Marginalia in cARTography.pdf Oct. 2014 | Page 9

INTRODUCTION Detail of plate 21, Jodocus Hondius’s America (Amsterdam: Jodocus Hondius, [1619]), with the itinerary of Le Maire’s voyage drawn in ink. Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University (Cabinet B619 1). The term marginalia (marginalium in singular) was coined in Company, appointed his son to lead a private expedition to discover the early nineteenth century to refer to scribbles and comments a new passage to the Dutch East Indies in 1615. written in the margins of books and manuscripts, a practice that A more recent use of the term marginalia has been given to the readers have undertaken since antiquity. The incunable of Hartmann images drawn in the borders of manuscripts, mostly those from the Schedel’s Liber chronicarum (Nuremberg: Anton Koberger, 1493) Middle Ages. Scholars such as Lilian M. C. Randall and Michael at the University of Wisconsin–Madison shows in its edges notes Camille use these marginal images as a key to fully decipher the written by an anonymous German reader who probably owned the meaning of illuminated medieval codices, deepening our knowledge book in the very late fifteenth or early sixteenth century (plate 7). of their authors and of the social and historical context in which These written additions also appear on maps, updating these manuscripts ݕɔ