Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts

This article discusses various early sources on the Indonesian archipelago. It starts with the status of knowledge before the first voyage of the Portuguese to the Moluccas from accounts of travellers to insular Southeast Asia in the Middle Ages and the picture on world maps European cartographers p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Svann Langguth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Indonesia 2012-10-01
Series:Wacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://wacana.ui.ac.id/index.php/wjhi/article/view/63
id doaj-9e09c3e2446845c69beb6884976b459f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9e09c3e2446845c69beb6884976b459f2021-07-08T04:08:07ZengUniversity of IndonesiaWacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia1411-22722407-68992012-10-0114224126410.17510/wjhi.v14i2.6363Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and chartsSvann Langguth0a lektor from German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)This article discusses various early sources on the Indonesian archipelago. It starts with the status of knowledge before the first voyage of the Portuguese to the Moluccas from accounts of travellers to insular Southeast Asia in the Middle Ages and the picture on world maps European cartographers produced. Comparing that view with text sources and the resulting geographic material of the first expeditions by the Portuguese provides an insight into contemporary mechanisms of knowledge transfer. Certain effects can be traced and are repeated on different levels of access to the original facts mainly because most maps were drawn up in Europe but based on the geographic description provided by text accounts. An abundance and multiplication of failures and mistakes is evident and is partly related to the scarcity of sources and due to reproduction techniques.http://wacana.ui.ac.id/index.php/wjhi/article/view/63portuguese perception, indonesian archipelago, sunda, world maps, cartography, toponym.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Svann Langguth
spellingShingle Svann Langguth
Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
Wacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia
portuguese perception, indonesian archipelago, sunda, world maps, cartography, toponym.
author_facet Svann Langguth
author_sort Svann Langguth
title Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
title_short Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
title_full Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
title_fullStr Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
title_full_unstemmed Thinking in Islands; The Portuguese perception of the Indonesian archipelago and particularly of Sunda in early texts and charts
title_sort thinking in islands; the portuguese perception of the indonesian archipelago and particularly of sunda in early texts and charts
publisher University of Indonesia
series Wacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia
issn 1411-2272
2407-6899
publishDate 2012-10-01
description This article discusses various early sources on the Indonesian archipelago. It starts with the status of knowledge before the first voyage of the Portuguese to the Moluccas from accounts of travellers to insular Southeast Asia in the Middle Ages and the picture on world maps European cartographers produced. Comparing that view with text sources and the resulting geographic material of the first expeditions by the Portuguese provides an insight into contemporary mechanisms of knowledge transfer. Certain effects can be traced and are repeated on different levels of access to the original facts mainly because most maps were drawn up in Europe but based on the geographic description provided by text accounts. An abundance and multiplication of failures and mistakes is evident and is partly related to the scarcity of sources and due to reproduction techniques.
topic portuguese perception, indonesian archipelago, sunda, world maps, cartography, toponym.
url http://wacana.ui.ac.id/index.php/wjhi/article/view/63
work_keys_str_mv AT svannlangguth thinkinginislandstheportugueseperceptionoftheindonesianarchipelagoandparticularlyofsundainearlytextsandcharts
_version_ 1721314320187392000