[306] Harrisse, Cabots, p. 173.
[307] Ibid., p. 232; and in his Bib. Amer. Vet., no. 149, he refers to Sacrobusto’s Sphera del mundo, translated from the Latin into Spanish by Hieronymus Chaves, and published at Seville in 1545, as showing a small map in a diagram, thought to be the work of Alonzo de Chaves.
[308] This is dated 1550, but is very much behind its date.
[309] Part ii. vol. i. p. 143, for the description.
[310] Ante, p. 40.
[311] Lelewel, pl. 46, from Apianus’ Cosmographia of that year.
[312] Ante, p. 41.
[313] Ante, p. 37.
[314] Raemdonck’s Les sphères de Mercator.
[315] Catalogue of Manuscripts, vol. i. p. 23.