Portolan charts are navigational maps based on compass directions and estimated distances observed by the pilots at sea. They were first made in the 13th century in Italy and later in Spain. With the advent of the Age of Discovery, they were considered State secrets in Portugal and Spain. They were very valuable in the description of Atlantic and Indian coastlines for newcomer English and Dutch raiding, and later trading, ships. The word portolan comes from the Italian adjective portolano, meaning "related to ports or harbours."
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These charts, actually rough maps, were based on accounts of medieval Europeans who sailed the Mediterranean and Black Sea coasts, and later were used to map coastal resources in the Atlantic and Indian oceans. At the beginning of the Age of Discovery they would describe the coast of Africa, Brazil, India and even past the Strait of Malacca into Japan, knowledge vital for the slow rise to prominence of the English Armada and of Dutch merchants, following in the Iberian Powers wake. Frequently drawn on sheepskin, portolan charts show coastal features and ports. In earlier days, what could be used as a harbour encompassed more of the coastline than now, as ships were smaller, they might need to seek refuge in a harbour more often, and some ships were intentionally beached for maintenance and repairs. Thus, nearly any protected bay or flat beach might be of interest to mariners, not only for safe harbour but also as previous coastal reconnaissance.
The straight lines criss-crossing many portolan charts represent the thirty-two directions (or headings) of the mariner's compass from a given point. This is similar to the compass rose displayed on later maps and charts. Naming or demonstrating all thirty-two points is called boxing the compass.
The portolan combined the exact notations of the text of the periplus or pilot book with the decorative illustrations of the conceptual T and O map. In addition, the charts offered a realistic depiction of the shore, and they were meant for practical use by a mariner of the period.
Portolans failed to take into account the curvature of the earth; as a result, they were unhelpful in crossing the open ocean, as navigational tools. Instead they derived their use in close quarters identification of landmarks. Portolani were useful for navigation in smaller bodies of water, such as the Mediterranean, Black, or Red Seas.
The oldest extant portolan is the Carta Pisana, dating from approximately 1296. The cartographer Angelino Dulcert produced a portolan in 1339.