The Liber Cronicarum is also interesting as being published in 1493.
In tone and focus the Liber is very backward-looking, and appeared in print
just before Christopher Columbus' discoveries were to completely re-shape
contemporary man's view of the World.
Schedel's
World map is thus of the traditional Ptolemaic type, omitting Scandinavia,
southern Africa and the Far East, and depicting the Indian Ocean as landlocked.
The woodcut is flanked by the figures of Shem, Japhet and Ham, the sons
of Noah, who re-populated the Earth after the Flood (incidentally, one
of the most striking of the woodcuts set in the text is of the construction
of the Ark).
On the left hand side, and printed from a separate block, are pictures
of outlandish creatures, culled from classical and early mediaeval travellers'
accounts. Rodney Shirley described the figures thus:
"Among the scenes are a six-armed man, possibly based on a file of Hindu
dancers so aligned that the front figure appears to have multiple arms;
a six-fingered man, a centaur, a four-eyed man from a coastal tribe in
Ethiopia; a dog-headed man from the Simien Mountains, a cyclops, one of
those men whose heads grow beneath their shoulders, one of the crook-legged
men who live in the desert and slide along instead of walking; a strange
hermaphrodite, a man with one giant foot only (stated by Solinus to be
used a parasol but more likely an unfortunate sufferer from elephantisis),
a man with a huge underlip (doubtless seen in Africa), a man with waist-length
hanging ears, and other frightening and fanciful creatures of a world beyond"
(2)
One unusual feature of the map is the presence of a large island off
the west coast of Africa. One possibility is that its presence might
relate to the account of Martin Behaim's voyage to the region, which is
incorporated by Schedel into his text. |