New World. A term used to describe the majority of lands of Earth’s Western Hemisphere, particularly the Americas. The term arose in the early 16th century during Europe‘s Age of Discovery, after Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci published the Latin-language pamphlet Mundus Novus, presenting his conclusion that these lands (soon called America based on Amerigo’s name) constitute a new continent.
This realization expanded the geographical horizon of earlier European geographers, who had thought that the world only included Afro-Eurasian lands. Africa, Asia and Europe became collectively called the “Old World” of the Eastern Hemisphere, while the Americas were then referred to as “the fourth part of the world”, or the “New World.”
Antarctica and Oceania are considered neither Old World nor New World lands, since they were only colonized by Europeans much later. They were associated instead with the Terra Australis that had been posited as a hypothetical southern continent.
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