Mappa Mundi: The greatest map of the medieval world | BBC Global

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  • Опубликовано: 3 апр 2024
  • On the second floor of the Library of Saint Marks in Venice, Italy, a map of the world occupies an entire room.
    The Mappa Mundi, completed by Italian monk and cartographer Fra Mauro in 1459 AD, is the compendium of all the geographical knowledge of the time and is arguably the greatest medieval map of the world.
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    #bbc #geography #maps

Комментарии • 309

  • @LudicrousPlatypus
    @LudicrousPlatypus 2 месяца назад +327

    My "Map Men" bros go way back with the mappa mundi

    • @thomash6933
      @thomash6933 2 месяца назад +29

      MAP MEN MAP MEN MAP MAP MAP MEN MEN

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 2 месяца назад +11

      ​@@thomash6933...men men men men men men men men...

    • @ayanlefarah318
      @ayanlefarah318 24 дня назад +1

      Its not the same mappa mundi

  • @paxamericanafilms
    @paxamericanafilms 2 месяца назад +673

    Thumbnail did its job

  • @craigwendler7204
    @craigwendler7204 2 месяца назад +311

    Audio levels are all over the place, and many shots are lacking basic color correction. Come on BBC, you're better than this!

    • @adamfrbs9259
      @adamfrbs9259 2 месяца назад

      You're way too far down your own rabbit hole on this topic.
      The general public is pretty stupid, I mean c'mon, McDonald's added numbers to the meal combos decades ago to help idiots order food. Most people are too high or dumb or both to even notice lol.

    • @grondhero
      @grondhero Месяц назад +18

      No, they're not. Not really. 😂

    • @FSVR54
      @FSVR54 Месяц назад +7

      @@grondhero 20 year ago, but not today

    • @maxfmfdm
      @maxfmfdm Месяц назад +6

      The standard is sadly rock bottom today.

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf Месяц назад +4

      No they are not.

  • @pitmanra
    @pitmanra 2 месяца назад +156

    Who did the sound levels for this video?

    • @CubicSpline7713
      @CubicSpline7713 Месяц назад +3

      RUclips is supposed to automatically correct, but failed here.

    • @OutWestRedDirt
      @OutWestRedDirt Месяц назад +6

      ​@@CubicSpline7713this isn't a ma and pa video, sound got failed by creator and RUclips

    • @binchamers
      @binchamers Месяц назад +3

      @@CubicSpline7713youtube cant fix audio levels between multiple things in the video bro

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf Месяц назад +2

      Someone hired by the BBC based on diversity criteria instead of actual competence.

    • @shinrapresident7010
      @shinrapresident7010 23 дня назад

      @@user-fe1gb9uc1t DEI ruins everything it touches.

  • @christianfrommuslim
    @christianfrommuslim 2 месяца назад +105

    I would like to see more detail on the map and its locations.

    • @danidejaneiro8378
      @danidejaneiro8378 2 месяца назад +1

      google is your friend

    • @RogySan
      @RogySan 2 месяца назад +1

      It literally says in the video that the map was made in the 15th century by the venician monk Fra Mauro and that it is kept in the Library of Saint Mark in Venice, also known as Biblioteca Marciana.

    • @christianfrommuslim
      @christianfrommuslim 2 месяца назад +10

      @@RogySan Yes, the location of the map was clear. I was asking it for more details on the locations illustrated on the map, the understanding of the world as it was at the time, and how that has changed.
      This would of course require a much longer video.

    • @mrquirky3626
      @mrquirky3626 2 месяца назад +6

      I don't think I can post the link here but if you search for 'mappa mundi' on the BBC news web site for the article, it contains a link in the ninth paragraph to an interactive digital version of the map where you can zoom right in and see all the details.

    • @Dave1507
      @Dave1507 Месяц назад

      You know where it is now...

  • @TheAlchaemist
    @TheAlchaemist Месяц назад +9

    The website of the Museo Galileo has an entire site dedicated to this map, which includes (buried in section 2) the possibility of navigating it in great detail.
    It's great to be able to zoom in and see the details, read the places, identify where they are today. Keep in mind that it also has little drawings of palaces, temples, sepulchers, etc. It's like being Indiana Jones on a budget.
    There's also a "fra-mauro-transcriptions" PDF somewhere online, that has the list of all the toponyms, and texts translated and annotated relating the map to modern day.

  • @-zorkaz-5493
    @-zorkaz-5493 2 месяца назад +57

    The biggest Mappa Mundi is in Hereford Cathedral. It hung on a wall there unprotected and unstudied for centuries before anybody thought it'd be pretty neat to actually preserve the thing. It has these fantastic depictions of the various mythical beasts thought to reside pretty much "anywhere that is not here".

    • @Peter-ov6xh
      @Peter-ov6xh 2 месяца назад +2

      You sound really smug.

    • @NarasimhaDiyasena
      @NarasimhaDiyasena 2 месяца назад +1

      Some of these maps are depictions of the inner earth. No im not bs’ing.

    • @woundedidiot429
      @woundedidiot429 2 месяца назад +3

      Nah bro chill​@@Peter-ov6xh

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 Месяц назад +1

      @@Peter-ov6xh The narrator was the one who immediately brought up size, implying that Mauro’s map is the largest, when it is not. So, OP did us a service letting us know which map is the largest. Good on him. Not so good on BBC and the video producer.
      As for accusing OP of being ‘smug'… Is English your first language?

    • @Peter-ov6xh
      @Peter-ov6xh Месяц назад +1

      @@jayhache5609 I didn't dispute his handle on the facts.

  • @FukutenshiYoufan
    @FukutenshiYoufan 2 месяца назад +57

    After watched this from the start to the end, I'm still wondering who the lady in the thumbnail is......

    • @eksiarvamus
      @eksiarvamus 2 месяца назад +9

      Nonsense, she is integral to the story.

    • @Shaun.Stephens
      @Shaun.Stephens 2 месяца назад +17

      She's what's called 'clickbait'.

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Месяц назад +11

      ​@@Shaun.Stephensassbait

    • @user-wr8fg4lh5v
      @user-wr8fg4lh5v Месяц назад +1

      Baddie

    • @ikarusxv
      @ikarusxv Месяц назад +1

      I think it's the same interviewer, just with a good take

  • @silentlee2073
    @silentlee2073 Месяц назад +29

    Looking at that thumbnail, i can tell that this is quite a unique situation where the booty leads one to the map instead of the other way around.

  • @Antonin1738
    @Antonin1738 Месяц назад +3

    this is really interesting, I wish it was longer

  • @joesmoe6454
    @joesmoe6454 Месяц назад +1

    It's incredible how orienting it differently changes it so much. I was thinking that the map wasn't nearly accurate compared to modern maps, but decent for medieval maps, but then once It was rotated it was amazing how close it was to reality.

  • @jrjubach
    @jrjubach 20 дней назад

    This is so intriguing.

  • @bradbutcher3984
    @bradbutcher3984 10 дней назад

    My ex wife knew how much I love maps and took all mine out of spite but I still have my 1941 Colliers World Atlas and Gazetteer. It shows the territories under German and Japanese (axis) control. I have much older books but I love it.

  • @WhoIsCalli
    @WhoIsCalli Месяц назад

    Such a beautiful map

  • @jasonking6892
    @jasonking6892 Месяц назад +3

    Very interesting 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @jaimegarcia9408
    @jaimegarcia9408 2 месяца назад +2

    Juan de la cosa, the first mapa mundi of the new world. In Madrid is amaizing

  • @rayrocher6887
    @rayrocher6887 Месяц назад +1

    Fundamental, is legend good work

  • @w.w.sakbeh571
    @w.w.sakbeh571 2 месяца назад +56

    The cartographer apparently knew about Japan, and yet he also apparently thought Japan had a medieval fortified city. It’s interesting how cultural assumptions remain even among scientists.

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 2 месяца назад +25

      Ughhh.... They had armoured chivalric knights, the most famed blacksmiths in the world making thier swords, kings in castles, princesses and dragons, peasants, monks and merchants.... everything that would be familiar to late medieval European people. They may have all looked slightly different, but the fundamentals where there.

    • @garotadagavea
      @garotadagavea 2 месяца назад +15

      @@patreekotime4578exactly. Their castles may have different esthetics, but they are still castles.

    • @w.w.sakbeh571
      @w.w.sakbeh571 2 месяца назад +4

      There were no chivalrous knights in Japan. Chivalry was the Christian-based code governing the life conduct of European knights. In the context of Japan, one refers to samurai and the code of boushido. True, there were castles in medieval Japan (some remain intact and are listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites), but to my knowledge there were no fortified towns (only the defensive castle was fortified). Those details aside, your point is well taken.

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 2 месяца назад +15

      @@w.w.sakbeh571 If you described the code of Boshido to a travelling 15th century Christian who didnt speak Japanese they would instantly recognize their own code of honorable knights. If you travel the world, you encounter familiar things the world over because humans are humans... we find similar solutions to similar problems, and we recognize the familiar despite the differences.

    • @w.w.sakbeh571
      @w.w.sakbeh571 2 месяца назад +3

      That goes without saying and is an extremely reductionist understanding of both chivalry and bushidou!

  • @user-sv5jv6cu7p
    @user-sv5jv6cu7p Месяц назад +4

    Al idrissi map was very close in accuracy and 3 centuries older, he probably doesn't have the most accurate map in medival times but he's defintely the greatest cartographer

    • @nassimmohammed9479
      @nassimmohammed9479 Месяц назад

      HE SIMPLY USED IT ; YES THIS GUY USED AL IDRISSI MAP BUT THEY OCCURED IT ;

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 24 дня назад +4

      Humans always travelled and humans always created maps of their travels. That's why you can find maps as old as humanity itself.
      Al-Idrisi did nothing more than adding his gained information into already existing concepts and maps, creating a more detailed version.
      Like every cartographer before.

    • @user-sv5jv6cu7p
      @user-sv5jv6cu7p 24 дня назад

      @@walther2492 Where did I say he's the first one to draw a map, everyone builds on the existing just because that exist doesn't mean every invention or discovery is equal, his maps and works revolutionezed cartoctaphy, he was baisacally the father of late medival cartography

  • @clubsobri
    @clubsobri Месяц назад

    Really cool!!!

  • @syedalamgir5838
    @syedalamgir5838 2 месяца назад +1

    Nice informative 👍

  • @wesleysanders8570
    @wesleysanders8570 2 месяца назад +7

    Great video

  • @crypticTV
    @crypticTV Месяц назад +5

    1:25 Sri Lanka 😍😍
    2:07 Marco Polo
    2:40 House
    3:00 Combined
    3:20 Columbus

  • @kirapurinton
    @kirapurinton Месяц назад

    Where can I watch the full show?

  • @AchyutChaudhary
    @AchyutChaudhary 2 месяца назад +8

    *Just curious, isn't the 'Mappa Mundi' map situated at the Hereford Cathedral in 🇬🇧UK (rather than 🇮🇹Venice)?* 🤔

    • @mikey50boy
      @mikey50boy 2 месяца назад +5

      Yes your right the Mappa Mundi is indeed in Hereford Cathedral along with the Chained Library one of the City’s popular tourist sites,but apparently their are 1,100Mappa Mundai’s that survived from the Middle Ages . Hereford’s is the biggest and from about 1300

    • @danilocaccamese9597
      @danilocaccamese9597 2 месяца назад +17

      "Mappa Mundi" is latin for "World Map", in italian today we say "Mappamondo" to refer a chart or map about the earth. So, every of this is a "Mappa Mundi/World Map". It will be better if named the by his author "World Map of Fra Mauro". In Italy that map is called "Mappamondo di san Mauro". For the the english one, in known to me as "Hereford Mappa Mundi". I hope that will help.

  • @HeroTypez
    @HeroTypez 2 месяца назад +3

    Man, my grandfather from Peru used to call all world maps by this name Mappa Mundi, I guess I never adked why

    • @TheAlchaemist
      @TheAlchaemist Месяц назад

      Because in Spanish, un mapamundi is precisely that. It's a loan word from Latin of course. And literally means "map of the world" :)

    • @ikarusxv
      @ikarusxv Месяц назад

      I used to hear this word a lot when I was a kid in the 90s in Chile, but I think it became obsolete.

  • @kramnam4716
    @kramnam4716 Месяц назад +1

    It is with her standing in front of it for sure.

  • @JohnAdams-1
    @JohnAdams-1 Месяц назад +2

    Great tush

  • @YagrumBagarn
    @YagrumBagarn 22 дня назад

    Nice map

  • @gramma677
    @gramma677 Месяц назад

    Why do I have a sudden desire to watch orson Welles.

  • @josefrietveld219
    @josefrietveld219 2 месяца назад

    Now i want to lift the curtain

  • @othoapproto9603
    @othoapproto9603 6 дней назад

    everything is ARGUABLE,

  • @shankarbalakrishnan2360
    @shankarbalakrishnan2360 24 дня назад

    Maps maps❤❤🎉🎉

  • @gabrielperez-ze9tk
    @gabrielperez-ze9tk Месяц назад +2

    Love the orientation of the map, really shows that to Venetians with water to the South would culturally see the world as "upside down" to how we see it, and showcasing that our very idea of north and south are largely arbitrary, at least during this time. To be fair, the invention of the compass changes such, as being in the northern hemisphere the reliance on such navigation upped the importance of the idea of north in general over that of the south.
    Then there is the fact that the coastline is overly exaggerated, which again makes sense as for those without a clear idea of Earth from orbit, those dramatic coastlines seem far more impactful than they are in a larger sense. So the coast emphasizes what are more likely very specific outcroppings of coast, that from the scale depicted by the mundi map would instead look like straight ish lines.
    Very curious how off they are with the gulf of persia and the shape of Saudi Arabia, really shows how quickly their knowledge runs out. Even with the proximity to the mediterranean, the lack of a simple canal (there was a restrictive one into the red sea on and off before the Suez) means that while the mediterranean is clearly completely understood, the handoff of goods to middlemen in the levant means that knowledge of the coasts completely fall off. If there was a water bridge between the med and the red, this would probably not be the case at all. And then, there are only vague impressions of the rest of the east. So very fascinating, and incredible. What I would do to spend a day in medieval venice. Being a port of trade, and a culturally open place because of it, if I had to spend time in the medieval world I would go from dead in a week somewhere like Britain, to able to eek out a life in shrewd venice, at least with some luck! Helps that knowing latin roots and italian would go further there (with some difficulty) than trying to parcel out the quickly changing English language of that period.

  • @TheCaretaker65
    @TheCaretaker65 20 дней назад

    Music is too loud, some interview dialogue too quite...

  • @antoinepetrov
    @antoinepetrov 2 месяца назад +6

    The accent of the narrator is the new standard for the BBC.

    • @paddyoak1
      @paddyoak1 19 дней назад +1

      Yeah, I was wondering about that

    • @vila777_
      @vila777_ 16 дней назад +1

      this is bbc global, i don’t see why they can’t have global narrators

  • @priztucker
    @priztucker 26 дней назад

    Just as I was gonna ask why Japan is left and not right on the map she explains the orientation 😅

  • @juanferrero2009
    @juanferrero2009 Месяц назад

    This mini doc is 10/10! The ending with crisopher columbus omggg!

  • @mho...
    @mho... 18 дней назад

    ancient maps are just glorious pieces of art....not really accurate, but beautiful nonetheless!

  • @werty2172
    @werty2172 Месяц назад +1

    Does it include the 10 dash line?

  • @jetonbalidemaj
    @jetonbalidemaj 2 месяца назад

    This map challenges the narrative and I love that

    • @icefalls
      @icefalls 2 месяца назад +15

      What narrative?

    • @hellomoto2084
      @hellomoto2084 Месяц назад +1

      Flat Earth is not real brother .

  • @loklikme
    @loklikme 23 дня назад

    Additional to that who is curious to know more to look up for Al Idrisi Norman king Roger II era

  • @6krio128
    @6krio128 Месяц назад

    Numidia 👀

  • @AWMulholland99
    @AWMulholland99 2 месяца назад

    cheers

  • @joaodefreitas8617
    @joaodefreitas8617 Месяц назад

    It die not prove that was possible to go around Africa before the portuguese, it just shows water since they did not knew what else to put in. You can technically go north aswell from that map.
    It is just a représentation but the truth is they did not knew if was possible for boats to go there without being shipwrecked.

  • @TheCheesyNachos
    @TheCheesyNachos Месяц назад

    man trying to get to babylon

  • @althyk
    @althyk 28 дней назад

    Italians have a zig zag speech.

  • @Aj-tu4gv
    @Aj-tu4gv 26 дней назад

    3rd eye, shiva lingam/stargate/genie objects

  • @gdrdm
    @gdrdm Месяц назад

    Weren't most -- if not all -- European medieval mapa mundi surrounded by a large world ocean whereby Africa was always believed to be -- conceptually at least -- 'roundable'? Or did the narrator simply mean that Fra Mauro suggested in his notes that this was a realistic prospect whereas previously it was dismissed as too big a feat?

    • @hollyjaw3303
      @hollyjaw3303 20 дней назад

      Yes, there's a note in which he describes recent Portugues findings of a suitable course to round Africa, with gentle beaches and shallow waters, useful to resupply during the navigation

  • @user-ld8mz9ej1c
    @user-ld8mz9ej1c 21 день назад

    I would like to pretend like this map matters at all today

  • @historyinobjects
    @historyinobjects 28 дней назад +4

    Not a single mention of Arab maps, after which Renaissance era maps were designed, even the most basic orientation (upside down) is following the Islamic Golden Age model of maps.

    • @thespeedyeagle
      @thespeedyeagle 24 дня назад

      That's normal western propaganda for you.

    • @carlobrotto7132
      @carlobrotto7132 22 дня назад +1

      Why this need of mentioning the arab maps if actually the video is a focus about this one ? It would have been unnecessary and useless, unless the BBC reporter was supposed to fit the inferiority complex of some Arabs ...

    • @thespeedyeagle
      @thespeedyeagle 22 дня назад

      @@carlobrotto7132 this is basic academic requirement. A similar example would be Newton's law of gravity. The Muslims in Spain were building aqueducts using the law of Gravity. All of a sudden it's his law. He was most likely reading an Arabic book on gravity when that apple fell on his head. Rather this is a common tactic to show fake superiority and undermine the contribution of a civilisation that was the very foundation of the renaissance of Europe.

    • @carlobrotto7132
      @carlobrotto7132 22 дня назад +1

      @@thespeedyeagle the only academic basic such eminent "intellectuals" of socials as you can learn is how to hold with history ( I mean the real history and not the fake one you build up in your bizarre statements) and how to pick up a written book again and just read it . Best wishes to your Arabic discover of gravity law ...😂😂

    • @historyinobjects
      @historyinobjects 22 дня назад

      @@carlobrotto7132 Maybe because the focus of this video was the GREATEST MAP OF THE MEDIEVAL WORLD" and last i checked the Islamic golden age was part of th medieval world that followed the antiquaty period (pre-Islam). How about learn some basics before embarrassing yourself.

  • @AURELIUSxx
    @AURELIUSxx 2 месяца назад

    I am somehow confused that a monk in the 15th. Century paints Palasts all over Asia but shows Rome, the center of Christianity, as a small village without any explanation

    • @TravellerdeLux
      @TravellerdeLux Месяц назад +1

      Rome stopped being an important city long before the middle ages started which makes sense given that without the empire it holds no strategic value whatsoever, it doesn't have any peculiar or important products and the population was never keen to enterprise, Venice was much bigger and richer, as Palermo, Ravenna an other cities. furthermore in that period the Papato was an instable institution they had up to 3 popes at the same time all declaring the other ones were illegitimate so Rome was really just a big village

    • @AURELIUSxx
      @AURELIUSxx Месяц назад +1

      @@TravellerdeLux so we both think the same, for the most people it is since 2.000 years the center of Christianity

    • @TravellerdeLux
      @TravellerdeLux Месяц назад

      @@AURELIUSxx it's not what i think it is history, the king of france moved the pope to Avignone for almost 100 hundred years, furthermore one could ask what kind of christian are you the pope is the head of the catholic church not of Christianity, if you dig deeper the catholic church almost dissapeared a couple times it was saved out of political consideration by Napoleon first, Garibaldi and the fist king of Italy second, Mussolini third, the idea of the Catholic church that we have now is all based on the work of Pope Giovanni Paolo II history tells us that it is definitely a failed institution with many flaws and dark moments, and definitely Rome is not an important city even nowadays if we took the national government out tomorrow it would be just a big city with some amazing archeological sites

  • @AfridiAhmd
    @AfridiAhmd Месяц назад

    pappa puppu

  • @gimplise9700
    @gimplise9700 Месяц назад

    Looked like the Wonder Woman scene didn't it?

  • @tandoori_naan_
    @tandoori_naan_ 2 месяца назад +3

    Marco polo was THE MAN who brought Europe into rennaisance.

  • @iznasen
    @iznasen Месяц назад

    ..Yes Parmesan cheese, Thanks

  • @Alpha_Online
    @Alpha_Online 25 дней назад

    Some people claim India didn't exist 100 years ago. I wonder what the term 'India' in this map means. 🤔

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 24 дня назад

      India as a state, because they were occupied by the British.

    • @hollyjaw3303
      @hollyjaw3303 20 дней назад +1

      On the map he also speaks of Italy, but of course Italy as a state was 400 years away. It's a geographical map that represents regions as the were known. Very few political organisation are mentioned, one of which is Cathai (Cina)

  • @AndreyRubtsovRU
    @AndreyRubtsovRU Месяц назад

    serious BBC is no stranger to clickbaity things

  • @bobbyfrancis7474
    @bobbyfrancis7474 Месяц назад

    All books deserve pillows

  • @patricktalley4185
    @patricktalley4185 Месяц назад +5

    Small quibble…. but putting Eden on the side of the map, as if it wasn’t a real place, was not a “modern” idea. Theologians dating back centuries before this map would have agreed that Eden was not a physical location to be found on earth, but a metaphorical “place” for mankind’s prelapsarian spiritual existence.
    In the late first century AD, Origen of Alexandria, one of the earliest fathers of the Christian church, argued that parts of the creation narratives obviously were not literal: “who is so silly,” he asked, “as to believe that God, after the manner of a farmer, ‘planted a paradise eastward in Eden,’ and set in it a visible and palpable ‘tree of life.”
    We think of the idea of not taking scripture literally is a modern development, but actually the opposite is true. Biblical literalism of the more recent American evangelical strain was created by 18th and 19th century Protestants in reaction to increasing attacks on biblical inerrancy from enlightenment philosophers and scientists. In earlier Christian eras, biblical interpretation was more nuanced and sophisticated.
    It’s no accident that monks and priests made some of the most important scientific and technical discoveries of western culture over the centuries. Their devotion to God inspired a passion to understand God’s creation from the motions of the stars and planets (Copernicus and Galileo) to genetics (Mendel) to geology (Steno) to the Big Bang (Lemetre).

  • @giambi1980
    @giambi1980 2 месяца назад +2

    Another reason to definitely state the Venice is the most beautiful city on earth!

  • @midnight_pilgrim
    @midnight_pilgrim 16 дней назад

    I don’t know why but this map looks very similar to the Islamic cartographer’s, Al-Idrisi🧐🤨 (not sarcasm btw so people don’t interpret it differently)

  • @bendenator647
    @bendenator647 29 дней назад

    What about the Mappa Mundi in Hereford Cathedral? How are these two different…

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 24 дня назад

      Mappa Mundi basically just means World Map.

  • @naturalcauses1695
    @naturalcauses1695 26 дней назад

    I can't understand the narrator

  • @weefatbobicus
    @weefatbobicus 12 дней назад

    Split second of the map for you to see north up, and then cut away time again. So a piece about a map they don't want you to see.

  • @stolasish1184
    @stolasish1184 2 месяца назад +3

    I wonder if and why it would be considered better than Medieval Islamic maps?

  • @thespeedyeagle
    @thespeedyeagle 24 дня назад

    Fra Mauro didn't have to leave Venice because the geographer Muhammad Al-Idrisi did the travelling for him 300 years ago before he was born. BBC crafty as always.

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 24 дня назад

      Humans always travelled and humans always created maps of their travels. That's why you can find maps as old as humanity itself.
      Al-Idrisi did nothing more than adding his gained information into already existing concepts and maps, creating a more detailed version.
      Like every cartographer before.

    • @thespeedyeagle
      @thespeedyeagle 23 дня назад

      @@walther2492 that's true, except you will find his map to be very identical to the one shown here. I think it does a lot of injustice to not mention the original creator of this particular map.

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 23 дня назад +1

      @@thespeedyeagle Very identical? Did you ever had a look at it? Pro tip: go to wiki, open the pictures of both and compare it. Than come back and try again.
      And mappa mundi is latin and means analogously "world map". Do you know why it has a latin name? Exactly.

    • @thespeedyeagle
      @thespeedyeagle 23 дня назад

      ​@@walther2492I've seen them both, one is simply an evolution of the other, we are talking about 300 years in between. But if you don't see the striking resemblance and don't see the academic justification to mention Idrisi, I've nothing to say.

  • @12440jayjay
    @12440jayjay 2 месяца назад +5

    1459 is not that far in the history. Other civilizations had better knowledge of world geography. Vasco de Gama was guided to India from the Cape of Good Hope by an Indian merchant-navigator. Columbus landed in America and called it India and the people, Indian; a mistake even celebrated today!

    • @paulopacifici
      @paulopacifici Месяц назад

      Celebrated by the European colonizers and devastated news for the original people.

  • @alex0589
    @alex0589 2 месяца назад +6

    fire the editor.
    Sound on this is unacceptably bad, even for a youtube piece

  • @PaulJohn01
    @PaulJohn01 Месяц назад

    2:40 sad to see all that graffiti on the walls !

  • @g.l.5072
    @g.l.5072 2 месяца назад +2

    I like her

    • @andrewtheworldcitizen
      @andrewtheworldcitizen 2 месяца назад

      why don't you marry her then....

    • @hellomoto2084
      @hellomoto2084 Месяц назад

      ​@@andrewtheworldcitizenI will , if I could and if she agreed.

  • @SolarMiracle
    @SolarMiracle 7 дней назад +1

    From Arabs/Muslims !

  • @davidfilestra8826
    @davidfilestra8826 Месяц назад

    The video could have been done in a more professional manner.

  • @oriel9347
    @oriel9347 2 месяца назад +2

    Caution 'Primary School Syllabus' content may cause 'primary school childern' to be active in the comments/shitposting.

  • @g1stylempdesign929
    @g1stylempdesign929 Месяц назад

    Boy I’m a sucker

  • @islamonlysolution461
    @islamonlysolution461 25 дней назад

    in year 800 900 abbassids made complete map even with australia and antartica

    • @walther2492
      @walther2492 24 дня назад +2

      No, they didn't. You fell for some fake information. The earliest map is from 1154, by Muhammad al-Idrisi, and includes nether Australia, nor Antarctica.

  • @coreyjblakey
    @coreyjblakey Месяц назад

    So Marco Polo was a backpacker? Travels the world but only really talks to other backpackers, and therefore ends up with a distorted view of most things. My brother is like that

    • @carlobrotto7132
      @carlobrotto7132 22 дня назад

      Marco Polo's family were merchants and obviously backpapers at the age. Once he got to China , he became a relevant official and diplomatic of the Khan .All his lifelong work is reputed a template of western world, his view of things was hugely smart, logic & deep, incredibly nearer to the mentality of the modern man than to that of a medieval one .

  • @shemadj7501
    @shemadj7501 Месяц назад

    I only have one question, is it Israel or Palestine on the map?

    • @imperiald3864
      @imperiald3864 21 день назад

      From that era, it the area would be under the Mamluk Sultanate. So what u would see would be the province of Syria-Palestina, which would be modern day Israel, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
      So neither a country of Israel Or Palestine would be on that map.
      Israel had not existed for thousands of years as a soveirgn nation and palestine had never existed as a soverign nation. .

  • @streetja
    @streetja 14 дней назад

    Poor sound design

  • @pectenmaximus231
    @pectenmaximus231 2 месяца назад +3

    There are over 1,000 extant mappa mundi. Mappa mundi is not a uniquely identifying name.

  • @alexanderg1935
    @alexanderg1935 2 месяца назад +3

    Mappa Mundi: The greatest map of the medieval world... But never mind that, have a look at my arse.

  • @user-vw6bk4pb4l
    @user-vw6bk4pb4l Месяц назад

    Venice was the "New York of the medieval world" in what sense?

    • @TheAlchaemist
      @TheAlchaemist Месяц назад +2

      They had tons of money, huge commerce and made interesting orgies.

    • @carlobrotto7132
      @carlobrotto7132 22 дня назад

      In your opinion , in what sense ?...

    • @user-vw6bk4pb4l
      @user-vw6bk4pb4l 22 дня назад

      ​@@carlobrotto7132 I associate New York with globalisation. Venice's golden age was during the Renaissance period not the medieval period.

  • @xmaniac99
    @xmaniac99 2 месяца назад +1

    Why the bot voice?

  • @VOTE_REFORM_UK
    @VOTE_REFORM_UK 2 месяца назад

    Lmao very few people are living “good lives” in NYC

  • @zacgrierson
    @zacgrierson 2 месяца назад +1

    Whoever did the sound and the colour grading needs to go back to school.

  • @Ramirez83786
    @Ramirez83786 Месяц назад +1

    1:41 PALESTIN

  • @jigstonemorata1297
    @jigstonemorata1297 2 месяца назад

    that is the 11 dash line of china

  • @Rydonattelo
    @Rydonattelo 2 месяца назад

    Ti's a fine Mundi, but ti's no Salvador Mundi English

  • @nabillionairevevo5986
    @nabillionairevevo5986 Месяц назад

    Africa could be sailed before the Portuguese made their map

  • @Hadraedan96
    @Hadraedan96 2 месяца назад

    I'm trying to get to Babylon.... Where are we?

  • @williamogilvie6909
    @williamogilvie6909 2 месяца назад

    No New World on that map.

    • @pinchevulpes
      @pinchevulpes 2 месяца назад

      Nothing new about it

    • @Dara-wk5ty
      @Dara-wk5ty Месяц назад

      @@pinchevulpes Even TED ED calls it new world (while also mentioning that its a bit controversial)

    • @pinchevulpes
      @pinchevulpes Месяц назад

      @@Dara-wk5ty what’s your point?

  • @MoaathMas
    @MoaathMas 18 дней назад

    basically he copied an Arab map

  • @Starfield1000
    @Starfield1000 2 месяца назад +6

    Literally copied Arabian map by Muhammad ibn Abdallah ibn Idris called al-idrisi map or tablet rogeriana.

    • @TheAlchaemist
      @TheAlchaemist Месяц назад

      LOL come on! you are taking all the epic out of the video :) hahahaha but yes, this comment should be pinned at the top.

    • @giacaro180
      @giacaro180 Месяц назад

      Fra Mauro did a better job.

  • @ronlacker326
    @ronlacker326 2 месяца назад +2

    Swear Europeans are the best.

    • @hellomoto2084
      @hellomoto2084 Месяц назад

      Lol not even close.
      Be happy that Arabs have come to civilise you and have understood true meaning of white mans burden

    • @giacaro180
      @giacaro180 Месяц назад

      ​@@hellomoto2084 not even remotely, but nice try

  • @tipsysmichigander6483
    @tipsysmichigander6483 Месяц назад

    Mappa ? Mauip'PAH Moon-Dee *
    Japan just to the left of India... Lol

  • @padulincolorao
    @padulincolorao Месяц назад

    woman body sells

  • @wladjarosz345
    @wladjarosz345 Месяц назад

    there was no "rossia" till 1721!

  • @GregoryJByrne
    @GregoryJByrne 19 дней назад

    "Why do the water clouds come from the west?" "Why does the warm moist air come from the south in the northern hemisphere?" "Why are the new moon tides a pale shadow of things to come (Noah's east to west tidal tsunamis)?" Jesus the son of God our father is the truth life & only way.
    The fear of God is the beginning of wisdom. Let God our father be the truth & every man a liar when it comes to the cause of these the birthing pains of this the millennium of climate change end times due to the mystery of the 7 star crossings Jesus held in his hand.
    Blessed are those who are poor in spirit of God for they know they are not God's and are not causing these the birthing pains of this the millennium of climate change end times due to the mystery of the 7 star crossings Jesus held in his hand.
    Otherwise known as the precession of the sun's shadow millennial alpha omega equinoxes of he great Year, Magnetic north, Yugas, Mayan calendar, Long march, etc.
    The new moon will pull the first of Noah's tidal tsunamis out & around the planet east to west with the first major conjunction of mercury & venus in 2033 & every 40 years thereafter for the millennium it takes the earth;s orbits to pass between the fermie cells of the Sun's OOrt cloud magnetosphere.
    The truth shall set humanity free from the leaven half truths of the pharisees/pharaohs.

  • @Brandon-xe1yt
    @Brandon-xe1yt Месяц назад +1

    FLATEARTH WAKE TF UP SHEEP

  • @anameidonthave7957
    @anameidonthave7957 Месяц назад +1

    Italian accent of english.😂