Mapping the Medieval Worldview

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  • čas přidán 1. 07. 2024
  • "Here there be dragons": We'll look at how Medieval Christians understood their world from the maps they drew of it.
    Modern myth holds that people in the so-called "Dark Ages" believed the world was flat until Columbus proved otherwise. We'll learn about the actual Medieval worldview from a survey of dozens of Medieval maps.

Komentáře • 24

  • @exoplanet11
    @exoplanet11 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I've been orienting maps for decades, but never thought to realize that I was 'eastifying' them ! Thanks for the talk!

  • @reganharrington6849
    @reganharrington6849 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for this generous lecture. I've learned so much about maps and the medieval world.

  • @glenn-younger
    @glenn-younger Před 2 lety +4

    I really enjoyed this! It's interesting to see the evolution of mapmaking. And your passing observation at the end, rang true, when you said (more or less) "their maps showed exactly what they wanted them to show."

  • @helicopter_traffic
    @helicopter_traffic Před 2 lety +3

    Love these lectures. Please do as many lectures in your special interest as you can, that’s something we can’t get anywhere else

  • @Zxuma
    @Zxuma Před 3 měsíci

    Best CZcams channel of philosophy and history of gods.

  • @ncarmstron
    @ncarmstron Před rokem

    Thank you. So much fresh information! I notice this topic didn’t draw the huge viewer numbers of some other lectures, maybe because it’s not as exciting on the surface, but I found it well worth my time. Now I’m going to rewatch it to try to absorb the many details.

  • @jimtaggert42
    @jimtaggert42 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome! can you talk about PIri Reis? the turkish admiral?

  • @citizencyclops406
    @citizencyclops406 Před 2 lety +1

    John, I have an old friend Dan Terkla, Indiana Wesleyan, who’s area of study is Medieval maps and paradigms. Just wondering if he was one of those 12. Love your work . . Cheers

  • @davidwest7776
    @davidwest7776 Před 10 měsíci

    Regarding the Macrobian map with north at the top: It is said that magnetic compasses arrived in Europe from China in the 12th centuries. It is said that sailors wanted to draw magnetic lines on their maps and lay their compasses and maps so that the map magnetic lines pointed in same direction as their compass arrow.

  • @Mike_Hernandez
    @Mike_Hernandez Před 3 lety +1

    Do you have any books you recommend that would have good examples of the maps you showcased?

    • @thomaskrasey3321
      @thomaskrasey3321 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a great book published by the Smithsonian - Great Maps: The world’s masterpieces explored and explained. Has most of the maps he talks about and many more, great book.

  • @loucorona2684
    @loucorona2684 Před 7 měsíci

    The Prince of Peace this is the guy who at the age of seven pushed another child off the roof killed him, doesn't sound so peaceful to me.

  • @RiggenbachDE
    @RiggenbachDE Před 2 lety

    Referring to minutes 59:34 to 1:00:20, I would suggest that the horizontal beam of the letter "T" is not meant to represent rivers, but rather the Black Sea (separating Ukraine from Turkey) and the Red Sea (separating Egypt from Arabia and Sinai).

    • @HamerToronto
      @HamerToronto Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yes, that's a sensible idea with our modern idea of continents, but that is not correct. The Nile and the Don are the border of the continents for the ancients.

  • @bothewolf3466
    @bothewolf3466 Před 3 měsíci

    Wooooo! #MapNerds Maps rock.

  • @Damons-Old-Soul
    @Damons-Old-Soul Před 2 lety

    I would be curious if there are any maps from ancient Egypt or on any of the clay tablets from the civilization from modern day Iraq.

  • @shawnlarrabee45
    @shawnlarrabee45 Před 3 lety

    Are there references to North being Up in the Book of Mormon and is this anacronistic?

    • @nathangale7702
      @nathangale7702 Před 3 lety +1

      That’s actually a subject of some debate along Book of Mormon apologists. If you accept Joseph Smith as the translator, not the author of the book, then you might conclude that the Nephites oriented their direction in relation to the sea. So Joseph Smith may have misinterpreted the directional words in the Book of Mormon. Of course, this gets into the question of what a “divine translation” even means in the first place, which might not be the direction you were going in with your question.

  • @jimtaggert42
    @jimtaggert42 Před 2 lety +1

    Toronto maps always look upside down!

  • @nikecatania95
    @nikecatania95 Před 3 lety

    ostrogoths+visigoths=gothics :D

  • @jimtaggert42
    @jimtaggert42 Před 2 lety +1

    Irish made maps!

  • @jounik8980
    @jounik8980 Před rokem

    Dragons burned villages

  • @unnunn12
    @unnunn12 Před rokem

    i love you

  • @kankikankkinen2670
    @kankikankkinen2670 Před rokem

    20 kilometers was max distance what people moved 100 years ago, selling eggs to buy salt, city people didnt move even kilometer, stupid living away from work