1st World Map

1st World Map. These maps were made with a mix of information available from traveler accounts, science hypotheses, literature and reports from navigators The name America is placed on South America on the main map.

Largest known early map of the world Nexus Newsfeed
Largest known early map of the world Nexus Newsfeed from nexusnewsfeed.com

Anaximander, the first cartographer made a representation of the world at that time. It is known as the first map to use the name "America"

Largest known early map of the world Nexus Newsfeed

This only cartographic work made by a witness of the first journeys of Christopher Columbus to the Indies that have been preserved. The surviving version of the Tabula Peutingeriana or "Peutinger Map," only dates to the 13 th century and was drawn by a monk in Colmar, France.The map is an impressive 22.1 feet (6.75 meters) long and 1 foot 1 inch (0.34 meters) high. The concept of a world map comes from a late Babylonian tablet, which was created sometime after the 9th century BC, but it is based most likely on a much older map

First World Map in Standard Atlas; Historic Cartography; Ortelius 1570 eBay. The oldest surviving world map is the Babylonian Map of the World, also known as the 'Imago Mundi' Unlike earlier maps — which featured roads, towns, and other geological features — Anaximander chose to show all of the inhabited lands known to the ancient Greeks.

. These maps indicated directions, roads, towns, borders, and geological features, enabling quicker and safer. photo source: Wikimedia Commons Although there were older maps drawn in ancient times, the pre-Socratic Greek philosopher Anaximander is often credited with being the first person to publish a map of the world