4 Columbus believed that the Eurasian continent extended 282° to the east and therefore could be found 780 to the west, that a degree was about 83 km, and that Japan was more than 2000 km offshore. Before Christ the Phoenicians had circumnavigated Africa, Hipparchus invented latitude and longitude, Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth probably within 1% (there is some doubt as to the length of his
stade) and Poseidonius calculated a circumference which is much too small if he used the same stade. The science of antiquity was largely lost to western Europe during the middle ages but in 1410 the
Geographike Huphegesis of Ptolemy was translated into Latin (printed in 1475). Ptolemy's famous map shows Asia extending much too far east and he quoted the figure of Poseidonius so he has been blamed for the misconception of Columbus but the matter is more complicated. Columbus knew of a ninth century Arab figure of 1° = 56 2/3 miles which is accurate in terms of an Arabic mile of
1975 metres but Columbus assumed an Italian mile of 1477 metres which make the Arabic figure agree roughly with Poseidonius if his
stade was a tenth of a Roman mile. The final misconception comes from Marco Polo who flatly states ‘Cipangu (Japan) is an island far out to the eastward, some 1500 miles from the mainland ’. As poor Columbus despaired ‘ neither reason, nor mathematics, nor maps were any use to me ’.
Google Scholar