Happy Saturday !!
Today's Poet is The Startling Sue McCartney !
Here's a little ditty from her about well.....a Map ?
You are my map……
Today's Poet is The Startling Sue McCartney !
Here's a little ditty from her about well.....a Map ?
You are my map……
You are my map to the
stars
My flight to the moon
My conduit to heaven
You guide me
Keep me on the right path
Sometimes I stumble
But you catch me
I feel safe in your care
Your roads take me to
wonderful places
You are the blood in my
veins
My grid, my web, my
lifeline
Your patches of blue match
my eyes
Your green spaces nourish
and calm
With green thoughts in
green places
I unfold your leaves to
find you
You broaden my horizons
You nourish my soul
You dazzle my eyes with
wonder
You enfold me in your
network
You hold me entranced
I would be lost without you
My map
Susan
Cartography is the study of maps and map
making. Someone who makes maps is called a
cartographer.
North may be at the top of maps today, but that
wasn’t always the case. During the middle ages,
most Western maps put east at the top instead.
In Latin, the word for east is oriens, so to hold
the map correctly, you had to “orient” it—that is,
make sure East was on top. This is where we get
the word “orientation” today.
Modern mapmakers often incorporate fake
towns into their maps, known as “paper towns,”
“phantom settlements,” or (for some reason)
“bunnies.” If they come across another map with
the same fake town, they know it is a copy!
In 1798, cartographer James Rennell drew the first
map of Africa featuring the massive Mountains of
Kong, an enormous mountain range that stretched
thousands of miles east to west across Africa. The
only problem was that the Mountains of Kong
didn’t exist; Rennell had made a mistake. Even so,
the Mountains of Kong would be placed on maps
of Africa for the next 100 years.
The first map to use the name “America” was
created by the German cartographer Martin
Waldseemüller in 1507. It’s also one of the most
expensive maps in the world—the US Library of
Congress bought it in 2003 for £10 million!
In 44 CE, ancient Roman thinker Pliny the Elder
wrote that every creature on land has a counterpart
in the ocean. Because of that, ancient mapmakers
would draw sea monsters on their maps to look
like aquatic versions of familiar land animals: sea
cows, sea serpents, sea pigs, marine pig-dogs, etc.
If you’ve ever seen a sea lion or a seahorse, this is
how they got their names!
During medieval times in Europe most maps of the
world, called mappae mundi, were used by royals
and nobles as displays of their wealth rather than
as tools for navigation. Only around 1,100 mappae
mundi still survive from that time period.
There are two Norths: true north and magnetic
north. True north is the direction of the geographic
North Pole. Magnetic north is the direction the
north end of a needle in a compass points. The
magnetic North Pole can actually move up to
25 miles a year and has even been known to swap
places with the magnetic South Pole (don’t worry,
the last time this happened was 780,000 years ago).
During World War II, the British game company
Waddington PLC altered several Monopoly games
by sealing silk maps into the game boards,
shuffling real money in with the fake, and adding
new playing pieces such as a working compass.
These special games were then shipped to
prisoner-of-war camps to help prisoners escape!
The oldest globe on record dates back to around
1,500 and is carved on the surface of an ostrich egg.
It’s also the first time the phrase “here be dragons”
appears on a map (in Latin: hic sunt dracones)
Poetry Challenge
NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April.
So go on.....have a go !!.
Submit via the contact button or email me at :-
NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April.
This blog is linked to the site and is quoted on it, therefore any work submitted here will receive a much larger audience !!
So go on.....have a go !!.
Submit via the contact button or email me at :-
neville.raper@gmail.com
Thanks Neville and Susan, brilliant MAP poem by Susan and related info by Neville. Good to learn something new every day! We have had 'the maps out' Roy has been planning our tour next week of the English/Welsh border, we are going looking for 'de Lacy Castles and Churches'.
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