Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 85

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 85
INVENTIO FORTUNATA 67 of the Polar regions on his world map of 1569.19 Six legends occur here. Mercator is also responsible for a summary of the Invenlio which he sent to John Dee in a letter dated 20 April, 1577 in reply to an enquiry from the latter as to the “authority whereupon he fashioned unto us that strange plat of the Septentrion- al Islands.” This and all previously mentioned references to the Inven- tio, except that of Day, were trans- lated and published by Professor E. G. R. Taylor in Imago Mundi in 1956.20 In his letter, Mercator tells Dee what he learned from a fourteenth century book written by a certain Jacobus Cnoyen of Herzogenbusch21 who was a traveller like Mandeville. The account opens with a descrip- tion of North or Dusky Norway which is separated by only 12 miles of sea from the lands of the Great Cham and then discusses islands of the Arctic. This information is said to come from Gesia Arihuri (now lost) which describes fantastic ex- peditions made to Iceland, Green- land and the Arctic by King Arthur around the year 530. Arthur found men 23 feet tall i.e. feet in which land is measured. But some of his men remained in the Arctic and in 1364 eight of these people, presum- ably descendants, came to the king’s court in Norway. Among them were two priests one of which had an astrolabe and who was descend- ed in the fifth generation from a man of Brussels. Then follow more fantastic adventures of Arthur, after which we return to the priest who had the astrolabe. “The priest who had the astro- labe related to the king of Norway that in A.D. 1360 there had come to these Northern Islands an English Minorite from Oxford, who was a good astronomer etc. Leaving the rest of the party who had come to the Islands, he journeyed further through the whole of the North etc., and put into writing all the wonders of those islands, and gave the King of England this book, which he called in Latin Inventio Fortunatae, which book began at the last cli- mate, that is to say latitude 54°, con- tinuing to the Pole. This monk said that the mountain range goes round the North like a wall, save that in nineteen places the indrawing channels flow through it, whereof the widest is not above 12 French miles across, the narrow- est % mile. And through the nar- rowest no ship would be able to go, because of the strong rush of the water. The mountain range is sur- rounded by sea except in North Nor- way, when the Norwegian mountain range reaches it for a width of about 17 miles. And right under the North Star, opposite Norway, there lies a fair level land which is uninhabited, where many beautiful (fol. 268 r.) . . . (Lacuna) . . . in the east there stretches out an arm of land which is nearly all wooded. And narrows continually, (the farther north?) 19. Taylor, “A Letter“, pp. 62, 65. 20. Vol. XIII, 56-68. 21. On Cnoyen see Steinnes, “Ein Nordpolsekspedisjon”, pp. 411-414.
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