[753] There are other reproductions of the map in full, in Nordenskjöld’s Vega, i. 51; in his Broderna Zenos, and in his Studien, p. 31. Cf. also the present History, II., p. 28, for other bibliographical detail; Hassler, Buchdruckergeschichte Ulm’s; D’Avezac’s Waltzemüller, 23; Wilberforce Eames’s Bibliography of Ptolemy, separately, and in Sabin’s Dictionary; and Winsor’s Bibliog. of Ptolemy’s Geography.

[754] Cf. D’Avezac in Bull. de la Soc. de Géog., xx. 417.

[755] See Vol. II. p. 41. There is another sketch in Nordenskjöld’s Studien, etc., p. 33, which is reduced from a fac-simile given in José de Lacerda’s Exame dos Viagens do Doutor Livingstone (Lissabon, 1867). The present extract is from Santarem, pl. 50. Cf. O. Peschel in Ausland, Feb. 13, 1857, and his posthumous Abhandlungen, i. 213.

[756] See references in Vol. II. p. 105.

[757] See Vol. II. p. 108.

[758] See post, Vol. IV. p. 35; and Kohl’s Discovery of Maine, p. 174. Cf. Winsor’s Bibliog. of Ptolemy, sub anno 1511.

[759] He holds that the 1513 Ptolemy map was drawn in 1501-4, and was engraved before Dec. 10, 1508.

[760] See Vol. II. p. 115.

[761] Winsor’s Bibliog. of Ptolemy, sub anno 1511.

[762] See Vol. II. p. 111. Winsor’s Ptolemy, sub anno 1513. Reisch, in 1515, seems to have been of the same opinion. Cf. the bibliography of Reisch’s Margarita Philosophia in Sabin’s Dictionary, vol. xvi., and separately, prepared by Wilberforce Eames. Reisch’s map is given post, Vol. II. p. 114. Another sketch of this map, with an examination of the question, where the name “Zoana Mela,” applied on it to America, came from, is given by Frank Wieser in the Zeitschrift für Wissensch. Geographie (Carlsruhe), vol. v., a sight of which I owe to the author, who believes Waldseemüller made the map.