In 1375, in a workshop in Palma de Mallorca — the capital of the small Mediterranean island of Majorca — a Jewish cartographer named Cresques Abraham finished work on a map of the known world. He had been working on it for several years, with help from his son Jafuda. The map was commissioned by Pere III, King of Aragon, and it was intended as a diplomatic gift to Charles V, the King of France. The completed map filled six leaves of vellum, each leaf the size of a small painting. Each was mounted on a wooden panel. When the panels were folded shut, the map was a book. When the panels were unfolded, the map became a single image, three metres wide. It showed the known world from the Canary Islands and the Atlantic coast of Africa in the west to the Indian Ocean and the kingdoms of China in the east. It showed the Mediterranean with extraordinary accuracy. It showed the Atlas Mountains, the Sahara Desert, the River Niger, the Nile, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean. It showed hundreds of cities, each with its name in Latin. It showed sailing routes, with hundreds of small rhumb lines crossing the Mediterranean to help sailors find their bearings. It showed sea monsters in the open ocean. It showed kings — small painted figures, each sitting on a throne, each labelled with a Latin caption telling the viewer who they were and what their kingdom was famous for. The most famous of these kings, the one most often reproduced from the atlas, is Mansa Musa of Mali. The map shows him seated in West Africa, on a low throne, wearing a gold crown, holding a tall sceptre in one hand and a perfectly round nugget of gold in the other. The caption beside him reads, in translation from the Latin: 'This Black lord is called Musse Melly, lord of the Black people of Guinea. So abundant is the gold which is found in his country that he is the richest and most noble king in all the land.' Mansa Musa had been dead for nearly forty years by the time the atlas was made. He had been the ninth Mansa (emperor) of the Mali Empire, ruling from about 1312 to 1337. In 1324 he had made the hajj — the pilgrimage to Mecca — accompanied by a vast caravan loaded with gold. When he passed through Cairo on his way to Mecca and on his way back, he gave away so much gold to the people he met that the price of gold in Cairo reportedly collapsed for several years. The story spread across the Mediterranean. By 1375, European cartographers and merchants knew Mansa Musa as the king of the gold country. The Catalan Atlas put him on the map. The atlas is therefore many things at once. It is a piece of medieval cartography — the most accurate world map made in Europe at that time. It is a record of medieval European knowledge of the wider world — what they knew, what they had heard, and what they still got wrong. It is a tribute to one of the great kings of medieval Africa, drawn nearly forty years after his death by a cartographer who had never been to Mali but who knew the story. It is a piece of Majorcan, Catalan, Aragonese, and French history. And it is a piece of Jewish history — the cartographer Cresques Abraham was Jewish, and his Jewish identity is part of why his workshop existed in the first place. This lesson asks how the atlas was made, what it shows, and what it teaches us about how the medieval European world imagined the wider world.
Several things working together. First, the geography. Majorca sits at the centre of the Mediterranean. Ships from many directions called there. Information arrived. Second, the political setting. The Crown of Aragon was a major Mediterranean power, with diplomatic and trading links across the region — so the kings of Aragon had reasons to commission good maps. Third, the cultural mix. Christians, Jews, and Muslims worked together. Each tradition brought different geographical knowledge. The Arabic and Hebrew traditions of the Mediterranean had access to information about Africa, Central Asia, and the Indian Ocean that Christian sources alone did not have. Fourth, the Jewish community in particular. The Majorcan Jews had developed map-making as a community skill. They had networks of family and trade across the Mediterranean. They could pull information from many sources. Fifth, the materials. Majorca had the resources to produce high-quality vellum and pigments. Strong answers will see that good maps require not just a good cartographer but a whole supporting culture — political will, cross-cultural information networks, access to sources, materials, and patrons willing to pay. Majorca had all of these. End by noting that Cresques Abraham's atlas could not have been made in most other places of his time. Paris, London, or Rome would have lacked the Arabic and Hebrew sources. Cairo or Damascus might have lacked the European maritime knowledge. Majorca was a unique meeting point.
Several things. First, that the Mediterranean was the centre. The most accurate, most detailed parts of the atlas are around the Mediterranean — the sea Cresques and his contemporaries knew best. Accuracy fades as you move further from the Mediterranean. This is true of medieval European cartography generally. The world is mapped most carefully where the mapmaker has the most reliable sources. Second, that the medieval world was not as small as we sometimes imagine. The atlas extends from the Atlantic to East Asia, covering the entire breadth of Afro-Eurasia. Cresques knew that China existed, that India existed, that there were kingdoms in West Africa with vast gold reserves. The medieval European world was provincial in some ways but it knew there was much more out there. Third, that the atlas combines reliable knowledge with legend without making a hard distinction. Real Asian cities sit beside imaginary Christian kingdoms of Prester John. Real West African kings sit beside half-mythical Saharan giants. Medieval cartographers did not have our modern distinction between 'verified' and 'reported' — they put everything they had heard on the map, and the reader had to use judgement. Strong answers will see that this is not a sign of medieval credulity. It is a sign of an honest attempt to represent what was known and what was rumoured, with the rumour included so the reader could think about it. End by noting that this is something modern maps and modern knowledge sources sometimes lack. The Catalan Atlas told you what was known with certainty (the Mediterranean coastlines, the port cities, the Italian and Iberian rivers) and what was reported but uncertain (Prester John, the kingdoms of the far east) in the same medium. Today we usually have to read different kinds of sources to get this mix. The atlas was an integrated medieval world view.
Several things. First, that medieval Europe knew about West African kingdoms and treated their kings with respect. The portrait of Mansa Musa is not mocking or dismissive. It shows a recognisable king with the same dignity that a portrait of any European king would have. Cresques labels him with his Mansa title and notes his wealth. Second, that the European view was still a European view. Mansa Musa wears a European-style crown, sits on a European-style throne, holds a European-style sceptre. The picture is what Cresques imagined a king would look like — projecting European royal imagery onto an African king he had never seen. Third, that Mansa Musa's fame came from European Mediterranean trade contacts. The Italian merchants and Catalan sailors of the 14th century knew the gold trade went through the Sahara. They knew it came from somewhere south. They knew Mansa Musa had made the famous pilgrimage. They knew the legend. The portrait is a product of that knowledge. Fourth, that medieval Africa was not invisible to medieval Europe. The Mali Empire was on the map, by name, with its ruler shown. Subsequent centuries of European colonial racism produced histories that erased pre-colonial African states from European consciousness. The Catalan Atlas is a useful corrective. In 1375, the Mali Empire was famous. Strong answers will see that the portrait is both a genuine acknowledgement of African importance and a European projection. Both readings are true at once. End by noting that this kind of dual reading — respectful acknowledgement plus cultural projection — is typical of many medieval European images of other cultures. The atlas does not patronise Mansa Musa, but it does Europeanise him. Both honest engagement and cultural translation are happening at the same time.
Several things. First, that knowledge is not innocent. The same maps that made the world legible to medieval scholars also made it accessible to medieval and early modern empires. Cartography is a tool. Tools can be used in many ways. Second, that history is full of unexpected continuities. The 14th-century Catalan-Jewish cartographers were not slave traders. But their grandchildren's students, the 15th-century Portuguese navigators, opened the routes for what became the Atlantic slave trade. The cartographers did not intend this. But their work made it possible. Third, that the persecution of Jews in 1391 and the development of European overseas expansion in the 15th century are two parts of the same century. The same Europe that drove out or forcibly converted its Jewish communities also drove out into the Atlantic and the Indian Ocean. Both are products of late medieval European turmoil. Fourth, that respectful acknowledgement of others can coexist with terrible later actions. The Catalan Atlas portrayed Mansa Musa with respect in 1375. Two hundred years later, European powers were systematically enslaving the descendants of his subjects. Both things happened. Both are part of European history. Strong answers will see that we cannot read the atlas as either a celebration of medieval European tolerance or a precursor to colonialism. It is both. End by noting that the atlas's portrayal of Mansa Musa is, on its own terms, an act of cross-cultural recognition by a medieval European cartographer of a West African king. We can honour this without forgetting what came later. We can also acknowledge what came later without erasing the genuine recognition that the atlas represents. Holding both at once is part of doing honest history.
The Catalan Atlas is a medieval world map made in 1375 in Palma de Mallorca, in the Crown of Aragon, by the Jewish cartographer Cresques Abraham and his son Jafuda Cresques. It was commissioned by Pere III, King of Aragon, as a diplomatic gift to Charles V, King of France. The atlas consists of six vellum panels, each about 64.5 by 50 centimetres, painted with various coloured inks, silver, and gold. Together the panels form a single connected image of the medieval world, about three metres wide when unfolded. The first two panels show calendars and astronomical diagrams. The third and fourth show Europe and the Mediterranean with remarkable accuracy. The fifth shows the eastern Mediterranean, the Holy Land, and Central Asia. The sixth shows India and the Far East, partly based on Marco Polo's account. The atlas is the most accurate and detailed European world map of the medieval period. It draws on Christian, Muslim, and Jewish geographical sources. The Mediterranean coastlines are remarkably close to modern maps; the further reaches become less reliable. Hundreds of cities are labelled. Rhumb lines help sailors navigate. Kings appear as small painted figures with Latin captions. The most famous of these figures is Mansa Musa of Mali, ninth emperor of the Mali Empire (ruled c. 1312-1337), whose 1324 pilgrimage to Mecca had made him famous across the Mediterranean for his gold. The atlas shows him on a low throne, wearing a golden crown, holding a sceptre and a nugget of gold. The caption calls him 'the richest and most noble king in all the land'. The portrait is respectful — though it Europeanises him by putting him in a European-style crown on a European-style throne. The Cresques family had a complicated later history. In 1391, sixteen years after the atlas was completed, anti-Jewish riots swept across Spain. The Jewish community in Palma de Mallorca was attacked, and Jafuda Cresques was forced to convert to Christianity (taking the name Jaime Ribes). He continued to make maps as a Christian, and later trained the Portuguese explorers under Henry the Navigator in the 1420s — including the navigators who would open the routes for the European maritime expansion of the 15th and 16th centuries. The atlas itself was preserved by the French royal library and is now held at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris. It has been digitised at high resolution and is freely available online. The Catalan Atlas is both a triumph of medieval cross-cultural scholarship (Christian, Muslim, and Jewish sources combined by a Jewish cartographer in a Christian kingdom for a French king to depict a Muslim African empire) and a precursor to the European maritime expansion that would, two centuries later, devastate West Africa through the Atlantic slave trade. Both readings are true. The atlas is one of the most important objects in the history of European geographical knowledge.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| about 1312 | Mansa Musa becomes the ninth Mansa of Mali | The empire's golden age begins |
| 1324 | Mansa Musa's pilgrimage to Mecca | His vast gold caravan crashes the gold price in Cairo; his fame spreads across the Mediterranean |
| about 1337 | Mansa Musa dies | The Mali Empire continues but begins a long slow decline |
| 1375 | Cresques Abraham completes the Catalan Atlas in Majorca | The first major European world map to include West Africa in detail; Mansa Musa is shown in his country |
| by 1380 | Atlas is in the royal library of Charles V of France | It becomes part of the French royal collection |
| 1391 | Anti-Jewish riots across Spain; Palma de Mallorca's Jewish community attacked; Jafuda Cresques forced to convert | The Majorcan Jewish cartographic school is ended by violence |
| 1420s | Jafuda (now Jaime Ribes) trains Portuguese navigators under Henry the Navigator | Catalan-Jewish cartography passes into the Portuguese maritime project |
| 1430s onwards | Portuguese expeditions reach the West African coast | European maritime expansion begins; the long road to the Atlantic slave trade opens |
| today | Atlas held at the Bibliothèque nationale de France | Available in high-resolution digital form for the whole world to study |
The Catalan Atlas is just a beautiful old map.
The Catalan Atlas is one of the most accurate world maps made in medieval Europe and a major piece of cross-cultural medieval scholarship. It draws on Christian, Muslim, and Jewish geographical sources, combines theoretical and practical knowledge, and represents the height of late medieval European cartography. Its beauty is real but it is also a serious work of geographic knowledge.
It is easy to look at medieval maps and treat them as quaint. The Catalan Atlas is far more sophisticated than this dismissive reading allows.
Medieval Europe did not know about Africa or about Mali.
Medieval Mediterranean Europe knew quite a lot about West African kingdoms, especially Mali. The Catalan Atlas depicts Mansa Musa with his name, his Mansa title, and a respectful caption. Italian merchants and Catalan sailors knew about the trans-Saharan gold trade. Arabic geographical writings — accessible through Jewish and Spanish-Muslim scholars — had described West African kingdoms in detail for centuries. The image of medieval Europe as completely ignorant of Africa is misleading.
Subsequent centuries of European colonial racism produced histories that minimised pre-colonial European knowledge of African states. The Catalan Atlas is one of many corrections.
Cresques Abraham was Spanish.
Cresques Abraham was a Jewish subject of the Crown of Aragon, working in Majorca. He was Catalan-speaking and culturally Mediterranean Jewish. The modern country of Spain did not exist in 1375; the Iberian Peninsula was divided among several kingdoms. Cresques's identity was Jewish, Mediterranean, Catalan, and Aragonese — not 'Spanish' in any modern sense.
Calling medieval Iberian Jews 'Spanish' projects modern national identity onto a period when it did not yet exist.
All medieval Europeans were ignorant about the wider world.
Medieval Europeans had widely varying levels of knowledge depending on their location, social class, and access to sources. Mediterranean port cities — Mallorca, Genoa, Venice, Barcelona, Naples — had access to detailed information about North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia through trade and shared scholarship. Inland European cities had less. Generalising 'medieval Europe' as ignorant ignores the cosmopolitan Mediterranean centres that included Cresques and his colleagues.
It is easy to imagine 'the Middle Ages' as a single dark age. The Mediterranean Middle Ages, with its multilingual scholarship and active long-distance trade, was much more sophisticated.
Treat the Catalan Atlas as a serious work of medieval cross-cultural scholarship. Pronounce 'Catalan' as 'CAT-uh-lan' (English) or 'kat-a-LAN' (Catalan). Pronounce 'Atles' as 'AT-les'. Pronounce 'Cresques' as 'KRES-kes'. Pronounce 'Majorca' as 'mah-JOR-kah' (English) or 'mah-YOR-kah' (Spanish 'Mallorca'). Pronounce 'Mansa Musa' as 'MAN-sa MOO-sa'. Pronounce 'Mansa' (the title) as 'MAN-sa' — it means 'sultan' or 'emperor' in the Mandinka language. Pronounce 'Mali' as 'MAH-lee'. Pronounce 'Aragon' as 'AR-uh-gon'. Pronounce 'vellum' as 'VEL-um'. Pronounce 'Bibliothèque nationale' as 'bib-lee-oh-TEK na-syon-AL'. Be respectful of Jewish history. Cresques Abraham was Jewish, and his identity is part of why the atlas exists — Jewish cartographers had cross-cultural access that Christian or Muslim mapmakers alone often did not. The forced conversion of Jafuda Cresques in 1391 was part of a wider anti-Jewish violence (the 1391 pogroms across Spain killed thousands and forcibly converted many more). The 1492 expulsion of Jews from Spain followed a century later. Treat this history with gravity. Be respectful of Mansa Musa and the Mali Empire. The Mali Empire was a real and powerful medieval state. Mansa Musa was a real ruler. His 1324 pilgrimage is well-attested in Arabic sources (especially al-Umari) as well as in the European traditions. He should not be reduced to a curiosity or a 'richest person ever' headline — he was a major political and religious figure of medieval Africa. Be honest about the European projection. The Catalan Atlas portrays Mansa Musa with respect but in European royal imagery — European-style crown, European-style throne, European-style sceptre. This is honest European medieval imagination but it is still European. Acknowledge this without making it the whole story. Be honest about what came later. The same Catalan-Jewish cartographic tradition that produced the atlas also helped train the Portuguese navigators who opened the routes for the Atlantic slave trade. Mention this honestly. Knowledge is not innocent. The atlas's respectful 1375 portrayal of Mansa Musa coexists in the same European history with the brutal subsequent colonisation. Be careful with the term 'Saracen'. The Catalan Atlas refers to Mansa Musa with terminology that, in modern reading, has racial and religious overtones (the Latin word translated as 'Black' or 'Moorish'). Translate carefully. The atlas's terminology is respectful for its time but reflects medieval European racial and religious categories that are not modern. Be careful about the term 'discovery'. The Portuguese voyages of the 1430s onwards are sometimes called 'discoveries'. From the African perspective, no discovery was happening — African kingdoms had been visible to themselves and to their northern neighbours for centuries. The Catalan Atlas shows this. Be careful with the modern controversy about Mansa Musa's wealth. There are popular articles claiming Mansa Musa was the 'richest person in history' with specific dollar figures. The basic claim of extraordinary wealth is well-attested. The specific dollar figures involve major guesses and should not be presented as established fact. If you have Jewish, Spanish, North African, or West African students, give them space to share their family or cultural perspectives if they want. The atlas touches on histories that matter to many communities. End the lesson on the present. The atlas is in Paris, freely available online. The Cresques tradition continues in indirect ways. The history is not closed.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Catalan Atlas.
What is the Catalan Atlas, and when was it made?
Why was 14th-century Majorca a good place to make maps?
Who was Mansa Musa, and why does he appear on the atlas?
How does the atlas portray Mansa Musa, and what does this tell us?
What happened to the Cresques family after the atlas was completed?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
The Catalan Atlas was made by a Jewish cartographer in a Christian kingdom, depicting an African Muslim king, drawing on Christian, Muslim, and Jewish sources. What does this teach us about medieval European culture?
The atlas shows Mansa Musa with respect but Europeanises him — he wears a European-style crown on a European-style throne. Is this a sign of recognition or a sign of projection?
The Catalan-Jewish cartographic tradition helped train the Portuguese navigators of the 15th century. Those navigators opened the routes that became the Atlantic slave trade. How do we hold together the respectful 1375 portrait of Mansa Musa and the brutal slave trade that came two centuries later?
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