The First Images of the Ob River on Western European Maps
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Martin Waldseemüller’s maps, published in 1507 and 1513 in Strasbourg, are the first maps to
bear the name of the new continent, America. They reveal the discovery of the New World by
Spanish and Portuguese navigators. None of the researchers, however, have noticed that the
same maps of North Asia (the area of present-day Western Siberia) for the first time show a
river flowing into the Arctic Ocean. The peculiarity of Western European cartographic sources
at the turn of the 15th–16th centuries lies in the fact that the reflection of the world picture was
based on the tradition of the geographer Claudius Ptolemy. The desire to publish the “New
Ptolemy” prompted the members of the Vosges Gymnasium, where Waldseemüller worked,
to combine traditional knowledge of the world with the latest geographical discoveries. The
article analyzes the content of Waldseemüller’s maps, provides a comparative analysis of the
maps that formed the basis for the creation of these images, and traces the borrowings of
data from the German cartographer by subsequent authors of the 16th century. As a result of
careful study of inscriptions and legends, the author concludes that the depiction of areas of
North Asia on the maps of the German cartographer dates back to the maps of Henry Martell
of 1489–1491. A large map of the world by this author is kept at Yale University, but many of
its inscriptions have faded or disappeared. The painstaking work of the American researcher
Chet van Duzer, who published a monograph on the map in 2019, gave researchers the opportunity
to examine the source carefully. The comparison between this map and an earlier
round map of Fra Mauro of 1459 suggested that Martell, in his turn, borrowed the image of the
North Asian river from this Venetian monk. Thus, the process of borrowing and clarifying the
information about the previously unknown river is traced. At the end of the article, the author
proves that European cartographers displayed the latest information about the Ob river, which
came from Russia.
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Kontev A. V. The First Images of the Ob River on Western European Maps. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2021, vol. 66, issue 3, рp. 971–989.