-Caveat Lector-

TA muchoz!!!

Dave.

----- Original Message -----
From: "klewis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, December 14, 2002 6:07 AM
Subject: Re: [CTRL] Fw: Say? Anyone With A New York Times Account?


> -Caveat Lector-
>
> On 14 Dec 2002 at 21:56, David Sutherland wrote:
>
> >
> > -Caveat Lector-
> >
> > Have access to this article:
> >
> >
http://www.nytimes.com/auth/login?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/14/arts
/design/
> > 14MAP.html
> >
> September 14, 2002
> Was 'Old' Map Faked to Tweak the Nazis?
> By EMILY EAKIN
>  he Vinland Map must be the world's most contested piece of
> parchment. Donated to Yale University by the philanthropist Paul
> Mellon in 1957, the map, which famously describes the Viking
> discovery of North America, has been stuck in scholarly deadlock
> ever since. The subject of endless studies and counterstudies, the
> map is either a rare medieval artifact - the first cartographic
> representation of the continent - or else a modern fake.
>
> Consider the two conflicting studies that appeared in scientific
> journals last month. One, published in Radiocarbon, gives a date for
> the map's parchment of 1434, suggesting to the researchers that
> the map could well be authentic. The second study, published in
> Analytical Chemistry, comes to the opposite conclusion, arguing, as
> previous studies have, that the presence of a mineral called anatase
> in the map's ink indicates a 20th-century origin - even if the
> parchment is far older. And just last Sunday, in The Boston Globe,
> the rival factions were rehashing the debate once again.
>
> But now the forgery camp may have some fresh ammunition. A
> Norwegian historian says she has fingered the forger: a German
> Jesuit priest named Josef Fischer, whom she believes made the
> map partly to protest the Nazi regime.
>
> "He would have made the map not for profit and not to flaunt it
> publicly, but mostly as a private protest," said the historian, Kirsten
> A. Seaver, an independent scholar based in Palo Alto, Calif., who is
> the author of a well-regarded book about the Viking exploration of
> North America. "I'm very convinced it was done to tease the Nazis."
>
> Politics and religion are at the heart of Ms. Seaver's intricate case
> against Father Fischer, which she has laid out in several scholarly
> articles and is turning into a book that she hopes to publish next
> year. And though her evidence is mostly circumstantial - Father
> Fischer left no confession - experts say her theory merits serious
> attention.
>
> "He seems pretty plausible," said Robert W. Karrow, curator of
> special collections and maps at the Newberry Library in Chicago. "It
> may have been intellectual arrogance or just a game, but he was in
> pretty much the right place at pretty much the right time and had the
> right information. I think it all hangs together."
>
> As Ms. Seaver points out, in many ways the Jesuit is an obvious
> suspect. He was an avid scholar and collector of old maps, credited
> with discovering the now legendary Waldseemüller world map from
> 1507 - the first to use the word America.
>
> He was also passionately committed to the idea that the Norse had
> been to this continent long before Christopher Columbus, publishing
> a book on the subject in 1902. At the time, there was little evidence
> for Father Fischer's theory. Yet he was convinced a cartographic
> record of the venture must exist.
>
> These facts alone might qualify as probable motive, but Ms.
> Seaver's theory is more elaborate. Father Fischer, she argues,
> would have been outraged by the Nazis' persecution of Jesuits.
>
> In 1938, Nazi officials forced the sale of Stella Matutina, the Jesuit
> College in Feldkirch, Austria, where Father Fischer had taught and
> was living in retirement. (He moved to Munich the next year and
> died in 1944.)
>
> At the same time, Ms. Seaver contends, Father Fischer would have
> been appalled to see ancient Norse history put to use as Nazi
> propaganda. The Third Reich did a bustling traffic in ersatz Norse
> art and artifacts, she points out, as German officials saw in the
> Vikings an Aryan people with territorial ambitions much like their
> own. In particular, a Viking conquest of North America would supply
> a perfect rationale for the Reich's empire-lust overseas.
>
> By making the Vinland Map, Father Fischer would thus seem to be
> fulfilling a cherished Nazi dream. But - and here's the rub - the
> map is laden with Catholic imagery. The legend in the top left corner
> refers not only to the discovery of "Vinland" by "the companions
> Bjarni and Leif Eiriksson," but to a trip there soon after by Eric,
> "legate of the Apostolic See and the bishop of Greenland."
>
> This, Ms. Seaver argues, was Father Fischer's ruse: to give the
> Nazis - and history - a Viking conquest of the New World but to
> make clear that it was a Catholic one as well.
>
> "The map shows two things clearly," she said. "The Roman Catholic
> Church was here first, long before Hitler and the Third Reich could
> claim any rights to the region, and it showed the Norse had
> discovered America long before Columbus. Whoever the Nazi
> authority was who was going to pronounce on such a map in the
> public eye would have to make a choice. Should the map be
> discarded because of its Catholic symbolism? Or should they go
> with the lovely idea of the Norse discovery of America?"
>
> Anomalies in the map's legend - including its idiosyncratic account
> of Norse history - further implicate Father Fischer, Ms. Seaver
> says, who would have relied on inaccurate secondary sources. But
> her most tantalizing clue concerns a Czech library that may once
> have housed the Vinland Map parchment.
>
> When Mr. Mellon purchased the map from a Connecticut rare books
> dealer in 1957, he also acquired two associated 15th-century works:
> "The Tartar Relation" and "Speculum Historiale." The latter volume
> was incomplete, however, consisting of just the first four sections.
>
> But in a Swiss auction catalog from 1934, Ms. Seaver found a listing
> for a manuscript fragment that appears to be the volume's missing
> fifth section. The catalog attributed the fragment to the Mikulov
> Castle library in Brno, a collection that was known for its antique
> maps and that Father Fischer consulted.
>
> When the library was sold in the early 1930's, Ms. Seaver
> speculates, Father Fischer either bought or was given a bound
> edition containing both"The Tartar Relation" and "Speculum
> Historiale," later converting some of the parchment - into the
> Vinland Map.
>
> "If correct," said Peter Barber, head of map collections at the British
> Library, Father Fischer's connection to "Speculum Historiale" "is
> close to a smoking gun."
>
> Close may be the best Ms. Seaver can do. Like her, Father Fischer
> was interested in map forgeries, and even published an article on
> some Renaissance world maps that he suspected were fakes. And
> like her, he lacked a smoking gun.
>
> "As far as I can see, none of these maps has an absolutely
> impossible appearance," he was obliged to concede.
>
> "But all of them are to a greater or lesser degree strange and
> different from all other hitherto known maps."
>
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That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

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