Johannes Kramer
|
Rainer Schlösser
|
Hans Joachim Schmitt
|
Anja Hennemann
|
Claudia Schlaak (Hrsg.)
Romanistik in Geschichte und Gegenwart 22,2
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Herausgegeben von Andre Klump, Johannes Kramer, Rainer Schlösser, Hans Joachim Schmitt, Anja Hennemann und Claudia Schlaak
Reihe:
Romanistik in Geschichte und Gegenwart
22,2
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Beschreibung
Bibliographische Angaben
| Einband | |
|---|---|
| DOI | 10.46771/2366078300222 |
| Auflage | Unverändertes eJournal der 1. Auflage von 2016 |
| ISBN | |
| Sprache | |
| Originaltitel | |
| Umfang | 128 |
| Erscheinungsjahr (Copyright) | 2016 |
| Reihe | |
| Herausgeber/in | Johannes Kramer Rainer Schlösser Hans Joachim Schmitt Anja Hennemann Claudia Schlaak |
| Hersteller nach GPSR |
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Einzelartikel als PDF
14,90 €
Whatever laymen in the late XVIth century knew about America, didn’t have its source in the original writings of the explorers simply because they were written in Spanish, a language scarcely accessible to the avarage educated audience. Instead, the normal information came from general encyclopaedias like the Cosmographia compiled by Sebastian Münster (1488–1552), a universal scholar typical of the XVIth century. His Cosmographia (1550) was in its time a widespread book. Münster himself wrote a Latin version for a public with humanistic background (1550a) and a German version for a larger readership craving for sensations (1550b). In this article the focus will be mainly on Münster’s description of Hispaniola and on the differences between the Latin and the German versions. Another main stress will be put on the progress of knowledge detectable from the last edition of the Cosmographia (1628) procured by Münster’s successors.
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