—"land of Amerigo."
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Related topics: Explorers Geography Age of Discovery Americas
Additional Sources
"Renaissance German Cosmographers and the Naming of America," Christine R. Johnson, Past & Present, Number 191, May 2006









Comments (20)
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Yes, great map and story.
I, too, am wondering if copies are available.
Posted by Ron Munson on April 11,2010 | 06:56 PM
This anomalously accurate map, like the Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings (Hapgood), was drawn from ancient source maps drawn by the mapping method described in article #2 at http://IceAgeCivilizations.com.
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on February 6,2010 | 08:14 AM
There is a very good DVD called THE MAP MAKERS - ep. 1 is about this map, and some other early maps.(was a 3 TV episode series by "Wild Dream Films" in association with "The History Channel" - so possibly gets repeated on cable.
Ep 2: is on Mercator Atlas.
Oddly - Ep 3 jumps to 400 years later - but it is very interesting, being about the elaborate mapping for the D-Day invasion of France in 1944.
But what happened to all the cartographic explorers in between - e.g. Captain Cook, Matthew Flinders - AND the other map makers in the rest of the world (Arabs, Turks, Chinese)? Maybe the Producers ran out of money? Pity.
Even just these 3 eps. are really worth seeing.
Posted by Dr Antony Howe on January 11,2010 | 02:37 AM
Not to be too pedantic, but St-Die was not in France in 1507. Lorraine was still part of the Holy Roman Empire, and would remain so for another 200 years. By law that is--but de facto, it was a separate state, with its own ruling family, and its own important patronage of artists and scholars, like Walseemuller.
Posted by Jonathan Spangler on January 11,2010 | 08:46 AM
An excellent article both fascinating and informative in an area that does not receive enough press. I shall buy the book so as to read the remainder of what space could not allow. Thank you. T.N. Craig
Posted by Terry N. Craig on December 26,2009 | 07:14 PM
A great story.
In answer to why they assumed there was a great sea beyond the Americas could be:
1. They, like the Portugese estimated the circumference of the earth, pretty closely. 2.From Marco Polo's report, they knew there was a great sea to the east of China. 3. Therefore,thatsea must cover the distance from China/Japan to the Americas or there might be two or more seas in between with other lands deviding them. So they showed the west coast of the Americas bounding this sea as undefined . For all they knew it might extend most of the way to China. Again,a great story, right to the end.
Posted by LA Bob on December 15,2009 | 05:06 PM
I thought it to be fascinating and insightful that the words, "those southern regions that is inhabited by more numerous peoples and animals than in our Europe, or Asia or Africa", begins to give us the initial sightings and revelations of people and animals outside of the then known continents. Such profundity in the simple written word!!
Posted by Deborah Dolsey on December 12,2009 | 11:27 AM
I have just finished reading the Smithsonian Magazine and the article by Toby Lester. Mr. Lester writes in a style that reminds me of a New York Times Best Seller. I thoroughly enjoyed the piece and could not put it down until I finished it. Thanks Mr. Lester. Let's have more!
Posted by Jim Palmer on December 12,2009 | 09:21 AM
Completely facinating, Although,even though Waldseemüller drew the map, judging from the text I think we should call it the Ringmann map.
Posted by Sean on December 10,2009 | 10:34 PM
The Waldseemuller Map looks very much like the one drawn by Piri Reis (Known as the Piri Reis Map) in 1513. His shows Antarctica's landmass free of ice. He explained that he composed his map from some 20 different maps, some of which dated back to Alexander the Great (died 323 AD) and even earlier.
Subsequent analysis of the Piri Reis Map showed it to be extremely accurate and according to some people could have only been done by viewing the earth from space.
In 1513, supposedly,North and South America as well as Antarctica had not been discovered. So how could these continents be depicted on any maps drawn up by Waldseemuller or Piri Reis.
It leads us to believe that a very intelligent race of people must have existed in our ancient and distant past.
Posted by Cecil Miller on December 9,2009 | 01:01 AM
Cristovão Colombo a portuguese natural of Cuba(in Alentejo-Portugal) discovered America at the service of the King of Spain, and he wrote the first map of the area.
I do believe that the Portuguese National Library (Torre do Tombo ) has a copy of this book, but on the area of reserves and it is not yet available as an internet copy and as with all the 15/16 th century books they do not allow us "the not illuminaty" to touch or even see it. But they are doing a fantastic job copying these kind of books so we will be able to see it soon.
I am not an expert on maps I am doing PHD on the Portuguese Caravel construction but I can try to answer any question because my latim and portuguese are much better than my english. We do have 7 years of latin and only 3 of english at school.
Merry Xmas
Francisco
Posted by Francisco A. Fontes on December 9,2009 | 02:24 PM
To John Burkhart, who asked for the title of the book--it's The Fourth Part of the World: The Race to the Ends of hte Earth and the Epic Story of the Map that Gave America Its Name, by Toby Lester
Posted by T.A. Frail on December 9,2009 | 01:23 PM
Thanks for an amazing article in another amazing issue of Smithsonian.
Posted by Calogero on December 9,2009 | 12:20 PM
On pg 79 part of the sub-title says "A new book tells how___" etc. What is the title of this book and who is the author?? I would like to read it.
thanx
Posted by John Burkhart on December 4,2009 | 11:37 PM
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