Photo from Atlas Obscura
The phrase "Here be Dragons" or hic sunt dracones in Latin was purportedly first found on the Hunt-Lenox globe c.1503. That phrase was etched into this tiny 5" diameter copper globe on the lower east coast of Asia, in the vicinity of modern day China / Thailand / Vietnam. While I feel that globe's authenticity is somewhat dubious, if its indeed authentic then it nonetheless provides another data point for me in my quest to truly comprehend dragon origins and lore, and the possibility that there may have been terrestrial "dragon" creatures at some point in recent human history.
Further recognized history of this phrase shows it printed as a label on a sea monster in the North Atlantic ocean, near Iceland/Greenland as depicted on the Carta Marina c.1539, a wall map by a Swedish cartographer.
It seems that subsequent cartographers from 1500-1800 widely depicted sea serpents and monsters on their maps, labeling them serpentes or dracones. Presumably, a cartographer during that era of early seafaring must have been highly incentivized to create the most accurate possible maps, as their employers were generally crown elite and wealthy merchants who required precise knowledge of land, waters and liabilities in order to navigate. Why would a cartographer engage in flight-of-fancy or buffoonery such as adding fictitious features, creatures or hyperbole to their maps? Accuracy in their body of work was surely paramount to any other motives.
Nevertheless, of course officialdom's historical record immediately and automatically assumes dragons to be entirely mythological, and mocks any notion to the contrary. Truly respectable science indeed, automatically dismissing multiple instances of documented evidence by respected seafaring cartographers, to be mocked as myths.
To Be Continued - Please Contribute
Photo from IRIS28, "A History of Dragon in Visual Art"
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