CreationWiki Requires Financial Support to Remain Online!
Please Donate If You Value This Resource

Ptolemy

From CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science
Jump to navigationJump to search

Ptolemy (Latin: Claudius Ptolemæus; Greek: Κλαύδιος Πτολεμαῖος, Klaúdios Ptolemaîos; c. Born::90c. Died::168) was a Greek mathematician, geographer, astronomer, and astrologer who lived in Roman Egypt.

Astronomy

Geography

Main Article: Geography
Ptolemy's Geography contained sixty-four smaller regional maps and four large additional maps. Shown here is the additional map of Europe which reveals Ptolemy's systematic exaggeration of west to east distances, particularly in the eastward extension of Scotland and the west to east slope of Italy.

Ptolemy gave geography and cartography its final form in the 2nd century AD. His massive work on the subject (Geographia), which summed up and criticized the work of earlier writers, offered instruction in laying out maps by three different methods of projection, provided coordinates for some eight thousand places, and treated such basic concepts as geographical latitude and longitude.

In Byzantium, in the 13th century, Ptolemic maps were reconstructed and attached to Greek manuscripts of the text. And in the fifteenth century, a Latin translation of this text, with maps, proved a sensation in the world of the book. A best seller both in the age of luxurious manuscripts and in that of print, Ptolemy's Geography became immensely influential. Columbus—one of its many readers—found inspiration in Ptolemy's exaggerated value for the size of Asia for his own fateful journey to the west.[1]

Creationwiki biography portal.png
Browse
Creationwiki geography portal.png
Browse


References

  1. Mathematics (Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture). Retrieved February 25, 2010, from http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/math.html

External Links