Monday, January 14, 2013

Piri Re'is map of 1513 ancient map was found in renovations of a palace in Turkey

Columbus did NOT discover North America - only the Caribbean





Piri Re'is map of 1513

An ancient map was found in renovations of a palace in Turkey. The copy of the map gathered dust for years until a professor with an interest in maps took a closer look. His findings shocked the scientific world with a challenge to our history and culture.

During renovations of the old Imperial Palace in what is now Istanbul (formerly Const antinople), a painted, parchment map was found, dated in the month of Muharrem, in the Moslem year 919 (A.D. 1513), and signed by an admiral of the Turkish navy,  Piri Ibn Haji Memmed, known as Piri Re'is. Thought to be one of the earliest "world  maps" to show the Americas, the map was originally used to bolster Turkish national  pride .Early scholars suggested that it showed accurate latitudes of the South American and African coastlines - only 21 years after the voyages of Columbus! (And remember, Columbus did NOT discover North America - only the Caribbean!) Writing in Piri Re'is own hand described how he had made the map from a collection of ancient maps, supplemented by charts that were drawn by Columbus himself.

This suggests that these ancient maps were available to Columbus and could have been the basis of his expedition.

A copy of the map was presented to a diplomat in the U.S. government,
where it remained a curious artifact for years. The true mysteries of of this map were eventually discovered by professor Charles H. Hapgood and revealed to the scientific community in his book, Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings. During scrutiny of the map, Hapgood discovered a partial charting of Antarctica, made during a period when the
coast was free of ice. This coastal structure, now covered again by ice, was subsequently verified by satellite radar scanning. Ice core samples of the coastline have fixed the last ice-free period to between 11,000 B.C. and 4,000 B.C.

Our historical understanding of navigation  includes a period of time before which it was impossible to determine a ships latitude (North to South position) in the Southern Hemisphere. This was because the known method involved sighting the angle of the only fixed star - the North Star - which cannot be seen in the Southern Hemisphere because of the curviture of the Earth.

Despite  this handicap, these maps show amazing  details and acurate latitude placement of many known islands along the southern most coastlines of Antarctica! But this paradox of history was made even more astounding.Hapgood has proved  that the Piri Re'is map is plotted out in plane geometry, containing latitudes and longitudes at right angles in a traditional "grid"; yet it is obviously copied from an
earlier map that was projected using spherical trigonometry! Not only did the early map makers know that the Earth was round, but they had knowledge of its true circumference to within 50 miles! (See similar map on right, based on spherical projection and used for air flights originating in Cairo to determine distances and uel consumption. This map was generated using sherical trigonometry - a science unknown to scholars until its discovery by the mathematician