Willoughby's Land Explained

During his 1553 voyage across the Barents Sea, English explorer Hugh Willoughby thought he saw islands to the north. Based on his description, these islands were subsequently depicted and named "Willoughby's Land" and "Macsinof Island" on maps published by Petrus Plancius in 1592 and 1594 (although he was doubtful of their existence).[1] Gerardus Mercator included them on his 1595 map. Willem Barentsz found no sign of Willoughby's discoveries and omitted them from his map published in 1599, but they continued to appear on Arctic maps published by Jan Janssonius and Willem Blaeu at least into the 1640s.

A (erroneous) claim propagated in 1612 held that Willoughby's Land was identical to Spitsbergen, thus supporting an English claim prior to the Dutch discovery by Barentsz in 1596. This claim was used to justify a monopoly charter on whaling rights granted to the Muscovy Company in 1613.[2]

Georg Michael Asher (1860) believed the two islands to be merely a western transposition of the two main islands of Novaya Zemlya.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Hacquebord . Louwrens . Sep 1995 . In Search of Het Behouden Huys: A Survey of the Remains of the House of Willem Barentsz on Novaya Zemlya . Arctic . 48 . 3 . 250 . 2009-03-08 . 10.14430/arctic1246. 10.1.1.505.5702 .
  2. Book: Hudson, Henry . Henry Hudson

    . Henry Hudson . Georg Michael Asher . Henry Hudson the Navigator: The Original Documents in which His Career is Recorded, Collected, Partly Translated, and Annotated . 1860 . Hakluyt Society . London . clix–clx .

  3. Book: Hudson, Henry . Henry Hudson

    . Henry Hudson . Georg Michael Asher . Henry Hudson the Navigator: The Original Documents in which His Career is Recorded, Collected, Partly Translated, and Annotated . 1860 . Hakluyt Society . London . clviii–clix .