The Erdapfel: The Last Globe Without America | Smartest Year Ever (Oct 12, 2025)

12/10/2025 4 min Temporada 10 Episodio 12

Listen "The Erdapfel: The Last Globe Without America | Smartest Year Ever (Oct 12, 2025)"

Episode Synopsis

What did the world look like before the Americas appeared on any map? In 1492, Martin Behaim unveiled the Erdapfel, the oldest surviving globe in existence. This hand-painted sphere was a Renaissance masterpiece—and yet, it’s hilariously wrong. Based on Marco Polo’s exaggerations, Ptolemaic geography, and medieval sailor legends, the Erdapfel shows a world with no Americas, an oversized Japan, and oceans dotted with phantom islands.This video explores why the Erdapfel matters, how it reflected European geography in the late 15th century, and why it became outdated almost immediately. Discover what this fragile globe reveals about the limits of human knowledge on the eve of Columbus’s first voyage, and how it preserves a snapshot of a vanished worldview.The Erdapfel is more than just a globe—it’s a time capsule of imagination, myth, and history.📌 Don’t miss the interactive globe link in the description—it’s incredible to explore Behaim’s Erdapfel in detail.SourcesRumsey Map Collection. (n.d.). Interactive Globe — Martin Behaim’s Erdapfel. Retrieved from https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY8132982190098258:Interactive-Globe--Martin-Behaim-s-Van Duzer, C. (2013). Sea Monsters on Medieval and Renaissance Maps. British Library.Stevenson, E. L. (1921). Martin Behaim and His Globe. American Geographical Society.Brotton, J. (2013). A History of the World in Twelve Maps. Viking.Whitfield, P. (1994). The Image of the World: 20 Centuries of World Maps. British Library.Germanisches Nationalmuseum (Nuremberg). (n.d.). Official collection notes on the Erdapfel.#HistoryFacts #Cartography #WorldHistory #SmartestYearEver #GeographyFacts #erdapfel #maps #globesMusic thanks to Zapsplat.

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