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قراءة كتاب A Book of Discovery The History of the World's Exploration, From the Earliest Times to the Finding of the South Pole
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A Book of Discovery The History of the World's Exploration, From the Earliest Times to the Finding of the South Pole
and vermilion, compasses and crests and flying banners, with mountains of red and gold." The seas are full of ships—"brave beflagged vessels with swelling sails." The land is ablaze with kings and potentates on golden thrones under canopies of angels. While over all presides the Madonna in her golden chair.
The Hereford Mappa Mundi, drawn in the thirteenth century on a fine sheet of vellum, circular in form, is among the most interesting of the mediæval maps. It must once have been gorgeous, with its gold letters and scarlet towns, its green seas and its blue rivers. The Red Sea is still red, but the Mediterranean is chocolate brown, and all the green has disappeared. The mounted figure in the lower right-hand corner is probably the author, Richard de Haldingham. The map is surmounted by a representation of the Last Judgment, below which is Paradise as a circular island, with the four rivers and the figures of Adam and Eve. In the centre is Jerusalem. The world is divided into three—Asia, "Affrica," and Europe. Around this earth-island flows the ocean. America is, of course, absent; the East is placed at Paradise and the West at the Pillars of Hercules. North and South are left to the imagination.
And what of the famous map of Juan de la Cosa, once pilot to Columbus, drawn in the fifteenth century, with St. Christopher carrying the infant Christ across the water, supposed to be a portrait of Christopher Columbus carrying the gospel to America? It is the first map in which a dim outline appears of the New World.
The early maps of "Apphrica" are filled with camels and unicorns, lions and tigers, veiled figures and the turrets and spires of strange buildings—
"Geographers in Afric maps With savage pictures fill their gaps." |
"Surely," says a modern writer,—"surely the old cartographer was less concerned to fill his gaps than to express the poetry of geography."
And to-day, there are still gaps in the most modern maps of Africa, where one-eleventh of the whole area remains unexplored. Further, in Asia the problem of the Brahmaputra Falls is yet unsolved; there are shores untrodden and rivers unsurveyed.
"God hath given us some things, and not all things, that our successors also might have somewhat to do," wrote Barents in the sixteenth century. There may not be much left, but with the words of Kipling's Explorer we may fitly conclude—
"Something hidden. Go and find it. Go and look behind the Ranges— Something lost behind the Ranges. Lost and waiting for you. Go!" |
Thanks are due to Mr. S. G. Stubbs for valuable assistance in the selection and preparation of the illustrations, which, with few exceptions, have been executed under his directions.
CONTENTS
CHAP. | |
I. | A LITTLE OLD WORLD |
II. | EARLY MARINERS |
III. | IS THE WORLD FLAT? |
IV. | HERODOTUS—THE TRAVELLER |
V. | ALEXANDER THE GREAT EXPLORES INDIA |
VI. | PYTHEAS FINDS THE BRITISH ISLES |
VII. | JULIUS CÆSAR AS EXPLORER |
VIII. | STRABO'S GEOGRAPHY |
IX. | THE ROMAN EMPIRE AND PLINY |
X. | PTOLEMY'S MAPS |
XI. | PILGRIM TRAVELLERS |
XII. | IRISH EXPLORERS |
XIII. | AFTER MOHAMMED |
XIV. | THE VIKINGS SAIL THE NORTHERN SEAS |
XV. | ARAB WAYFARERS |
XVI. | TRAVELLERS TO THE EAST |
XVII. | MARCO POLO |
XVIII. | THE END OF MEDIÆVAL EXPLORATION |
XIX. |