To the ends of the earth : 100 maps that changed the world

by Jeremy Harwood

Other authorsA. Sarah Bendall
Paper Book, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

GA201

Publication

Cincinnati, OH : London : F & W Publications ; Marshall Editions, 2006.

Description

This thought-provoking history of cartography focuses on 100 key maps that changed human understanding of the world around us, changed the course of map-making itself, or directly influenced the path of history. It reveals how different peoples have observed and represented their world through the ages, and explores the human fascination with maps. It addresses how maps have been used for navigation, exploration, wartime propaganda and planning, and to project national goals. A team of academic experts in the history of cartography provides a scholarly and revealing text that addresses the key questions of how, why--and, crucially, if--these maps have changed the world. One hundred of the world's most beautiful and fascinating maps provide the illustrations. The result is a definitive, fact-packed, fresh and lively study that readers, no matter how much or how little they may know about the subject already, will find informative, insightful, and absorbing.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jamespurcell
Looking at the history of civilization through the role maps play in recording same.
LibraryThing member Mapguy314
100 significant maps ancient to modern

Language

Physical description

192 p.; 30 cm

ISBN

1582974640 / 9781582974644

Barcode

34662000851870
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