Slowly at first, new maps were added to printed editions, for example, to Francesco Berlinghieri's 'Geographia' (1482) and the Ulm Ptolemy (of the same year).
The fourth edition of the Rome Ptolemy, published in 1508, was the first to include a world map incorporating the new discoveries. A less successful alternative, used by Bernard Sylvanus in 1511, was to try and combine, on each regional map, the Ptolemaic corpus with more modern materials.