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1 December 2004 Further Information on Neotropical Monkeys Reported in the XVI Century
Bernardo Urbani
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Previously, I reviewed chronicles that reported on or illustrated Neotropical primates in the XVth and XVIth centuries (Urbani, 1999). Recently, I found two new documents that are important for understanding how New World monkeys were initially represented in Europe and Asia.

The first is an Ottoman map of 1513 made by the Turkish Admiral Piri Re'is (1470–1554), a navigator and polyglot who spoke Greek, Arabic, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese. This work, known as the Piri Re'is Carte de L'Atlantique (90 x 65 cm), is housed at the Topkapi Sarayi Museum in Istanbul, Turkey (La Ronciere et al., 1984: plate 28). The polychrome map was lost until 1929 and was part of a larger planisphere. Monkeys were illustrated but not mentioned in the text (Afetinan, 1954; McIntosh, 2000) (Fig. 1). In addition to Portuguese and Arab sources, Piri Re'is may have drawn from a chart by Christopher Columbus, apparently found in a Spanish ship captured by the Turks in the Mediterranean Sea around 1501. In fact, Piri Re'is' map may reflect the earlier Columbus map of 1498 (La Ronciere et al., 1984: 218), which coincidentally is the year that Columbus, in his travels, first reported on monkeys in America (Urbani, 1999). In the highly detailed map of Piri Re'is, baboon-like monkeys in the New World were drawn for the first time (Fig. 1). It is possible to infer that these illustrations were made with African primate referents, as were the reports by other travelers in the New World such as Amerigo Vespucci (who referred to Neotropical primates as baboons and macaques; Urbani, 1999) and Arabic chroniclers (Kruk, 1995). On the other hand, Piri Re'is might have obtained another original source on New World monkeys directly from the Europeans. Two primates are represented and associated with mythical animals, one “dancing” with a cynocephalus (dog-head) and another with a fruit in its hand together with an acephalus (headless) (Fig. 1). These monkeys were illustrated as inhabiting the area that is currently Colombia, Brazil, and Venezuela.

Figure 1.

Two monkeys of the New World in the Piri Re'is' Carte de L'Atlantique 1513. One is to the right of a cynocephalus (on the left of the map) and the other to the right of an acephalus (on the right of the map) (La Ronciere et al., 1984: plate 28).

i1413-4705-12-3-146-f01.gif

In February 1595, the English pirate captain Sir Robert Dudley (1574–1649), voyaging in the West Indies, entered the Gulf of Paria (Venezuela) from the southwest at Serpent's Mouth, leaving it by the Dragon's Mouth in order to arrive at the Isle of Trinidad. Of this island, he said, “the country is fertile, and ful of fruits, strange beasts and foules, where of munkeis(3), babions and parats were in great abundance [sic]” (Dudley, 1899: 71). He also indicated that the local name for primates in Trinidad was “howa” (Dudley, 1899: 78). Of interest is that the editor, G. F. Warner, wrote a footnote citing Charles Kingsley (1819–1875): “(3)His ‘munkeys’ were, of course, the little Sapajous; his ‘babions’ no true Baboons, for America disdains that degraded and dog-like form, but the great red Howlers (Kingsley, At last, p.69).” In principle, it is the first reference that we know of for monkeys from a Caribbean island, and specifically Trinidad. Considering the two primates of this island (Phillips, 1998), the “munkeis” are most likely Cebus albifrons trinitatis, whereas the “babions” refer to Alouatta seniculus insulanus, both endemic subspecies.

Acknowledgments

To the personnel of the UIUC libraries for their cooperation, and Paul Garber and Anthony B. Rylands for their suggestions. As always to Tania Urquiza-Haas. B. U. is supported by a Fulbright-OAS Scholarship. The author would appreciate comments and references for future updates.

References

1.

A. Afetinan 1954. Life and Works of the Turkish Admiral: Pirî Reis. The Oldest Map of America Drawn by Pirî Reis. Türk Tarih Kurumo Basimevi. Ankara. Translated to English by Leman Yolaç. Google Scholar

2.

R. Dudley 1899. Robert Dudley's voyage to the West Indies, 1594–1595, narrated by Himself. In The voyage of Robert Dudley, afterwards styled Earl of Warwick and Leicester and Duke of Northumberland, to the West Indies, 1594–1595, narrated by Capt. Wyatt, by Himself, and by Abram Kendall, master. G. F. Warner , editor. (ed.), pp. 67–79.The Hakluyt Society. London. Google Scholar

3.

G. C. McIntosh 2000. The Piri Reis Map of 1513. University of Georgia Press. Athens. Google Scholar

4.

Ch Kingsley 1896. At last: A Christmas in the West Indies. Macmillan and Co., Ltd. London. Google Scholar

5.

R. Kruk 1995. Traditional Islamic views of apes and monkeys. In Ape, Man, Apeman: Changing Views Since 1600. R. Corbey and B. Theunissen , editors. (eds.), pp. 29–42.Leiden University. Leiden. Google Scholar

6.

K. A. Phillips 1998. Tool use in wild capuchin monkeys (Cebus albifrons trinitatis). Am. J. Primatol 46:3259–261. Google Scholar

7.

M. La Ronciere, M. Mollat du Jourdin, M-M. Azard, I. Raynaud-Nguyen, and M-A. Vannereau . 1984. Les Portulans, Cartes marines du XIIIe au XVIIe siècle. Office du Libre S. A. Friburg (Switzerland). Google Scholar

8.

B. Urbani 1999. Nuevo mundo, nuevos monos: Sobre primates neotropicales en los siglos XV y XVI. Neotrop. Primates 7:4121–125. Google Scholar

Notes

[1] Bernardo Urbani, Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois, 109 Davenport Hall, 607 S. Mathews Ave., Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA, e-mail: <burbani@uiuc.edu>.

Bernardo Urbani "Further Information on Neotropical Monkeys Reported in the XVI Century," Neotropical Primates 12(3), 146-147, (1 December 2004). https://doi.org/10.1896/1413-4705.12.3.146
Published: 1 December 2004
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