false geography was more persistent or more pernicious
than this. Jerusalem occupies the central point,
because it was found written in the Prophet Ezekiel:
“
Haec dicit Dominus Deus: Ista est Jerusalem,
in medio gentium
posui eam, et in circuitu ejus
terras;"[2] a declaration supposed to be corroborated
by the Psalmist’s expression, regarded as prophetic
of the death of Our Lord: “
Deus autem,
Rex noster, ante secula operatus est salutem in
medio Terrae” (Ps. lxxiii. 12).[3] The Terrestrial
Paradise was represented as occupying the extreme
East, because it was found in Genesis that the Lord
planted a garden east ward in Eden.[4]
Gog and Magog
were set in the far north or north-east, because it
was said again in Ezekiel: “
Ecce Ego
super te Gog Principem capitis Mosoch et Thubal ...
et ascendere te faciam de lateribus Aquilonis,”
whilst probably the topography of those mysterious
nationalities was completed by a girdle of mountains
out of the Alexandrian Fables. The loose and
scanty nomenclature was mainly borrowed from Pliny
or Mela through such Fathers as we have named; whilst
vacant spaces were occupied by Amazons, Arimaspians,
and the realm of Prester John. A favourite representation
of the inhabited earth was this [Symbol]; a great
O enclosing a T, which thus divides the circle in three
parts; the greater or half-circle being Asia, the
two quarter circles Europe and Africa.[5] These Maps
were known to St. Augustine.[6]
[Sidenote: Roger Bacon as a geographer.]
81. Even Ptolemy seems to have been almost unknown;
and indeed had his Geography been studied it might,
with all its errors, have tended to some greater endeavours
after accuracy. Roger Bacon, whilst lamenting
the exceeding deficiency of geographical knowledge
in the Latin world, and purposing to essay an exacter
distribution of countries, says he will not attempt
to do so by latitude and longitude, for that is a system
of which the Latins have learned nothing. He
himself, whilst still somewhat burdened by the authoritative
dicta of “saints and sages” of past times,
ventures at least to criticise some of the latter,
such as Pliny and Ptolemy, and declares his intention
to have recourse to the information of those who have
travelled most extensively over the Earth’s surface.
And judging from the good use he makes, in his description
of the northern parts of the world, of the Travels
of Rubruquis, whom he had known and questioned, besides
diligently studying his narrative,[7] we might have
expected much in Geography from this great man, had
similar materials been available to him for other
parts of the earth. He did attempt a map with
mathematical determination of places, but it has not
been preserved.[8]