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In comparison with DeWit's large wall map, this map purports to show the newest and most accurate information about the Americas. However, the geographic information presented here is not much different from the earlier map, especially in its perpetuation of the "California as an island" myth. All the source regions for Florida's recent immigration--Canada, Mexico, the West Indies, and northern South America--are included on both maps. While these regions have been depicted as separate geographic entities, there is an underlying reminder that they are extensions of European colonial powers: the southwestern tip of Europe (the Iberian peninsula) appears on the right edge of the map, not quite out of sight, while the use of certain place names reflects European relocation--Hispania Nova (Mexico and Central America), Nova Francia (Canada's St. Lawrence region), or Nova Britagna (Canada's Hudson Bay region). In addition, the map's iconography reinforces this interpretation, especially the upper left plaque, where an angel and a female figure bearing a cross symbolize the Christianizing of the native peoples, and in the lower left cartouche which shows natives bringing the wealth of the land (gold bars and baskets of grain) to an Indian chieftain, representing the European economic exploitation of the continent's mineral and agricultural wealth.

Page data

Page
1
Source index
0
Type
photo
Media ID
1e6fa8178c0b72d7
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
x633f915s
Core
obj
Type
map
DTO data
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    "contentType": "map",
    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Novissima et accuratissima totius Americae descriptio",
    "description": "In comparison with DeWit's large wall map, this map purports to show the newest and most accurate information about the Americas. However, the geographic information presented here is not much different from the earlier map, especially in its perpetuation of the \"California as an island\" myth. All the source regions for Florida's recent immigration--Canada, Mexico, the West Indies, and northern South America--are included on both maps. While these regions have been depicted as separate geographic entities, there is an underlying reminder that they are extensions of European colonial powers: the southwestern tip of Europe (the Iberian peninsula) appears on the right edge of the map, not quite out of sight, while the use of certain place names reflects European relocation--Hispania Nova (Mexico and Central America), Nova Francia (Canada's St. Lawrence region), or Nova Britagna (Canada's Hudson Bay region). In addition, the map's iconography reinforces this interpretation, especially the upper left plaque, where an angel and a female figure bearing a cross symbolize the Christianizing of the native peoples, and in the lower left cartouche which shows natives bringing the wealth of the land (gold bars and baskets of grain) to an Indian chieftain, representing the European economic exploitation of the continent's mineral and agricultural wealth.",
    "date": "[\"[1670?]\"]",
    "year": 1670,
    "citationUrl": "https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:x633f915s",
    "rights": "No known copyright restrictions.",
    "rightsUri": "No known restrictions on use.",
    "reuseAllowed": "no restrictions",
    "language": "Latin",
    "identifierLocal": "05_04_000097",
    "creators": [
        "Wit, Frederik de."
    ],
    "institution": "Boston Public Library",
    "collections": [
        "Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center Collection"
    ],
    "subjects": [
        "America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "North America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "South America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "Central America--Maps--Early works to 1800"
    ],
    "subjectsGeographic": [
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        "Mesoamerica",
        "North America",
        "North and Central America",
        "South America"
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}

Context sent to Scholar

Document identity
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    "label": "Novissima et accuratissima totius Americae descriptio",
    "core": "obj",
    "dtoType": "map",
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Document source metadata
{
    "id": "x633f915s",
    "sourceUrl": "https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:x633f915s",
    "contentType": "map",
    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Novissima et accuratissima totius Americae descriptio",
    "description": "In comparison with DeWit's large wall map, this map purports to show the newest and most accurate information about the Americas. However, the geographic information presented here is not much different from the earlier map, especially in its perpetuation of the \"California as an island\" myth. All the source regions for Florida's recent immigration--Canada, Mexico, the West Indies, and northern South America--are included on both maps. While these regions have been depicted as separate geographic entities, there is an underlying reminder that they are extensions of European colonial powers: the southwestern tip of Europe (the Iberian peninsula) appears on the right edge of the map, not quite out of sight, while the use of certain place names reflects European relocation--Hispania Nova (Mexico and Central America), Nova Francia (Canada's St. Lawrence region), or Nova Britagna (Canada's Hudson Bay region). In addition, the map's iconography reinforces this interpretation, especially the upper left plaque, where an angel and a female figure bearing a cross symbolize the Christianizing of the native peoples, and in the lower left cartouche which shows natives bringing the wealth of the land (gold bars and baskets of grain) to an Indian chieftain, representing the European economic exploitation of the continent's mineral and agricultural wealth.",
    "date": "[\"[1670?]\"]",
    "year": 1670,
    "citationUrl": "https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:x633f915s",
    "rights": "No known copyright restrictions.",
    "rightsUri": "No known restrictions on use.",
    "reuseAllowed": "no restrictions",
    "language": "Latin",
    "identifierLocal": "05_04_000097",
    "creators": [
        "Wit, Frederik de."
    ],
    "institution": "Boston Public Library",
    "collections": [
        "Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center Collection"
    ],
    "subjects": [
        "America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "North America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "South America--Maps--Early works to 1800",
        "Central America--Maps--Early works to 1800"
    ],
    "subjectsGeographic": [
        "America",
        "Mesoamerica",
        "North America",
        "North and Central America",
        "South America"
    ],
    "genreBasic": [
        "Maps"
    ],
    "typeOfResource": [
        "Cartographic"
    ],
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    "pageCount": 1,
    "source": "import",
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    "publisher": "[s.n.]"
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Document source extras
{
    "url": "https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/x633f915s",
    "institutionArkId": "sf268508b",
    "collectionArkId": "41688024w",
    "schema:latitude": 42.284495,
    "schema:longitude": -101.123047,
    "extent": "1 map : hand col. ; 54 x 63 cm.",
    "notes": [
        "Relief shown pictorially.",
        "Includes ill.",
        "California shown as an island with irregular coastline and islands on both sides.",
        "Does not include the additional islands on lower left of map that were added in later editions.",
        "Featured in the Faces & Places Exhibit, Kravis Center, Palm Beach, FL, since 2005. MB (BRL)"
    ],
    "hasTranscription": false,
    "dcId": "x633f915s",
    "type": "map"
}
Page context
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    "mediaId": "1e6fa8178c0b72d7"
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