[763] The map is given, post, Vol. II. 175. Cf. also Nordenskjöld, Studien, p. 53.

[764] Cf. Winsor’s Bibliog. of Ptolemy, sub anno 1522.

[765] Winsor’s Bibliog. of Ptolemy, sub anno 1525. This map is no. 49, “Gronlandiæ et Russiæ.” Cf. Witsen’s Noord en Oost Tartctrye (1705), vol. ii.

[766] Winsor’s Kohl Collection, no. 102.

[767] Given post, Vol. III. p. 17.

[768] Given post, Vol. III. p. 11.

[769] Jahrb. des Vereins für Erdkunde in Dresden (1870), tab. vii. A similar feature is in the map described by Peschel in the Jahresbericht des Vereins für Erdkunde in Leipzig (1871). It is also to be seen in the Homem map of about 1540 (given in Vol. II. p. 446), and in the map which Major assigns to Baptista Agnese, and which was published in Paris in 1875 as a Portulan de Charles Quint. (Cf. Vol. II. p. 445.)

[770] There is a fac-simile of Ziegler’s map in Vol. II. 434; also in Goldsmid’s ed. of Hakluyt (Edinb., 1885), and in Nordenskjöld’s Vega, i. 52.

[771] The map (1551) of Gemma Frisius in Apian is much the same.

[772] In the Basle ed. of the Historia de Gentium. Cf. Nordenskjöld’s Vega, vol. i., who says that the map originally appeared in Magnus’s Auslegung und Verklarung der Neuen Mappen von den Alten Goettenreich (Venice, 1539); and is different from the map which appeared in the intermediate edition of 1555 at Rome, a part of which is also annexed.