The German mapmaker who named the continent after you was Martin Waldseemüller. In 1507, he created a map that named the newly discovered continent "America" after the explorer Amerigo Vespucci.
America is named for a Portuguese explorer and mapmaker. His name was Amerigo Vespucci. He was born in 1454 and died in 1512.
The German mapmaker who named the New World after Amerigo Vespucci is Martin Waldseemüller. He published a world map in 1507 that named the landmass "America" in honor of Vespucci's discoveries in the region.
North America was named after Amerigo Vespucci (not the other way around). He wrote a book claiming he had discovered North America ( this has been proven to be a lie), but a German mapmaker believed him when naming North America .
Since it is not called Vespucci, that would be America.
The German mapmaker who named a continent after someone is Martin Waldseemüller. In his 1507 world map, he named the newly discovered continent of South America "America" in honor of the Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci, whose voyages contributed to the understanding of the continent as a separate landmass. Waldseemüller's use of the name solidified its adoption in subsequent maps and texts.
The United States part wasn't named after anyone, the America part is named after a man named Amerigo who discovered America after Columbus. A German mapmaker gave America it's name, later he tried to change it to Columbus, but people caught on too quickly.
It is named after Amerigo Vespucci- an Italian mapmaker- who made great maps detailing North America, people started calling it that, and the name just stuck. <-*Blowin(:me(:kisses(:*->
Amerigo Vespucci is credited with naming the continent "America" after himself, based on his observations during his explorations of the New World in the late 15th century. Though he was not a mapmaker himself, cartographers began using the name in his honor to refer to the newly discovered landmass.
A mapmaker in Italy (?) named Amerigo Vespucci began making maps of the newly discovered lands, and, well, those maps of Amerigos.....they just caught on.
The name America comes from the Latin version of the name Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian explorer who first suggested that the lands discovered by Christopher Columbus were part of a separate continent. The name was popularized by a mapmaker named Martin Waldseemüller in 1507.
If you are referring to the United States of America, it was named in honor of Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian mapmaker. He was not an explorer in the true sense of the word.