In the European Renaissance cartography the maps of Muscovy are almost always east-oriented, while on the north-up maps some rivers or merchant routes are often represented “upside down”. This reversal, inherited from medieval T-O maps, however, can have a deeper sense. As Edward W. Said wrote, “It is Europe that articulates the Orient; this articulation is the prerogative (…) of a genuine creator, whose life-giving power represents, animates, constitutes the otherwise silent and dangerous space beyond familiar boundaries”. Through an analysis of the most important XVIth century maps of Muscovy – by M. Waldseemüller (1507), B. Agnese (1525), S. von Herberstein (1546), G. Gastaldi (1548), G. Mercator (1585), A. Magini (1596), but above all those by Anton Wied (1555) and Anthony Jenkinson (1562) – we’ll try to trace the West-European orientalizing discourses on Muscovy, aiming to separate the familiar and civilized space of the European œcumene from Asian Muscovy – land of monsters and wolverines.

Asia or Europe? Some lies on where Russia lies. Writing and mapping the Muscovy in the 16th Century / G. Franczak. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Convention of The Association for Slavic, East European, & Eurasian Studies tenutosi a Washington nel 2016.

Asia or Europe? Some lies on where Russia lies. Writing and mapping the Muscovy in the 16th Century

G. Franczak
Primo
2016

Abstract

In the European Renaissance cartography the maps of Muscovy are almost always east-oriented, while on the north-up maps some rivers or merchant routes are often represented “upside down”. This reversal, inherited from medieval T-O maps, however, can have a deeper sense. As Edward W. Said wrote, “It is Europe that articulates the Orient; this articulation is the prerogative (…) of a genuine creator, whose life-giving power represents, animates, constitutes the otherwise silent and dangerous space beyond familiar boundaries”. Through an analysis of the most important XVIth century maps of Muscovy – by M. Waldseemüller (1507), B. Agnese (1525), S. von Herberstein (1546), G. Gastaldi (1548), G. Mercator (1585), A. Magini (1596), but above all those by Anton Wied (1555) and Anthony Jenkinson (1562) – we’ll try to trace the West-European orientalizing discourses on Muscovy, aiming to separate the familiar and civilized space of the European œcumene from Asian Muscovy – land of monsters and wolverines.
20-nov-2016
Muscovy; Cartography; Mathias of Miechów; Bernard Wapowski
Settore L-LIN/21 - Slavistica
Settore M-STO/03 - Storia dell'Europa Orientale
Settore L-FIL-LET/08 - Letteratura Latina Medievale e Umanistica
Asia or Europe? Some lies on where Russia lies. Writing and mapping the Muscovy in the 16th Century / G. Franczak. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Convention of The Association for Slavic, East European, & Eurasian Studies tenutosi a Washington nel 2016.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/481680
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