cartography
cartography
The art of drawing maps or charts, was carried on, in medieval times, in the monasteries ; it has been greatly influenced by the work of Catholics.
Domnus Nicolaus Germanus, a Benedictine monk (1466 ) was the first scholar to modernize Ptolemy and make him generally accessible.
Cardinal Fillastre (1348-1428) had Ptolemy’s maps drawn from a Greek original.
John Ruysch (1460-1533), a Benedictine , published a famous map of the world representing the new Spanish and Portuguese discoveries in America.
Canon Martin Waldseemller (1475-1522) was responsible for the naming of America , being the first to use this name on a wall map and a globe.
Martin Behaim (1459-1507), a German Catholic, constructed the oldest globe, now at Nuremberg.
The most celebrated monument of medieval cartography, a map of the world, in the Biblioteca Marciana, Venice, was the work of a Camaldolese monk, Fra Mauro (1459).
Abraham Ortelius (1527-98), a Catholic of Antwerp , made the first modern atlas which combined the maps of the world and contained a catalog of maps with the names of 99 cartographers who lived before 1570 .
The Jesuit missionaries made maps of the territory they explored and a famous map of the Chinese Empire (1717 ) was due to their efforts.
New Catholic Dictionary