Hereford Mappa Mundi (1300)
1 2021-06-21T15:33:52-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 7 1 There Hereford Mappa Mundi is a medieval map of the known world, dating from 1300. It is on display at Hereford Cathedral in England, and is the largest medieval map known to exist. It is 52 inches in diameter, depicting 420 towns, 15 Biblical events, 33 animals and plants, 32 people, and five scenes from classical mythology. Jerusalem sits at the center, while the Garden of Eden is a circle near the edge of the world. While flat-earth thinking was common during the Middle Ages, the spherical shape of earth was already known in ancient times, and thus the circular depiction of the earth in this visualization is probably an attempted spherical projection onto a flat surface. However, only the Northern Hemisphere was known to inhabit humans, so the circular representation was adequate for the time. Researchers believe that this map was created by multiple people, first by Richard de Bello (“Richard of Haldingham and Lafford”) and was passed onto a younger cousin. plain 2021-06-21T15:33:52-04:00 52.058968, -2.713679 1300 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6Contents of this tag:
- 1 2021-06-21T15:33:49-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 Primary Source Data Visualizations for World History and Geography 4 This page provides a list of primary source data visualizations to support inquiry in world history and geography. They are organized according to the periodization scheme in Michigan's social studies standards for world history. plain 2022-01-27T01:59:24-05:00 1150 BCE Tamara Shreiner 72eaa2d1ba1352b75b8a8da73e879a4ceb510ae0