Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Record:   Prev Next
Resources
More Information
Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Willingham, Elizabeth M. (Elizabeth Moore), author.

Title The mythical Indies and Columbus's apocalyptic letter : imagining the Americas in the late Middle Ages / Elizabeth Moore Willingham.

Publication Info. Eastbourne, UK : Sussex Academic e-Library, [2015].

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (illustrations)
Spanish language
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Contents Foreword: Aims and apparatus -- An introduction to Columbus's letter -- Discovery and commerce : a letter in folio -- A slippery job : identifying the folio's printer -- Lasting impressions : the initial and the types -- The letter goes abroad : the Roman connection -- Lost, found, and yet undiscovered : peninsular quartos -- Manuscripts : real and imagined -- Reading the Variorum -- A Variorum edition of the Spanish folio -- Debriefing : ink and paper, men, and stemma -- An English translation of the folio -- Parsing the reading -- Columbus and his apocalyptic letter -- Guide to abbreviations, frequent short references, proper names and symbols -- Glossary -- Publications of the Columbus letter -- Incunabula and early sixteenth-century books cited.
Summary "With his Letter of 1493 to the court of Spain, Christopher Columbus heralded his first voyage to the present-day Americas, creating visions that seduced the European imagination and birthing a fascination with those 'new' lands and their inhabitants that continues today. Columbus's epistolary announcement travelled from country to country in a late-medieval media event--and the rest, as has been observed, is history. The Letter has long been the object of speculation concerning its authorship and intention: British historian Cecil Jane questions whether Columbus could read and write prior to the first voyage while Demetrio Ramos argues that King Ferdinand and a minister composed the Letter and had it printed in the Spanish folio. The Letter has figured in studies of Spanish imperialism and of discovery and colonial period history, but it also offers insights into Columbus's passions and motives as he reinvents himself and retails his vision of Peter Martyr's Novus orbis to men and women for whom Columbus was as unknown as the places he claimed to have visited. The central feature of the book is its annotated variorum edition of the Spanish Letter, together with an annotated English translation and word and name glossaries"--Provided by publisher.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Columbus, Christopher. Carta (Feb. 18, 1493)
Columbus, Christopher -- Correspondence.
Columbus, Christopher.
Genre/Form Correspondence.
Subject Carta (Feb. 18, 1493) (Columbus, Christopher)
America -- Early accounts to 1600.
America.
Chronological Term Early accounts to 1600
Subject Explorers -- America -- Correspondence.
Explorers.
Explorers -- Spain -- Correspondence.
Spain.
America -- Discovery and exploration -- Spanish -- Sources.
Discoveries in geography.
Genre/Form Sources.
Electronic books.
Early works.
Records and correspondence.
Personal correspondence.
Personal correspondence.
ISBN 9781782840374 electronic book
9781782840398 electronic book
1782840397 electronic book
1782840370 electronic book
9781845197001