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Did Marco Polo "Discover" America?
Smithsonian Magazine ^ | Oct 2014 | Ariel Sabar

Posted on 09/27/2014 8:41:05 PM PDT by Theoria

For a guy who claimed to spend 17 years in China as a confidant of Kublai Khan, Marco Polo left a surprisingly skimpy paper trail. No Asian sources mention the footloose Italian. The only record of his 13th-century odyssey through the Far East is the hot air of his own Travels, which was actually an “as told to” penned by a writer of romances. But a set of 14 parchments, now collected and exhaustively studied for the first time, give us a raft of new stories about Polo’s journeys and something notably missing from his own account: maps.

If genuine, the maps would show that Polo recorded the shape of the Alaskan coast—and the strait separating it from Asia—four centuries before Vitus Bering, the Danish explorer long considered the first European to do so. Perhaps more important, they suggest Polo was aware of the New World two centuries before Columbus.

“It would mean that an Italian got knowledge of the west coast of North America or he heard about it from Arabs or Chinese,” says Benjamin B. Olshin, a historian of cartography whose book, The Mysteries of the Marco Polo Maps, is out in November from the University of Chicago Press. “There’s nothing else that matches that, if that’s true.”

But as Olshin is first to admit, the authenticity of the ten maps and four texts is hardly settled. The ink remains untested, and a radiocarbon study of the parchment of one key map—the only one subjected to such analysis—dates the sheepskin vellum to the 15th or 16th century, a sign the map is at best a copy. Another quandary is that Polo himself wrote nothing of personal maps or of lands beyond Asia, though he did once boast: “I did not tell half of what I saw.”

The parchments came to America in the steamer trunks of an enigmatic Italian immigrant named Marcian Rossi. Rossi landed on Ellis Island as a teenager in 1887 and later told a historian that the documents were passed down through patrician ancestors from an admiral to whom Polo had entrusted them. The mustachioed, bow-tie-fancying Rossi was a father of six who worked as a tailor in San Jose, California. He was also a charming, cigar-puffing raconteur, who despite little schooling wrote a sci-fi thriller, A Trip to Mars.

Might Rossi have conjured a Polo fantasy, too? “He certainly was enough of a character,” says his great-grandson, Jeffrey Pendergraft, a Houston energy executive who is custodian of the family papers. But neither Pendergraft nor cartographic experts suspect Rossi of forging the maps. “The incredible amount of knowledge in them about a whole variety of subjects—I would be very skeptical that my great-grandfather possessed,” Pendergraft says.

When Rossi donated the palimpsest “Map with Ship” to the Library of Congress in the 1930s, even the FBI was stumped. The agency’s analysis, requested by the library and signed by J. Edgar Hoover, was mum on the question of authenticity.

One reason the parchments have languished since then is their idiosyncrasy. They tell of people and places absent not just from Polo’s narrative but from known history. And they’re an awkward fit for the era’s known map styles—Portolan sailing charts, the grids and projections of Ptolemy, and the medieval schematics known as mappae mundi.

The parchments bear inscriptions, some cryptic, in Italian, Latin, Arabic and Chinese. Olshin, a professor at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, who spent more than 13 years researching and writing his new book, is the first scholar to fully decode and translate the maps and to trace Rossi’s ancestry, with some success, back to Polo’s Venice. One of Olshin’s most tantalizing finds are allusions to “Fusang,” an obscure fifth-century Chinese name for a “land across the ocean” that some scholars now contend was America.

History says little about Polo’s three daughters. (He had no sons.) But Fantina, Bellela and Moreta have star turns here, signing their names to some of the parchments and claiming to have drawn them from their father’s “letters,” apparently after his death. Bellela writes of hitherto untold encounters with a Syrian navigator, a band of lance-toting women in ermine pelts and people on a peninsula “twice as far from China” who wear sealskin, live on fish and make their houses “under the earth.”

Travels made Polo an instant celebrity after his return to Venice, both for his descriptions of faraway lands and for what his countrymen suspected was wild fabrication. His daughters may have plunged back into their father’s notes in hopes of securing his reputation, surmises Stanley Chojnacki, a University of North Carolina expert on gender relations in 14th-century Venice, and “to claim by reason of defending him a certain measure of respectability and status and importance themselves.”


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: 1492; ageofsail; alaska; ancientnavigation; benjaminbolshin; cartography; china; christophercolumbus; clivecussler; columbus; columbusday; epigraphyandlanguage; fusang; godsgravesglyphs; italy; kublaikhan; map; marcianrossi; marcopolo; marcopolomaps; navigation; pages; thierrysecretan
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To: Cincinatus

Discoveries must be followed up or they are NOT “discoveries.” .............................. The people who were here discovered it, the ones that came later were conquerors looking for spice, gold, cheap labor and to spread Christianity. (Pretty much in that order)


21 posted on 09/28/2014 7:53:10 AM PDT by Bringbackthedraft (Hillary or Warren 2016! Why? Just to have a woman for Historical Purpose?? At least pick a looker!)
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To: Bringbackthedraft

Nobody has been to the moon in 40 years. Is it discovered?


22 posted on 09/28/2014 8:17:28 AM PDT by eartrumpet
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To: eartrumpet

Was it discovered before anyone had been there?


23 posted on 09/28/2014 8:19:01 AM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: Cincinatus

Columbus’ discovery wasn’t unique because he found new continents. That there was land across the Atlantic was somewhat common knowledge. The “discovery” was that people were living there, in cultures distinct from Europe, Asia, and the Indian subcontinent.


24 posted on 09/28/2014 8:37:56 AM PDT by oblomov
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To: stevem

Probably, since it would be a pretty short list...


25 posted on 09/28/2014 10:27:45 AM PDT by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up yoiur boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: onedoug

Perhaps?. The Icelandic sagas “Saga of the Greenlanders” and “Saga of Eric the Red” document “Vinland”. While there are some discrepancies between the two; the accuracy of these sagas was proven when they were used by archeologists to locate the Norse settlement at L’Anse Aux Meadows in Northern Newfoundland. This settlement only lasted about 8-10 years. It’s existence and the Sagas pretty well document the Norse discovery of the Americas 500 years before Columbus. However, I am not aware of any of this information ever being taken back to Europe.


26 posted on 09/28/2014 12:05:23 PM PDT by X Fretensis (How)
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To: X Fretensis
Yes, L'Anse aux Meadows is definitely a Norse settlement from about 1000. Whether the Norse went further afield (Nova Scotia or New England) is unknown, but I recall reading that a medieval Norwegian coin (13th century?) was found at an archaeological site in Maine. It could have been traded from one tribe to another so may not mean the Norse got that far but would indicate at least some later contacts after the incidents around 1000 described in the sagas.

About 986 a Norseman attempting to sail from Iceland to Greenland missed Greenland and saw land further west, but did not go ashore. His name was Bjarni (perhaps an ancestor of Bjarni Fife). Leif Ericsson knew about Bjarni's discoveries before the voyage he took which led to the discovery of "Vinland."

I think there is a medieval Danish historian who mentions something about these discoveries but don't remember if he knew about Vinland or only about Greenland.

27 posted on 09/28/2014 1:56:01 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: SunkenCiv

Wait! This part is scary:

...Stanley Chojnacki, a University of North Carolina expert on gender relations in 14th-century Venice....

&&
Expert on gender relations?


28 posted on 09/28/2014 1:57:25 PM PDT by Bigg Red (31 May 2014: Obamugabe officially declares the USA a vanquished subject of the Global Caliphate.)
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To: onedoug

... another attempt to delegitimize Columbus.

***
Perhaps. But, no matter what may be learned about earlier “discoveries” of America, it was not until Columbus’s voyages that things really started poppin’. So they can’t take that away from him.


29 posted on 09/28/2014 2:01:19 PM PDT by Bigg Red (31 May 2014: Obamugabe officially declares the USA a vanquished subject of the Global Caliphate.)
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To: Cincinatus

My thoughts were similar to yours when I read this. See my #29.


30 posted on 09/28/2014 2:05:11 PM PDT by Bigg Red (31 May 2014: Obamugabe officially declares the USA a vanquished subject of the Global Caliphate.)
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