ABSTRACT

This illustrated work is intended to acquaint readers with the early maps produced in both Europe and the rest of the world, and to tell us something of their development, their makers and printers, their varieties and characteristics. The authors' chief concern is with the appearance of maps: they exclude any examination of their content, or of scientific methods of mapmaking. This book ends in the second half of the eighteenth century, when craftsmanship was superseded by specialized science and the machine. As a history of the evolution of the early map, it is a stunning work of art and science.

This expanded second edition of Bagrow and Skelton's History of Cartography marks the reappearance of this seminal work after a hiatus of nearly a half century. As a reprint project undertaken many years after the book last appeared, finding suitable materials to work from proved to be no easy task. Because of the wealth of monochrome and color plates, the book could only be properly reproduced using the original materials. Ultimately the authors were able to obtain materials from the original printer Scotchprints or contact films made directly from original plates, thus allowing the work to preserve the beauty and clarity of the illustrations.

Old maps, collated with other materials, help us to elucidate the course of human history. It was not until the eighteenth century, however, that maps were gradually stripped of their artistic decoration and transformed into plain, specialist sources of information based upon measurement. Maps are objects of historical, artistic, and cultural significance, and thus collecting them seems to need no justification, simply enjoyment.

chapter 1|6 pages

Maps of primitive peoples

chapter 2|10 pages

Cartography in the ancient world

chapter 3|13 pages

The Christian Middle Ages

chapter 4|8 pages

Islamic cartography

chapter 5|8 pages

Mediaeval sea-charts

chapter 6|8 pages

World maps of the later Middle Ages

chapter 7|12 pages

Ptolemy and the Renaissance

chapter 8|10 pages

The first printed maps

chapter 9|6 pages

The end of the Middle Ages

chapter 10|8 pages

The cartography of the Great Discoveries

chapter 11|12 pages

Nautical cartography in the 16th century

chapter 13|36 pages

The mapping of European countries

chapter 14|14 pages

The century of atlases

chapter 15|4 pages

The mapping of America

chapter 16|18 pages

The cartography of Asian peoples