The Vinland map is purportedly a 15th century Mappa Mundi, redrawn from a 13th century original. Its importance (if authentic) is that, in addition to showing Africa, Asia and Europe, the map depicts a body of land across the Atlantic called Vinland, which the map describes as having been visited in the 11th century. It is believed by some that the map demonstrates that Viking explorers found and mapped the New World before Columbus did in 1492.
The map was discovered bound together with a codex, Historia Tartorum ("Description of the Tartars," sometimes referred to as the Tartar Relation). The Historia is a manuscript of undoubted authenticity that was at some point bound with the Vinland Map. It is a description of the history and manners of the Mongols that appears to be an early version of the memoir of Giovanni da Pian del Carpine (q.v. for full details), a Franciscan friar who in 1245 made a trip to the supreme khan at Karakoram. Carpine went on to write a more robust account of his travels, but the shorter "Tartar Relation" survived until the 15th century by being included as an addendum to a volume of Vincent of Beauvais's encyclopedic "Historical Mirror" (Speculum historiale).
The map first came to light in 1957 and was donated with funds from Paul Mellon to its current owner, Yale University, in 1965; The New York Times reported that insurers valued the map at $25 million. It was first published by Dr. Raleigh Ashlin Skelton et al. The Vinland Map and Tartar Relation, 1965. In 1995 Yale released a second edition of the book, together with further articles that claim the map is authentic.
Authenticity
Dating of parchment
There have been a number of claims that the map is a
forgery, and examinations by a number of institutions, including the
Smithsonian Institution, have returned conflicting results.
Radiocarbon dating, performed by physicist Douglass Donahue and chemists Jacqueline Olin and Garman Harbottle, place the origin of the parchment somewhere between
1423 and
1445, although the entire map appears to have been coated with an unknown substance sometime in the
1950s. This could have been part of a previously undocumented attempt at preservation, or could have been done by a forger as part of the process of drawing a new map on a previously-used piece of 15th century parchment. It is unclear whether the ink on the map is on top of this more recent layer of material or not.
Dating of ink (a Controversy)
Chemical analysis of the ink dated the map to after
1923 due to the presence of
anatase (titanium dioxide) –a naturally rare compound that has been used as a synthetic pigment since the 1920s. Anatase was not manufactured before the
1920s, which suggests that the yellowing of ink on the map was faked. Although in
1992 Dr.
Thomas Cahill of
University of California, Davis found natural anatase in a variety of medieval manuscripts, the rounded crystals in the ink from the map were characteristic of synthetically created anatase. In July
2002, the authenticity of the map was again challenged. Using
Raman spectroscopy, the drawings on the map are claimed to consist of simulated stains from the decay of an iron-based ink, although the ink itself is carbon-based and should have generated no decay stains. All of the other pages of the
Historia Tartorum and
Speculum historiale were written using standard medieval iron-based ink. Nevertheless, chemist
Jacqueline Olin, a retired researcher with the Smithsonian Institution, has concluded that the map's ink was made in medieval times. Her article appears in the December 2003 issue of the journal
Analytical Chemistry.
Content of map
Finally, there are a number of questions about the actual content of the map. The most obvious anomaly is that the map depicts
Greenland as an island of the correct size and shape, although most contemporary Viking accounts–including a rare map from
1427–depict Greenland as a peninsula descending from the north. Indeed, Greenland was not believed to have been successfully circumnavigated until the turn of the
20th century. In addition, the text uses a
Latin form of
Leif Eriksson's name ("Erissonius") more consistent with
17th century norms and with transmission through a French or Italian source. Thirdly, the Latin captions include several usages of the diphthong
æ; this was almost unknown in later medieval times (a simple
e was written instead) and although the diphthong was revived by Italian humanist scholars in the early 1400s, it is found only in documents of deliberately classicising style produced by Italian scribes, and never in conjunction with a Gothic style of script such as we see in the Map. Finally, Vikings were known for their navigation skills because they did not use maps in naval travel, and so experts question why this map would have been created.
Other evidence for Vinland
Regardless of whether or not the map is genuine, it has been independently proven to general satisfaction that
Greenland was settled by
Vikings around
970, a settlement which lasted until the
fifteenth century, while the
archeological finds in
L'Anse aux Meadows (on
Newfoundland,
Canada) show that there was a Viking settlement predating
Christopher Columbus there.
See also
External links
- Vinlanda: The Vinland Map on the Web Comprehensive and balanced guide to the Vinland map on the web, including recent developments in the controversies.
- An article by the BBC on the date of the Vinland map
- Archaeological Forgeries
- Carpini's voyage to the great khan.
- 2003-11-28, Science Daily: Vindication For Vinland Map: New Study Supports Authenticity Quote: "...Recent conclusions that the storied Vinland Map is merely a clever forgery are based on a flawed understanding of the evidence...Norse explorers charted North America long before Columbus...these elements raise serious doubts about the possibility of forgery..."
- Brookhaven National Laboratory: Scientists Determine Age of New World Map. “Vinland Map”, “Vinland Map” hi-res image of the map,2.5 Mb Quote: "...date of 1434 A.D. plus or minus 11 years...Recent testing, however, only revealed trace quantities of titanium, whose presence may be a result of contamination, the chemical deterioration of the ink over the centuries, or may even have been present naturally in the ink used in medieval times. Another recent study detected carbon, which has also been presented as evidence of a forgery. However, carbon can also be found in medieval ink. Current carbon-dating technology does not permit the dating of samples as small as the actual ink lines on the map...."
- BBCNews, 30 July, 2002, Fresh doubt over America map
- Nature, 1 August 2002: New fight over old map. Debate over oldest map of America flares again
- Welcome to The Ohio State Univ. Department of Economics: The Vinland Map, Some "Finer Points" of the Debate, J. Huston McCulloch, August, 2001
- "The Viking Deception", an episode of Nova, first aired on PBS on February 8, 2005
Sources
Ancient world maps | Viking exploration of North America | Forgery
Vinlandskortet | Vinland-Karte | Vinland-kartan | Mapa de Vinland