8 Index of maps relating to Gavin Menzies presentation in Beijing, March 22nd 2006

Index of maps relating to Gavin Menzies presentation in Beijing, March 22nd 2006

Part I
The Venetians and Portuguese claim they had maps of the whole world; The Portuguese took copies home from Venice in 1428.

Image 1 – Doges Palace world map

Image 2 – Roundel describing Nicola da Conti’ s contribution

Image 3 – Roundel describing Marco Polo’s contribution.
Part II
Maps of the New World which were published before Europeans reached the New World

Image 4a – Pizzigano (1424) – Guadeloupe

Image 4b – Pizzigano – Puerto Rico

Image 5 – Cantino (1502) Florida

Image 6 – Cantino (1502) Africa

Image 7 – Piri Reis (1573) Patagonia and Antarctic

Image 8 – Jean Rotz (1542) Australia

Image 10 – Waldseemueller (1507) Americas

Image 11 – Composite map
Part III
European world maps before European voyages of exploration

Image 12 – Globe – E Hemisphere

Image 13 – Globe – W Hemisphere

Image 14 – Albertin di Virga

Image 15 – di Virga and E Hemisphere globe

Image 16 – The Waldseemueller 1507

Image 17 – The Waldseemueller latitudes and longitudes.

Image 17a – List of latitudes and longitudes.

Image 18 – Waldseemueller transferred to globe

Image 19 – Waldseemueller and W Hemisphere globe

Image 20 – di Virga, Waldseemueller and globes of E and W hemispheres.
Part IV
Chinese Cartography in the time of Zheng He

Image 21 – Memo 25 October 2005 – Zheng He’s inheritance: Kubilai Khans maps

Image 25a) b) c) d) e) – Chinese Cartography: (coloured in for ease of recognition)

25a) Hendon Harris map – English translation

25b) Hendon Harris map – David Deal’s interpretation

25c) Shanhai Yudi Quantu

25d) Rolando Chacon map

25e) 1418 / 1763 map

Part V
Liu Gang’s 1418 map

Image 26 – The 1418 Map

Image 27 – 1418 map on a globe chopped in half.

Image 28 – Hemispheres overlapped

Image 29 – Hemispheres transposed

Image 30 – Hemisphere of Americas with modern globe

Image 31 – East Hemisphere compared to modern globe

Part VII
European maps derived from 1418 map

Image 32 – di Virga (1419)

Image 33 – Waldseemueller (1507)

Image 34 – Doges Palace (c1428)

Image 35 – The Pizzigano (1424)
Part VII and VIII

Image 36 – Why 1418 map cannot be a forgery?

Image 37 – Why 1763 map cannot be a forgery?

GAVIN MENZIES
LONDON
16th February 2006

View map: Zheng He’s integrated map of the world, 1418

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