When the mapmaker German printed the map was that Vespucci name became forever attached to the New World and that is were his trouble began.
Amerigo Vespucci referred to the New World as "America" in his letters published in 1507 and 1508. This attribution eventually gained widespread acceptance and led to the continent being named after him.
1497 1507
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.
In 1507, the German mapmaker Martin Waldseemüller suggested that the newly discovered lands in the Americas be named after Amerigo Vespucci. He created a world map in which he labeled the continent "America" in honor of Vespucci, who had explored and written about the New World. Waldseemüller's map was influential and played a significant role in popularizing the name. This marked the first instance of the name "America" being used to refer to the continents of the Western Hemisphere.
America first appeared on a map in 1507 when the mapmaker Martin Waldseemüller named the land after Amerigo Vespucci, a Florentine explorer who had recognized that the newly discovered lands were not part of Asia but a separate continent.
1507 was in the 16th century.
1507-900 = 607
Martin Behaim - he was a cartographer and he made the earliest known globe. He died in 1506. (So either my answer is incorrect or the date in your question.)
There are about 60 inches 1n 1507 mm
A German mapmaker named Martin Waldseemüller named the continent of America after Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian explorer who made several voyages to the New World. Waldseemüller's map, published in 1507, was one of the first to label the continents of the Western Hemisphere as "America."
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the war
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Amerigo did claim he landed on the American mainland before Columbus. In 1507 a German geographer named Martin Waldseemuller accepted the claim and in a book he published in 1507 he named the new land "America."
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in 1507