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Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Iberian Peninsula and the Atlantic
- 2 The imperial bureaucracy and the appropriation of the New World
- 3 The piloto mayor: cosmography and the art of navigation
- 4 Machines of the empire
- 5 The Master Map (Padrón Real) and the cartography of the New World
- 6 The creatures of God never seen before: natural history
- 7 The New World, global science, and Eurocentrism
- Bibliography
- About the Author
- Index
5 - The Master Map (Padrón Real) and the cartography of the New World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Iberian Peninsula and the Atlantic
- 2 The imperial bureaucracy and the appropriation of the New World
- 3 The piloto mayor: cosmography and the art of navigation
- 4 Machines of the empire
- 5 The Master Map (Padrón Real) and the cartography of the New World
- 6 The creatures of God never seen before: natural history
- 7 The New World, global science, and Eurocentrism
- Bibliography
- About the Author
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter presents one of the technological products that most explicitly represents European power over the New World: maps. In particular, the chapter focuses on the Spanish project of a Padrón Real, a great map of the entire world, and explains the leadership role of Casa de Contratación de Sevilla in the construction of a new picture of the Earth.
Key words: Maps, Cartography, Navigational charts, Geography, Cosmography
‘The great man is a little man looking at a good map’.The uses of maps are varied: they may serve as navigational aids, charters of ownership, symbolic forms of appropriation, or tools for political administration. They are also useful for the defense of diplomatic interests or serving military or commercial purposes, or may be valuable possessions and saleable goods in their own right. Likewise, they may be appreciated as works of art since they are often objects with an undeniable aesthetic appeal, and because mapmaking rests on complex technical skills.
The Spanish cartography of the New World has been studied in depth and is well documented. Some recent investigations offer a fairly complete account of their history. This chapter deals with a scientific project of great scope, closely linked to the Casa de Contratación, navigation, and the post of the pilot major: the drafting of a new map of the world or a Master Map. As indicated by its name in Spanish, it was a singular cartographic representation that was meant to serve as a point of comparison for all maps and as a model for all navigational charts. The idea was that, either in Seville or Madrid, the Crown would have a register and a faithful representation of the New World.
When the Crown appointed Amerigo Vespucci as the first pilot major, despite his lack of experience as a navigator, it ordered him to:
to make a master map and so as to make it more faithful, we order our officials at the Casa de Contratación of Seville to assemble all our pilots, the most skillful that may be found on land at that time, and in the presence of yourself, the said Amerigo Vespucci, our pilot major, a register of all the lands and islands of the Indies which have been discovered to date is to be arranged and made.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Exploration, Religion and Empire in the Sixteenth-Century Ibero-Atlantic WorldA New Perspective on the History of Modern Science, pp. 217 - 244Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2021