Volume I Part 13 (2/2)
[226] See references to Ulpius below, p. 117.
[227] Compare this mounting with that of Schoner as seen in Fig. 26.
[228] This is a tract of 44 pages.
[229] Schoner, J. Opera Mathematica. Norimbergae, 1551. See p. 127 for what has been thought to be a representation of Schoner's terrestrial and celestial globes of 1533. It will be noted that the maps in each of these globe pictures have been reversed.
[230] See above, p. 96.
[231] Wieser. Magalhaes-Stra.s.se. p. 76, and Tab. V, which is a copy of the southern hemisphere; Harrisse. Discovery. pp.
592-594, and pl. XVII, which is a copy of the western hemisphere; Santarem, V. de. Notice sur plusieurs monuments geographiques inedits.... (In: Bulletin de la Societe de Geographie. Paris, 1847. p. 322.); Stevens, H. Notes. New Haven, 1869. p. 19; Nordenskiold. Facsimile Atlas, pp. 80, 83; Winsor. Narrative and Critical History. Vol. VIII, p.
388.
[232] Harrisse. Discovery. p. 610.
[233] Harrisse. Discovery. p. 613, and pl. XXII, which is a representation of the western hemisphere.
[234] Michow, H. Caspar Vopell ein Kolner Kartenzeichner des 16 Jahrhunderts mit 2 Tafeln und 4 Figuren. (In: Hamburgische Festschrift zur Erinnerung an die Entdeckung von Amerika. Hamburg, 1892. Vol. I, pt. 4.); Graf, J. H. Ein Astrolabium mit Erdkugel aus dem Jahre 1545, von Kaspar Volpellius. (In: Jahresbericht d. Geographischen Gesellschaft zu Munchen. 15 Heft, p. 228); Nordenskiold, op.
cit., p. 83, and pl. XL, which gives a representation of the globe of 1543, twelve gores in colors; Merlo, J. J.
Nachrichten vom Leben und den Werken Kolner Kunstler, Koln, 1850. p. 493.
[235] Nordenskiold, op. cit., pl. XLV.
[236] Korth, L. Die Kolner Globen des Kaspar Vopelius. (In: Globus. Braunschweig, 1883. Vol. XLIV, pp. 62-63.)
[237] Described briefly by Michow, op. cit., p. 12.
[238] Letter of August 12, 1913.
[239] Described briefly by Michow, op. cit., p. 13.
[240] Described by Michow, op. cit., p. 14. Michow cites a letter written by Postell to Abr. Ortelius, April 9, 1567, in which the accusation is made against Vopel that merely to please the Emperor Charles V he had joined America and Asia in his globe map. In this letter the New World is called Atlantis.
[241] Such globes, it will be noted, represent the Ptolemaic system.
[242] Fiorini. Sfere terrestri e celesti. p. 214.
[243] Wieser, F. R. v. A. E. Nordenskiold's Facsimile Atlas.
(In: Petermanns Geographischen Mitteilungen. Gotha, 1890. p.
275.)
[244] Graf, op. cit., n. 37.
[245] Compare with that reproduced by Nordenskiold, n. 38 above.
[246] Gunther. Erd- und Himmelsgloben. p. 57; Doppelmayr, op. cit., p. 56. Hartmann was a noted manufacturer of globes and mathematical instruments in Nurnberg. In his youth he spent several years in Italy, probably in Venice.
[247] De Costa, B. F. The Globe of Ulpius. (In: Magazine of American History. New York, 1879. pp. 17-35.) Accompanying the article is a re-draughted representation of the western hemisphere; same author. Verrazano the Explorer. New York, 1881. (In: Magazine of American History. New York, 1881. p.
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