Close
Digital Collections
Statement on Potentially Offensive Materials
Help
Rights and Reproductions
Log In / Sign Up
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Overview
Add to collection
Download
Share PDF
Get link
Title
Tarih-i Yeni Dunya, el-musemma be hadis-i nev ca. 1600
Date Created
1600
Place
America
Language
Turkish, Ottoman
Subjects
Discoveries in geography
Description
Text in Arabic "nesih" script, rubricated, within gold and black borders; illuminated head-piece is a gold cartouche on a lapis background decorated with gold, red, turqoise, and white flowers; on heavy yellowish glazed paper.
Thirteen color miniatures illustrate textual descriptions of native American flora and fauna, such as the coconut, guava, and banana trees, cochineal cactus, tapir, armadillo, bison, pelican, and jaguar; a landscape of the Peruvian town of Potosi, with its silver mountain; and two imaginary drawings of a merman, and a wak-wak tree, bearing fruit in the form of naked women. Cf. Goodrich.
Three double-page maps, oriented with the south at the top, illustrated in red, blue, black, white, and gold with small pictures of cities and sailing ships, and borders in gold and black. Includes two circular hemispheric maps (24 cm.) of the Old and New Worlds, and a rectangular mappa mundi (19 x 26 cm.), very similar to the one by J. Gastaldi in Geografiya di Claudio Ptolemeo (Venice, 1548).
First printed in Constantinople in 1730 by Ibrahim Muteferrika; reprinted in 1875 without the maps. Cf. Goodrich.
English translation of the Newberry ms. by Thomas D. Goodrich in Ottoman Turks and the New World: a study of Tarih-i Hind-i garbi and sixteenth-century Ottoman Americana. Wiesbaden : Harrassowitz, 1990.
Summary
Unsigned ms. copy, dated 1368-1369, but actually from ca. 1600, of the Tarih-i Hindi-i garbi [A history of the India of the West], written by an anonymous Turk around 1580. The account relates the explorations of Columbus, Cortes, Pizarro, and others, introducing American colonial history and the new geographic discoveries to the Islamic world. Chapts. 1 and 2 discuss Islamic cosmology and geography, the Old World with its seven "climes," its bodies of water, and areas of aridity and fertility, and the Atlantic Ocean. Chapt. 3 contains one section on North America and the Magellan expedition, and another on South America, mainly Peru. The author, probably assisted by someone from Spain who knew Italian, worked from Italian translations of 16th-century texts: Lopez de Gomara's Historia general de las Indias; Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes' De la natural hystoria de las Indias; Peter Martyr's De orbe novo; and Historia del descubrimiento y conquesta del Peru by Agustin de Zarate.
Extent
[107] leaves, bound, [6] leaves of plates : 13 col. ill., 3 col. maps ; 26 cm
Format
Early accounts to 1600
Archival Collection Title
Edward E. Ayer Collection
Rights Status
No Copyright - United States
Newberry Open Access Policy
The Newberry makes its collections available for any lawful purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without licensing or permission fees to the library, subject to
these terms and conditions.
Contributing Institution
Newberry Library
Link to Catalog
View record
Call Number
Ayer MS 612
BibID
174224
IIIF Resource Type
Manifest
IIIF Resource ID
https://collections.newberry.org/IIIF3/Presentation/Manifest/2KXJ8ZSFHTDKG
Filename
991742248805867_VAULT_Ayer_MS_612
Unique identifier
NL11JNTP
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results