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・ Giovanni Errichiello
・ Giovanni Evangelista Draghi
・ Giovanni Evangelisti
・ Giovanni Fabbroni
・ Giovanni Faber
・ Giovanni Fagnano
・ Giovanni Fago
・ Giovanni Falcone
・ Giovanni d'Andrea
・ Giovanni D'Anzi
・ Giovanni d'Aragona
・ Giovanni d'Aragona (cardinal)
・ Giovanni D'Ascenzi
・ Giovanni d'Asciano
・ Giovanni da Asola
Giovanni da Carignano
・ Giovanni da Cascia
・ Giovanni da Gaeta
・ Giovanni da Maiano
・ Giovanni da Milano
・ Giovanni da Nola
・ Giovanni da Oriolo
・ Giovanni da Pian del Carpine
・ Giovanni da San Giovanni
・ Giovanni da Santo Stefano da Ponte
・ Giovanni da Serravalle
・ Giovanni da Siena
・ Giovanni da Udine
・ Giovanni da Verrazzano
・ Giovanni da Vigo


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Giovanni da Carignano : ウィキペディア英語版
Giovanni da Carignano

Giovanni da Carignano, or Johannes de Mauro de Carignano (Genoa c. 1250-Genoa 1329) was a priest and a pioneering cartographer from Genoa.
There is little certain information about his life. There is a Genoese document (dated June 9, 1291) referring to a certain Giovanni, son of Mauro, from Carignano (''Johannes de Mauro de Calignano''). Other fragments suggest he had two brothers, Giacomo a notary, and Anselmo a doctor. Further documents suggest he was still alive in September 1329, but dead by May, 1330.〔Revelli, p.450-52〕
From 1293 to 1329, Giovanni da Carignano was the rector of the church of San Marco al Molo (Saint Mark in the Pier), a parish in Genoa, just a few meters away from the bustling port of Genoa, arguably the most important seaport in the Mediterranean Sea at the time.
Carignano is important to the history of cartography as the author of an early 14th-century nautical portolan chart, depicting, with much skill, most of the world as then known to his Italian contemporaries (Europe, North Africa, Mediterranean, Black Sea and much of the Middle East). Although the northern reaches of Europe are unclear, it contains possibly the first depiction of Scandinavia as a peninsula. Carignano's portolan has been variously dated between 1305 and 1327.〔Beazley (1906: (p.516 )) pushes for an earlier date, 1300-1305, Desimoni (1875: (p.44 )) for 1306, Nordenskiöld (1896: (p. 689 )) says 1310; Campbell (1986) proposes 1327.〕). If the earlier dates are accepted, then it might be the first known portolan signed by its author (i.e. before Pietro Vesconte's portolan of 1311). The signature read: ''Presbiter Johannes Rector sancti Marci de portu Ianue me fecit''.〔Desimoni (''Giornale Liguistico'', 1875: (p.44 ))〕
The Carignano chart was long held by the Archivio di Stato in Florence, Italy. Alas, already fragile, the chart was destroyed in 1943 during a bombing of Naples, where it was temporarily on exposition. All that remains of it are a set of photographs and notes by earlier scholars.
A second mysterious Carignano map, dated 1306, is mentioned routinely in 19th-century lists, but without indication of its location or description of its content, and thus either never existed beyond rumor, or has long been lost.〔e.g. Carignano's 1306 map is listed without a location in the catalog of Pietro Amat di S. Filippo (1875), ''Studi bibliografici e biografici sulla storia della geografia in Italia''. Rome: Elzeviriana. (p.329 ))〕
In this map he joins the teological tradition (Jerusalem in the centre of a T-in-O scheme) and the more accurate and up-to-date information
In the port of Genoa (1306) he interviewed the ambassadors of abissinan negus Wedem Arad; some scholars, as Silverberg, presume he was the first European to collocate the legendary Prester John's Kingdom in Africa (Ethiopia) rather than in northern Asia.
== References ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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