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The Fourth Part of the World: The Race to the Ends of the Earth, and the Epic Story of the Map That Gave America Its Name

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Brimming with enthralling details and personalities, Toby Lester's The Fourth Part of the World spotlights Martin Waldseemüller's 1507 world map and recounts the epic tale of the mariners and scholars who facilitated this watershed of Western history. Five hundred years ago, an obscure German scholar took a quantum leap in thought to design a groundbreaking map. It included such innovations as labeling a separate New World continent America and approximating the world as we know it today. Inherent in this magnificent masterpiece are clear echoes from the adventures of Marco Polo, the discoveries of Christopher Columbus, the explorations of Amerigo Vespucci, numerous Renaissance journeys, and much more. Fully realized by Peter Jay Fernandez's superb narration, this vivid account will help listeners appreciate why - in 2003 - the Library of Congress paid 10 million dollars for this 6-foot by 9.5-foot antiquity and the authenticating documents found with it in 1901.

690 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 3, 2009

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About the author

Toby Lester

4 books49 followers
I'm a journalist, an editor, and an independent scholar. Most recently, I'm the author of Da Vinci's Ghost (2012), about Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, and The Fourth Part of the World (2009), about the map that gave America its name. I'm also a longtime contributor to The Atlantic, for whom I've written extensively, on such topics as the reconstruction of ancient Greek music, the revisionist study of the Qur'an, and the attempt to change alphabets in Azerbaijan.

Between 1995 and 2005 I worked for The Atlantic in a number of different editorial capacities—as a staff editor, as the executive editor of the Web site, as a senior editor, and as a managing editor. During those years I also served briefly as the editor of Country Journal and the executive editor of DoubleTake. My writing has appeared in not only The Atlantic but also Smithsonian, The Boston Globe, The American Scholar, The Wilson Quarterly, BBC News Magazine, and the London Times, as well as a number of anthologies, including the lead chapter of the recent New Literary History of America.

Prior to 1995, I worked in international relief and development: monitoring intifada-related activity in the West Bank, as a refugee-affairs officer for the United Nations; helping establish programs in eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, as a Peace Corps country desk officer; and teaching English in a mountain school, as a Peace Corps volunteer in Yemen. I graduated from the University of Virginia in 1987 with degrees in English and French, and now live in the Boston area with my wife and three daughters.

I come from a family of writers. My father, James Lester, was a member of the first successful American Everest expedition, and is the author of Too Marvelous for Words (1994), the only biography of the jazz pianist Art Tatum. My mother, Valerie Lester, is the author of, among other works, Fasten Your Seat Belts: History and Heroism in the Pan Am Cabin (1995), and Phiz: The Man Who Drew Dickens (2004)—a biography of her great-great grandfather, Hablot Knight Browne, who was Charles Dickens’s principal illustrator. And my sister, Alison Lester, is the author of Locked Out (2007), a collection of short stories about expatriate life.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 192 reviews
Profile Image for Emily.
Author 6 books32 followers
May 30, 2011
I read history books the way others read genre fiction. Some of them are well-written and some not, some well-sourced and some not. Sometimes a book claiming to be a work of historical scholarship is actually a political screed. When I read one well-written, well-sourced, and about a subject not often tread, I am in my happy place. The Fourth Part of the World is one of those books and it's about maps.

To be precise, it is about one map: the first map in the world to name the New World "America." But to get to that point, one has to go back in time and start with the Medieval maps of the 12th century and slowly move the clock forward through the Golden Horde and the Crusades. The Travels of Marco Polo and "the Book" -- no authoritative version of the travels of Marco Polo exists but any number of versions await a reader's pleasure. The endless fascination and eternal quest to find Prester John, an imaginary king with an imaginary army waiting just over the hills to come to the assistance of the Crusaders and who existed in every unexplored corner of every map. The re-discovery of Greek in Western Europe, lost for a thousand years, and the translation of Claudius Ptolemy's Geographie, a book with instructions on how to draw maps, described latitude and longitude, and with 8000 places in the ancient world. Great convocations on religious matters where men of learning got together and, for the first time in dark rooms, discussed the forgotten philosophies and mathematics of the ancient world as they were feverishly translated, and exchanged books. The printing press. The invention of the Caravel. Dreams of Japan. The Portuguese and Africa and what they found there. The first trip around the Cape of Good Hope. The men of Bristol who saw something, once, a long stretch of coastline while chasing schools of cod. Columbus. John Cabot. Amerigo Vespucci. de Medicis and Papal Spies and secret societies of Royal mapmakers and the quest for the way to India. Lies and false letters and Monarchies jostling to lay hands on the New World.

And it all comes together with two men in a small town outside of Strassburg, one a philosopher and one a cartographer, who had access to a printing press, a stolen map of the New World, and a set of forged letters full of imaginary extra adventures of Amerigo Vespucci. They fell in love with the alliteration of Africa and Asia and Europe and, with small metal letters and newly translated Latin poetry in their heads, named the new world America. It was a best seller for twenty years but maps being what maps are and they wore out as new ones appeared. The map disappeared from the face of the Earth until one copy complete, in tact, and whole, found... and now in the Library of Congress.

The book ends with a very nice touch of the impact of the maps of the New World on Nicolaus Copernicus who quotes much of the intro text to the first true world map in his On the Revolutions. It leaves proof that, while perhaps not all of his theories of the Earth revolving around the Sun came from this source, it had bearing on his thinking. With the Fourth Part of the World, the old Aristotelean view of the world no longer worked. And if it didn't work, what else about how the world worked was outright wrong.

The Fourth Part of the World is terrific. For anyone interested in the history of maps and learning in Western Europe, or the Age of Discovery, I can completely recommend this book. It's a fun read, it's well written, it's incredibly well sourced, it is full of pictures of maps to help with the text, and it's all around great.

Fantastic. An easy 5 star rating.

Profile Image for Jeff.
153 reviews7 followers
March 13, 2021
'The Fourth Part of the World', Toby Lester, 2009. All to often, the keepers of knowledge, -the academics, intellectuals and scholars, are sadly crippled by verbose, pompous, unreadable writing skills. Occasionally It takes an outsider, a professional writer such as Toby Lester, to attack a subject with freshness and enthusiasm. The catalyst for "The Forth Part of The World" was the purchase by The Library of Congress of the Waldseemuller world map of 1507, for the incredible sum of ten million dollars. Toby Lester dissects the map, researching the historical world events leading up to its creation. Lester takes the broadest approach possible, making the book more of an overview of the history of cartography and exploration, rather than a narrow history of one specific peice of cartography. "The Fourth Part of The World' is a very exciting, fast paced read.
Profile Image for Rex Fuller.
Author 7 books184 followers
March 15, 2015
Let’s see, although Balboa crossed Panama to a large body of water in 1513, nobody in Europe knew there was a true ocean on the other side of South America until Magellan sailed around Cape Horn and across the Pacific in 1521. So, how could some German monks in eastern France (of all places) make a map in 1507 showing the continent surrounded by water and call it “America?” The reason, believe it or not, is “sex sells.” How it happened is an amazing story, very well told by Toby Lester in “The Fourth Part of the World: The Race to the Ends of the Earth, and the Epic Story of the Map That Gave America Its Name.” The map was thought to have disappeared until it was found in a German castle in 1901. The Library of Congress then sought to acquire it for many years and finally bought it in 2003 for $10 million, the most ever paid for any map.

The possibility of a fourth part of the world – in addition to Europe, Asia, and Africa – goes back to the ancients, including Ptolemy. But it was never universally accepted. The size of the Earth itself suggested as much, but that size was not agreed upon either, which allowed Columbus to believe he had sailed to islands just east of Asia, the “Indies.” His writings could have led the map’s makers to name the area Columbia. Or John Cabot’s voyage sponsored by England in 1497 to Labrador and Newfoundland could have lent another name. But it was a Florentine businessman, Americus Vespucci, whose name stuck. Strangely, whether Vespucci actually made a voyage is not certain. He claimed to have made four between 1499 and 1502, two for Spain and two for Portugal, and to have been in command. But he may have only tagged along on two, if that. What did it for him? The then equivalent of tabloid sensationalism. He sold his stories of discovery highlighting naked, sexually promiscuous people, cannibalism, and rivers that could be the four rivers of paradise. He had a bestseller. Largely on the strength of Vespucci’s tales, which pointed out differences between what he saw and what Marco Polo saw, the German monks, Martin Waldseemuller and Matthias Ringmann, drew the first map showing that water surrounded the new land and credited Vespucci with demonstrating it, although he didn’t. They named the land “America.”

Exactly why they concluded that water surrounded the lands Columbus, Vespucci, and others found remains a mystery. Nor were they as certain of it as the map suggested. After Ringmann died in 1511, Waldseemuller published another map and reverted to labeling the lands “the New World.” But the die was cast. Not only did the map popularize the name “America,” it also found its way to Poland and into the hands of someone who realized that it meant the earth had to revolve around the sun. Nicolas Copernicus was so fearful of what he discovered that he didn’t publish it for another thirty six years, shortly before he died.

Lester tells how all of this and much more happened in encyclopedic, fascinating detail. Absolutely recommended.
Profile Image for Jennifer (JC-S).
3,605 reviews290 followers
August 6, 2022
‘Old maps lead you to strange and unexpected places, …’

I was searching for another book when I rediscovered this one, which has been sitting on my shelf for far too long patiently awaiting its turn to be read. I picked it up and started reading.

In this engaging book, Mr Lester writes about the story behind the Waldseemüller map of 1507. While one thousand copies of this twelve-section map were printed, apparently only one has survived. This copy was discovered accidentally in 1901, by Father Joseph Fischer, in the library of a German castle. It was purchased by the Library of Congress in 2003 for $10 million.

The discovery of this map becomes a starting point for Mr Lester’s look at how, over several centuries, Europeans acquired knowledge which changed their view of the world. The reader is taken on a voyage of discovery through geography, history and mapmaking.

For centuries, scholars had believed that there was a fourth part of the world, separated from Asia Africa and Europe by a vast expanse of ocean.

In the Introduction to Cosmography, published in 1507 to accompany the Waldseemüller map, its unknown author names America. After introducing Asia, Africa and Europe, he writes:

‘These parts have in fact been more widely explored, and a fourth part has been discovered by Amerigo Vespucci (as will be heard in what follows). Since both Asia and Africa received their names from women, I do not see why anyone should rightly prevent this [new part] from being called Amerigen—the land of Amerigo, as it were—or America, after its discoverer, Americus, a man of perceptive character.’

Mr Lester continues:

‘With no fanfare, near the end of a minor Latin treatise on cosmography published in the mountains of eastern France, a nameless sixteenth-century author had stepped briefly out of obscurity to give America its name. And then he disappeared again.’

The America depicted on Waldseemüller’s map was South America, not the United States of America. While large areas of the globe may have been unknown, its size and shape were known approximately as Arab astronomers had refined earlier calculations undertaken by the Greeks.

I loved this book. I enjoyed revisiting what I knew about ‘The Age of Discovery’ and learning more. If you are interested in how our knowledge of the world developed and how (and by whom) it was mapped, I can recommend this book.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
Profile Image for Tony.
1,049 reviews1,948 followers
February 27, 2012
I decided not to travel just once on a very long journey by ship or on horse or on foot to those lands, but many times on a tiny map with books and the imagination. -- Petrarch

Well, I am often that way. And this book did take me places and show me things. I learned that the 'silk trade involved vast amounts of labor and expense and travel for the singularly frivolous purpose,' according to Pliny the Elder, 'to enable the Roman maiden to flaunt transparent clothing in public.' I'm guessing Pliny the Younger had to hide his Playboys under his bed.

I learned that the Christian discoverers put up padraoes, huge crosses, to mark their course along the African coast, even as they filled their ships with human cargo.

There were enough tidbits here, even if already known, to make this an interesting read. However, the twin-bill of the subtitle - The Race to the Ends of the Earth, and the Making of History's Greatest Map - suggests edge-of-your-seat thrills and some serious gravitas. It doesn't deliver.

The re-telling of the adventures adds nothing new. As for the map: yes, it's nice; but it's delivered wrapped in one uncertainty after another. Even Waldseemueller, who probably created the map, waffled about it in later versions. Except that it inspired Copernicus. Unless, our author writes, it didn't.

If this had been subtitled, Pay No Attention to That 'Here Be Dragons' Sign on That Old Map, it would have been a more forthright effort.



Profile Image for Hilary.
3 reviews
November 6, 2009
I love this book--in the interest of full disclosure I edited it at the Free Press--but I've been crazy about it since I saw the proposal ages ago. When the Library of Congress bought the 1507 Waldseemüller map from the German government for $10 million, they sent out a press release that crossed Toby’s desk at the Atlantic where he was Deputy managing editor. He thought the map’s drawing and rediscovery after four centuries might make a nice little article, even a short book, but closer examination began to reveal the map’s depths. And indeed, the book’s structure reflects the vantage point of the obsessed observer. The starting-off point for each chapter is a close-up of the map, and one-by-one the chapters move over the map’s surface, following the course of European exploration, both geographically and chronologically until it lands on the shores of South America or the Land of the Parrots, as it was briefly, whimsically, called. The discovery of this “fourth part of the world” was the result of doomsday prophecy, voracious greed, Renaissance optimism, and imperialism. It would yield far more discoveries —even what is arguably man’s most profound discovery, the heliocentric universe. The book itself is lavishly illustrated with hundreds of maps and pictures—some in vivid color—that allow us into the strikingly different consciousnesses of people who lived a thousand years ago and the strikingly familiar imaginations of people living five hundred years later. Each map adds a new facet to the epic narrative.
Profile Image for N.E. White.
Author 14 books56 followers
September 29, 2010
I recently finished The Fourth Part of the World, The Race to the Ends of the Earth, and the Epic Story of the Map That Gave America Its Name by Toby Lester. Though this is Toby's first book, he has been writing for a very long time on religion, history, and maps. He has done a magnificent job with this book.

The Fourth Part is a hefty tome. At 462 pages (hardback edition - yes, it's worth it), including an index and notes, one might think a book so long about one map would be a slog to get through. But Toby Lester engages the reader by bringing the European Middle Ages to life.

The author starts the book with a preface that details why he started on the quest to research the Waldseemuller world map of 1507.

$10 million. (It's always about money, isn't it?)

In 2003, the Library of Congress had just purchased the Waldseemuller map for $10 million dollars, 2 million more than the original copy of the Declaration of Independence. This fact piqued Toby Lester's interest and six years later we have The Fourth Part.

The Fourth Part is divided into three parts: Part One, Old World; Part Two, New World; and Part Three, The Whole World. It also includes a Prologue, Epilogue, and an Appendix along with Notes and an Index.

In Part One, Old World, Toby delves into the mindset of the early Medieval scholar. Their religious view of the world told them that the world consisted of three parts only - Asia, Africa, and Europe. They based much of their geographic knowledge of the world on what the Bible taught or alluded to.

In the mid 13th century, the Great Khan Guyuk (widely known as Genphis Khan) announced to the western world (Europe):

"Through the power of God all empires from sunrise to sunset have been given to us, and we own them."

What a surprising and frightening proclamation. Ultimately, the Mongols empire building efforts along with the numerous Crusades to win back Jerusalem led to more geographic information. Monks were sent to parley and Christianize the Mongols. Though they did not succeed in that venture, they did bring back cultural and geographical details that helped flesh out European's sense of the world. Still, their view of the world consisted of T-O maps and mappamundes - rather poor representations of the world that excluded at least half of it.

It's easy for us to look back and scoff at the inadequate maps that were produced in Europe before the 14th century. It's easy for us to forget that most people were illiterate. Merchants and travelers didn't have the benefit of a travel guide, nor were they able to produce a travel guide with their own knowledge as they didn't have the skills or means to do so. The Christian monks that produced maps and cosmology (geography) texts at the time worked with the best knowledge that they had bereft of the great secular knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Roman Latins who had it a bit more right, but whose knowledge was lost to Europe's Catholics.

In Part Two, New World, the author chronicles the efforts of the great Genoese and Florentine mariners at rediscovering the world of the ancient Greeks and Romans. In the 14th century, surprisingly detailed and accurate marine charts of Europe and North Africa emerged. Europeans also rediscovered Ptolemy and other Greek texts that helped piece the larger world together. With Portugal's and Spain's drive to reach India (as their overland routes were hampered by the Muslims finally taking control over the entire Middle East), maps of the known world were improved, and the thought of sailing west gripped explorers. So they did.

Part Two is the largest section in The Fourth Part, and contain the most fascinating tales. Any summary of mine will do it injustice. So, I'll leave you with this quote from the book:

"Just as one thing leads to another and starts a train of thought, while he was in Portugal [my father] began to speculate that just as the Portuguese had sailed so far south, it should be possible to sail as far west, and to find land in that direction. - Ferdinand Columbus (circa 1538)"

The last part of the book, Part 3, The Whole World, Toby explains how Walter Lud, Matthias Ringmann, and Martin Waldseemuller came across one of Amerigo Vespucci's letters that detailed his explorations of the New World. Though that letter was a fake, the three scholars and map makers didn't know that at the time. They took it at face value, and together they created a "curious little book" titled Cosmographiae introductio (1507). This little book included a huge map (the largest known map produced at the time), and just so happened to haphazardly name the New World - America.

What struck me most while reading The Fourth Part is how religion has played such a huge role in our political, social, and geographic history. Of course, I already knew that. Anyone with any sort of education can see religion's stamp on just about everything, but the author presents the motives (both religious and otherwise) behind the map makers and explorers in a manner that drives that fact home.

Conclusion? I can't recommend this book enough. If you want a quick, blow by blow of the events that led up to the discovery of the New World, the fourth part of the world, then this is the perfect book for you. It will be a well-thumbed, reference book on my shelf for a very long time. If you have any interest in history and/or maps, go get this book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Rindis.
540 reviews75 followers
January 23, 2014
In 1507, new world maps were something of a booming business. The Portuguese had been discovering more about Africa for decades, the Spanish had recently found a number of islands, and a larger landmass across the Atlantic, and the English had found a long shoreline to the west of Greenland.

Since Asia was mostly known to be a northerly continent, that last was still presumed to be part of Asia, but the Spanish mainland, in the tropics, was starting to look like something else again. In 1507 a new map was published, designed to put together all the pieces of the world, as they were becoming known. It was a large map, meant to be mounted and used as huge wall map, and it marked the southern landmass "America", after Amerigo Vespucci, who was known to have visited the landmass a year before Columbus did on his third voyage by a letter written by him that was being reprinted across Europe.

The map, made to be used, largely disappeared, and it was only in the nineteenth century that its existence as the first use of the word "America" for the New World was discovered. Toby Lester's book is about this map—and everything else that led to it. This begins with medieval mappaemundi, and works its way through Marco Polo, the Italian and German humanists, and the dawn of the Age of Exploration.

It's a very entertaining and informative book all the way, and gives a good overview of the careers of Columbus and Vespucchi, and explains the letter that has caused much gnashing of teeth over the centuries, and kept Columbus from being a major cartographical feature, even if it did not keep him out of the history books.

It is most likely not written by Vespucci at all. It takes pieces of two of his letters, some details from one of Columbus' reports, adds sex and cannibals, and did a brisk business for local printing presses across the continent. It's kind of a early-sixteenth century equivalent to the DaVinci Code.
Profile Image for Jay.
306 reviews10 followers
October 1, 2011
This is one of those books calculated to warm the heart of a cartographer and excite the pulse of an historian. Since I am both, I loved it! It's like one of those Simon Winchester books that takes many seemingly unrelated events and people, and shows how they came together to produce a history-changing result.

The book purports to be the story of the 1517 Waldseemüller map, on which the name "America" was first applied to the New World. In fact, it's the history of the way Europe's perception of the world, and man's place in it, evolved from the days of Ptolemy through the Renaissance. Aided by the Mongols, metallurgy, and an obscure abbey a day's ride north of London, Europeans grew to see the world (which they *always* knew was round) as an understandable, comprehensible, knowable place that fit in nicely with the emerging philosphy of humanism.

I can't recommend this book too highly for anyone with a desire to learn how our modern knowledge of the world's geography, and our place in it, was born.
Profile Image for Michelle.
2,647 reviews54 followers
December 8, 2009
At first I wondered how Lester was going to fill 400 pages with the story of the Waldseemuller map. I'm glad I stuck around to find out--instead of just the story of a map, I was treated to a wonderful exploration of an evolving worldview--just HOW our modern conception of the continents began to dawn upon the Europeans in the beginning of the age of exploration. From Mongol hordes to monasteries, humanists to self-promoting explorers, Lester lays it all out with style. Very rewarding 400 pages after all. I especially liked making connections with the fun bio of Joanna of Naples I just read--having fun with intersections like Petrarch, Boccacio and Florentine merchants.
Profile Image for Leanne.
850 reviews91 followers
December 1, 2017
In 2003, the Library of Congress paid $10 million to purchase the sole surviving copy of the Waldseemüller map of 1507. One of the earlier maps to to incorporate new data gleaned from the voyages of Columbus and Vespucci, it is said to be the first map to name a place called America. When it was purchased, it was nicknamed "America's birth certificate."

This is the story of that map--but not only that because Toby Lester tells a thousand stories in this book! Incredibly detailed it basically presents everything you will need to gain an understanding of the history of European cartography. While I agree with one of the reviewers here who stated that there is no real new information, the book is so wonderfully written and doesn't leave any stone unturned.

Haven't you wondered why the continent wasn't called Columbia after the person we associate with America's discovery? This is the story and it also illuminates all the various ancient and medieval theories that informed Columbus and Vespucci's discovery... it is a wonderful book!
Profile Image for Shannon.
1,355 reviews47 followers
April 28, 2023
A very interesting book in parts, but somewhat boring at times. You have to really be into the history of maps to enjoy all of this book, and I thought I was one of those people but I still had a really hard time occasionally. I can see this book being a better reference book than something read from cover to cover. The pictures are really great though.
705 reviews6 followers
January 9, 2018
Really good read, lots of great historical information with lots of great source material. I have more books I now need to read. The book flows very well, with a great cast of historical figures they never taught us about in school.
Well worth the time.
Profile Image for Ian Mihura.
56 reviews
May 18, 2024
History of maps and their meanings, up until XVI century.

Found myself enjoying the first part about old maps, being more symbolic, mythic and with a large-history sense. The second part delves too much in the minutia and day-to-day of the first explorers, their political and personal struggles. The last part of the book revisits the symbolic structure of history, with the construction of a new (geographical) world image.
Profile Image for Ward Sanford.
Author 6 books17 followers
April 10, 2021
This was an amazing read about the history of maps in Western Civilization and how people saw the world they live in. Highly recommended for world history and map lovers.
Profile Image for Emily.
687 reviews700 followers
September 19, 2010
This is a detailed history of the paired development of geography and cartography through the middle ages, the Renaissance rediscovery of classical texts, the so-called "Age of Discovery," and the early 16th century. I bookmarked too many pages containing interesting facts and insights to be able to share them.

The conventional wisdom about what Europeans did and didn't know about the earth is picked apart here. As with so many issues of the early modern era, we see a bizarre juxtaposition of the modern and reasonable ("the earth must be round because the lookout spots land before a man on deck") and the completely mythical (Europeans' unquashable belief in Prester John). Paired with their ignorance of North and South America and the East was their total certainty about the existence of a literal and historical Heavenly Paradise in the Far East, Hy-Brasil, and other significant geographical features that only ever existed as rumors. And to top off their outlandish ideas about the world outside Europe, medieval Europeans also lacked the technology to explore and believed that staying home and ratiocinating over the Bible was an adequate way to deduce the shape of the earth. The book shows how their fuzzy and fanciful mental map of the world was overturned through technology and thinking through the ramifications of Europeans' voyages of exploration, to emerge in the 16th century as something we can recognize as a correct world map.

The book is ostensibly about a single map, but I wouldn't call it a microhistory in the sense of tracing something small through a large expanse of space or time. Instead, it's more a straight-up history of the development of an idea during a particular era. I would note, though, that it doesn't make a very good ebook due to the important illustrations.
Profile Image for Tuck.
2,264 reviews255 followers
December 6, 2011
a fantastic book on the history of the Waldseemuller map and much much more. Looks at maps and humanists from 1200's to 1500's, delves into the movement of people both physically and intellectually plus so much more. as simon winchester says in blurb "lester..create[s] a masterpiece of cartographic literature that will be of lasting importance". agreed by little ol me (though he DOES only concentrate on european maps and intellectual history to the detriment of all other ideas, from say asia, africa, amer indians etc), this is one of the most important books written in the 21st century about the history of ideas. i don't know how long these websites will last but here are some digital versions and more insight into the mappamundis of the middle ages and re-enlightenment:
here are waldseemuller map and carta marina side by side http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/earlyamer...

a high rez version http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/map_ite....

here's loc map librarian john hessler, see his "warping waldseemuller" section of his most fantastic blog http://warpinghistory.blogspot.com/

and free press has a toby lester page which is pretty damn keen http://www.simonandschuster.com/speci...

now where was i.....?
Profile Image for Christopher.
526 reviews21 followers
May 16, 2010
The description of this book is focused on the Waldseemuller map and the adventures of America's namesake, Amerigo Vespucci. That's part of the story here, but really the book is broader than that.

This book is mainly a history of cartography in Europe from the Middle Ages until the early 1500's. Boring, right? Not for me. The history talks about what passed for world maps in the Dark Ages when the Church dictated that Jerusalem was the 'navel of the world' and all land in the world was divided into three continents by a T of water (the Mediterranean Sea, Nile Rive, and Danube River) inside an O of encircling Ocean Sea. It covers the itinerary maps of the Crusades and the expansions to the European view of the world brought about by the Mongol invasions and explorations of Marco Polo. It adds the false knowledge from hoaxes like the Travels of Sir John Mandeville. Then we see the power of accurate nautical charts in the hands of Italian, Portugese, and Spanish navigators and how this new science melded with the rediscovered old geography of Ptolemy.

The discussion of Vespucci is quite good and finally explains to me why I live in the USA and not the United States of Columbia. It's amazing to see the power of hoax accounts of travels and how the word-play and punning of intellectuals can live on in world centuries later.

Over-all, an nice addition to my growing collection of cartographic histories.
112 reviews2 followers
November 6, 2012
One of the most entertaining and informative books I've read in some time, can't say enough about how much I enjoyed reading it. Names from grade-school days like Vespucci, Marco Polo, Copernicus, Genghis Khan, da Gama and Columbus collide and come alive here, their adventures, exploits and discoveries richly recounted and complemented by plenty of ancient maps and illustrations (The graphics are perhaps the best part of this book.)

Our world is mapped and digitized to the extent one can know his/her location almost anywhere on the globe within a few feet. We've looked at finely-detailed maps and globes since we could walk. Space and the invisible microworlds are what come to (my) mind as the unknown frontiers. As noted recently in Outside magazine, GPS, the internet and other technologies have rendered the days of epic travel yarns and embellishments pretty much over.

The Fourth Part of the World will let you imagine again, and discover the world beyond Europe one voyage, one map, many fables and tall tales at a time. Lester has written this book in such a way as to allow the reader to feel he/she is a part of the many adventures contained herein. Piece together the known world bit by bit, starting with maps speculating at the location of the "monstrous races" up through the first to use the term "America," the Waldseemuller map eventually purchased by the Library of Congress for ten million dollars.

Highly, highly recommended.
89 reviews1 follower
September 21, 2011
This is my first reading of a non fiction book and I really enjoyed it. Possibly because I just visited the Library of Congress and saw the WALDSEEMULLER Map. My guide recommended this book because it tells the story of how the map came about and how it was found. Research revealed that the map had been made but no one could find one. People hunted for one for hundreds of years until one was finally found in 1901 in an obscure castle in Germany. Finally in 2007, USA paid 1 million dollars for it because it is the first map that identifies the American continent reasonably well and names it America. It is housed in a special case in the Library of Congress in Washington DC.

The book teaches how exploration and map making progressed from when people thought there were only 3 places, Asia, Africa and Europe and the rest of the earth was hidden and forbidden. Until the seas voyages of Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci discovered the American Continent.

A very readable book. I got caught up in the story.
Profile Image for Jenny T.
1,040 reviews46 followers
November 30, 2009
A delicious, well-written book about the history of map-making as it relates to the "discovery" of the Americas. The author begins by introducing the most expensive historical document ever purchased publicly: the Waldseemuller map of 1507 (the first map to label "America" as such)--bought by the Library of Congress for 10 million dollars--2 million more than was paid for the Declaration of Independence...

From there, the author discusses the history of maps, from ancient times through the invention of the printing press and the voyages of Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci. Filled with historical anecdotes (Saint Brendan! Prester John!) well-researched (and cited), with plenty of illustrations--this was a treat to read AND I learned quite a bit.
Profile Image for Bookmarks Magazine.
2,042 reviews806 followers
February 8, 2010
Many reviewers stressed early on that Lester's book offers more of a historical detective story than a narrative built around exciting characters of the past. But they were also consistently impressed with the way he could draw in readers by bringing together what might otherwise seem to be a miscellaneous collection of observations and tales. Above all, critics came away impressed with the way that all maps provide insight into the character of a culture. All the more true, then, for one as important as this. This is an excerpt from a review published in Bookmarks magazine.
Profile Image for Brett.
3 reviews5 followers
June 19, 2012
This book is a masterpiece. Starting with a few questions about a once lost map, Lester stretches the canvas, so to speak, and draws us into a broader discussion of early cartography and the Age of Discovery. He brilliantly connects seemingly disparate events; the writing of Ptolemy’s seminal Geography, the Mongol conquest, Marco Polo's journeys, and Magellan’s Voyage all fall into place like the pieces of a perfect mosaic. This is History at its best. Rather than feeling like a doctoral thesis full of mind numbing minutiae, this book creates an intriguing, visual story of the world that was. I highly recommend.
Profile Image for Jon Fish.
40 reviews2 followers
August 31, 2013
An amazing, accessible account of the European quest to understand the geography of the world in the Middle Ages. Every paragraph contains some new piece of information that forced me to rethink my perceptions of Medieval Europeans, geography, religion, and history. If nothing else, read this book to shake the notion that Medieval Europeans thought the world was flat until Columbus, and that explorers like Columbus, Polo, and Vespucci were altruistic voyagers with a thirst for truth like academics instead of bold men living within their context. You do not need to be a history buff to appreciate the thoroughly-researched yet coherent text.
Profile Image for Emilyadamc.
51 reviews26 followers
December 27, 2014
This was one of the best sourced, well written, informative books I have ever read. It covers a broad range of time and fills in so many gaps in history. Instead of glossing over minuscule historic events, it delves into them revealing history that I had never even heard of. Or if I had, I had always heard it incorrectly.
This book is now on my top 3 historical book list. It has opened up an entire world of history and people for me to learn even more about.
I was intrigued throughout the entire book and was sad when I was done.
Profile Image for Ken.
95 reviews1 follower
January 28, 2010
When I read the subtitle of this book, I expected to be let down a little. I was not. This was truly an epic story about the naming of America. Forget all you know about the discovery of the New World. Unbelievably detailed, and written in an authoritative narrative, Toby Lester reconstructs the mapping of the world from medieval days in a way that will challenge the modern mind to look at the world in a different way.
Profile Image for Martha.
477 reviews14 followers
October 25, 2014
This is a good read chock a block full of history - great kings and khans, the voyages to the "Indies" , the familiar explorers and not so familiar, the maps and map makers, the philosophers, the primary documents lost and found. This is a intriguing cartographical journey and it begins with a beloved word: America.




The book has a wonderful set of illustrations so much so I wished I were reading the hard back edition.
Profile Image for Turi Becker.
408 reviews29 followers
December 11, 2009
The scope of this book was a lot broader than I expected. I thought it was going to be more about a specific map, but the story of the Waldseemuller map was really just a bookend to a pretty full history of cartography and exploration. Well researched and in-depth, possibly a little more so than I was looking for.
Profile Image for Wesley Fryer.
12 reviews4 followers
December 30, 2011
I absolutely loved this book! I heard Lester speak at a Google Geo-Teacher's Institute in Maine in September. This book fuses history, geography, economics, and politics together in a delightful tale. I learned a great deal about the Age of Exploration as a result of reading it. Definite five stars. Super book!
83 reviews2 followers
December 10, 2009
I loved this book. I'm not a big non fiction reader. This book was fascinating from the beginning. Ancient maps, how they were created, how America got it's name. It's all in here.
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