News
In 15th-century Europe, the apocalypse weighed heavily on the minds of the people. Plagues were rampant. The once-great capital of the Roman empire, Constantinople, had fallen to the Turks.
Researchers decipher a mystifying 15th-century document. ... The map, made by a German working in Florence named Henricus Martellus, has long been overlooked because fading obscured much of its text.
When it surfaced in 1957, it was too good to be true: a purported 15th-century world map depicting an island to the far west labeled Vinilandia Insula -- the fabled Vinland -- proof positive, it ...
When it surfaced in 1957, it was too good to be true: a purported 15th-century world map depicting an island to the far west labelled Vinilandia Insula the fabled Vinland proof positive, it seemed ...
MARTELLUS AND COLUMBUS. Contrary to popular myth, 15th-century Europeans did not believe that Columbus would sail off the edge of a flat Earth, says Chet Van Duzer, the map scholar who led the study.
Germany is handing over a 15th century navigation cross to Namibia, ... Namibia, the Stone Cross was once considered to be such an important navigation marker that it featured on old world maps.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results