Geert J. Verhoeven

PhD Archaeology



University of Vienna

Franz-Klein-Gasse 1
Room A5.04 (5th floor)
1190 Vienna
Austria



Leonardo Depicted America: Misread as the Moon


Journal article


Stefaan Missinne, Geert J. Verhoeven
Advances in Historical Studies, vol. 08(04), 2019, pp. 139-147


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APA   Click to copy
Missinne, S., & Verhoeven, G. J. (2019). Leonardo Depicted America: Misread as the Moon. Advances in Historical Studies, 08(04), 139–147. https://doi.org/10.4236/ahs.2019.84011


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Missinne, Stefaan, and Geert J. Verhoeven. “Leonardo Depicted America: Misread as the Moon.” Advances in Historical Studies 08, no. 04 (2019): 139–147.


MLA   Click to copy
Missinne, Stefaan, and Geert J. Verhoeven. “Leonardo Depicted America: Misread as the Moon.” Advances in Historical Studies, vol. 08, no. 04, 2019, pp. 139–47, doi:10.4236/ahs.2019.84011.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{missinne2019a,
  title = {Leonardo Depicted America: Misread as the Moon},
  year = {2019},
  issue = {04},
  journal = {Advances in Historical Studies},
  pages = {139-147},
  volume = {08},
  doi = {10.4236/ahs.2019.84011},
  author = {Missinne, Stefaan and Verhoeven, Geert J.}
}

Abstract
Leonardo da Vinci must have been aware that Columbus discovered new territories in the West. Until now, no material evidence had been found to substantiate this assumption. Here we show that Leonardo not only read Amerigo Vespucci’s letter (derived from a painted star constellation), but that he even drew a map including the New World, a drawing which was previously interpreted as a depiction of the Moon. Finally, Leonardo engraved his notion of this new continent on an ostrich egg globe (now known as the Da Vinci Globe) and made a copper cast of this. Both the cosmographic and cartographic clues demonstrate that Leonardo da Vinci knew about the fourth continent, to be named “America” in 1507, less than a decade after Columbus embarked upon its shores. This expansion of Leonardo’s cartographic legacy comes at a time of increased interest for such multi-disciplinary insights, as the world commemorates in 2019 the 500th anniversary of his death.

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