(02-01-2026, 03:41 PM)bi3mw Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.See: VM408 folio86v ‘The Rosette Map’: Elements of a Mappa mundi and a map of the Elements
Juergen Wastl1 and Danielle Feger
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I am sorry, but I am not impressed at all by that article.
It is entirely based on the premise that the Rosettes' diagram is a version of the medieval mappae mundi. But they give no arguments for that identification, and ignore tons of evidence that it is false.
For one thing, a Medieval mappa mundus had
three unequal continents packed into a circle, whereas f86v2 has
four equal and well-separated "continents" M1-M4, at the corners of a square, and four "inter-continents" E1-E4 that had no parallel in the Medieval maps.
They identify the NE "continent" (M2) with Europe because of the North Italian style merlons (as if the artist would know what African and Asian merlons looked like).
Then they identify the NW "continent" (M1) with Africa because the tower depicted there must be the lighthouse of Alexandria. How do they conclude that? Because the roof is yellow, which is the color of fire. Even if we were to believe that the colors are original, there is the little detail that the drawing shows a
round tower, while the Pharos has always been drwan as a massive
square building. Oh, and also the tower on f85v2 is surrounded by a massive wall that reaches all the way to the top floor...
And M3 s then assigned to Asia. Why? Because there is a building with three towers on the way that leaves Europe towards E3 which is the way to M3, and everybody at the time knew that Constantinople (which an Italian scribe may consider part of Asia?) was shaped like a triangle and thus represented as a castle with three turrets. Never mind that the three towers of f86v3 are on a straight line, rather than a triangle, and the building looks uncanningly like You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. in Prague, including the square-top roof with
two ball-tipped spikes...
But, even dismissing that paper, we can ask whether the central rosette is meant to be Jerusalem. The problem is those onion domes. I have seen some images from the time, in which Jerusalem is shown with many towers of all sizes and shapes (not just six equal round ones) with conical or at most hemispherical domes. And the Scribe surely must have been familiar with those images. So, are there any Medieval images of Jerusalem that even remotely resemble the central plaza of f86v2?
All the best, --stolfi