|   
 Marinus
    of Tyre, Phoenicia, and Phoenicia's Hall of Maps
  
        
          Marinus
                of Tyre was the founder of mathematical geography and assigner
                of latitude and
                lontitude in
              the design of maps. Evolution
              of cartography & Hall of Maps
         
       
    Phoenician
          Mathematical Geography, Maps and Masters of Cartography in the Ancient
          World 
    
        Marinus
              of Tyre, Phoenicia, (ca. 70-130 A.D.) was a geographer
              and mathematician, as well as the founder of mathematical geography.
              His
        chief
          merits were that he assigned to each place its proper latitude and
            longtitude with equal spacing for lines (ca. 100 A.D.), and introduced
            improvements
        to the construction of  maps and developed a system of nautical charts.
        His
          charts used the city of Rhodes as a central point of reference. He
            also carefully studied the works of his predecessors and the diaries
            of travellers.
        His maps
        were the first in the Roman Empire to show China.  
        Around 120 A.D.,
            Marinus wrote that the habitable world was bounded on the west by
            the Fortunate
          Islands. The
          status of the Fortunate Islands as
            the western
            edge of the known world was more formally established when Claudius
            Ptolemy (90 - 168 A.D.) adopted
        the Fortunate Islands as the prime meridian for his Geographia, written
        ca. 150 A.D. He  acknowledged his great obligations
            to Marinus. Geographia was lost to
            the west during most of the Medieval period, but was rediscovered
        during the fifteenth century. It was the most famous classical map of
        the
            world, unsurpassed
            for almost 1500 years. The sources that Ptolemy cited most consistently
            were the maps and writings of Marinus, as well as adopting his 
            ideas and
            practices. Ptolemy’s
            commentaries on Marinus are the only records remaining about the
            latter’s
        work, as none of his maps or texts has survived.  
        1700 years before
            the modern  discovery of the source of the Nile, Marinus wrote
            an account of
          a journey
          to the Ruwenzori ca.  110 A.D. He related
              the tale of a Greek merchant, Diogenes who claimed a 25 day journey
            inland from the
              African East coast to "two great lakes and the snowy range
              of mountains where the Nile draws it's twin sources."          Ptolemy
              and Marinus were major authorities used by Columbus in  determining
               the circumference of the globe. 
     
    Phoenicia's Hall
      of Maps  
       
        The collection of 
          maps in this virtual hall provides a visual tour on the evolution of 
          cartography through centuries, from 6200 B.C. till the Roman era. In 
          addition, maps of Phoenicia Prima, the Phoenician Colonies, Settlements 
          and Trading Posts, and a unique Phoenician coin which is believed to 
          contain a map of the world. 
         
          Recognition: 
            This page and the related Phoenicia's Hall of Maps were inspired by 
            Dr. Gavin Francis, a physician and history enthusiast 
            with The British 
            Antarctic Survey (BAS) Research station located Latitude 75°35' 
            S, Longitude 26°34' W, Brunt Ice Shelf, Coats Land, Antartica. 
            I am indebted to Dr. Francis for writing to me about this important 
            subject. 
         
       
Phoenicia's
    Hall of Maps 
    Click on the thumbnails to view detailed, larger images
    
  
		
		
		  Related link: 
          Prehistoric 
          Globalization, maps that change history by Enrique Garcia Barthe 
        Sources 
          & Further Reading:  
          
            - J. Siebold; Ancient Maps, April 1998. http://www.henry-davis.com/MAPS/AncientWebPages/Ancient1.html
 
            - Faul, Stephanie; MappoMundi, 2000. http://mappa.mundi.net/locus/locus_0../a> 
 
            - J.J.  O'Connor,
                 E.F. Robertson,; The history of cartography, August
            2002. http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/HistTopics/Cartography.html
 
            -  J L Berggren and A Jones, Ptolemy's Geography : An
                    annotated translation of the theoretical chapters (Princeton,
                    2000). 
 
            -  T Campbell, Early maps (New York, 1981). 
 
            -  T Campbell, The earliest printed maps, 1442-1500 (London,
                      1987). 
 
            -  N Crane, Mercator : The Man who mapped the Planet (London,
                      2002). 
 
            -  G R Crone, Maps and their makers (London, 1953). 
 
            -  I J Curnow, The world mapped (London, 1930). 
 
            - J. Méndez; The
                  History of La Palma, July 2003. http://www.ing.iac.../lapalma/history.html
 
            -  R W Karrow, Mapmakers of the sixteenth century and
                        their maps (Chicago, 1993). 
 
            -  F
                  Sezgin, Geschichte des arabischen Schrifttums X : Mathematische
                        Geographie und Kartographie im Islam und ihr Fortleben im
                        Abendland. Historische Darstellung. Teil 1 (Frankfurt
                        am Main, 2000). 
 
            -  F
                  Sezgin, Geschichte des arabischen Schrifttums XI : Mathematische
                        Geographie und Kartographie im Islam und ihr Fortleben im
                        Abendland. Historische Darstellung. Teil 2 (Frankfurt
                        am Main, 2000). 
 
            -  F
                  Sezgin, Geschichte des arabischen Schrifttums XII : Mathematische
                        Geographie und Kartographie im Islam und ihr Fortleben im
                        Abendland. Kartenband (Frankfurt am Main, 2000). 
 
            -  H Stevens, Ptolemy's Geography : A brief account of
                        all the printed editions down to 1730 (London, 1908). 
 
            -  F J Swetz, The Sea Island mathematical manual : surveying
                        and mathematics in ancient China (Pennsylvania, PA,
                        1992). 
 
            -  R V Tooley, Maps and Mapmakers (London, 1949). 
 
            -  R Vermij (ed.), Gerhard Mercator und seine Welt (Duisburg,
                      1997). 
 
            -  M Watelet (ed.), Gérard
                  Mercator cosmographe : le temps et l'espace (Antwerp, 1994). 
 
            -  J N Wilford, The mapmakers : the story of the great
                        pioneers in cartography from antiquity to the space age (New
                        York, 1981). 
 
            - Additional references 
 
           
		  Articles 
		  
		    -  A Ahmedov
		          and B A Rozenfel'd, "Cartography" -
		        one of Biruni's first essays to have reached us (Russian), in Mathematics
                      in the East in the Middle Ages (Russian) (Tashkent,
                      1978), 127-153. 
 
		    -  K Andersen, The central projection in one of Ptolemy's
                        map constructions, Centaurus 30 (2) (1987),
                        106-113. 
 
		    -  L Bendefy, Regiomontanus und Ungarn, in Regiomontanus
                          studies, Vienna, 1976 (Vienna, 1980), 243-253. 
 
		    -  A V Dorofeeva, From the history of the discovery of the
                        Mercator projection (Russian), Mat. v Shkole (3)
                        (1988), i; 81. 
 
		    -  N S Ermolaeva, Mathematical cartography and D A Grave's
                        method for solving the Dirichlet problem (Russian), Istor.-Mat.
                        Issled. No. 32-33, (1990), 95-120. 
 
		    -  H Kautzleben,
		          Carl Friedrich Gauss und die Astronomie, Geodäsie und Geophysik
		          seiner Zeit, in Festakt und
                        Tagung aus Anlass des 200 Geburtstages von Carl Friedrich Gauss,
                        Berlin, 1977 (Berlin, 1978), 123-136. 
 
		    -  C Lardicci, Geometric aspects of cartography (Italian), Archimede 34
		        (1-2) (1982), 23-42. 
 
		    -  R P Lorch, Ptolemy and Maslama on the transformation
                        of circles into circles in stereographic projection, Arch.
                        Hist. Exact Sci. 49 (3) (1995), 271-284. 
 
		    -  O Neugebauer, Ptolemy's Geography, book VII, chapters
                        6 and 7, Isis 50 (1959), 22-29. 
 
		    -  D B Quinn, Thomas Harriot and the new world, in Thomas
                          Harriot : Renaissance scientist (Oxford, 1974),
                          36-53. 
 
		    -  M Schramm, Verfahren arabischer Nautiker zur Messung
                        von Distanzen im Indischen Ozean, Z. Gesch. Arab.-Islam.
                        Wiss. 13 (1999/00), 1-55. 
 
		    -  M A Tolmacheva, Ptolemy's East Africa in early medieval
                        Arab geography, J. Hist. Arabic Sci. 9 (1-2)
                        (1991), 31-43, 131-129. 
 
	       
	   
		
		    
	     
		
		
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 Phoenician Encyclopedia -- Phoenicia, A Bequest Unearthed (Desktop Version) 
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 This site has been online for more than 21 years.  
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DATE (Christian and Phoenician):
                    
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          year 4758 after the foundation of Tyre  | 
 
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