ABSTRACT

This book shows how travellers and scholars since Roman times have put together their maps of the land east of the River Jordan. It traces the contribution of Roman armies and early Christian pilgrims and medieval European travellers, Crusading armies, learned scholars like Jacob Ziegler, sixteenth-century mapmakers like Mercator and Ortelius, eighteenth-century travellers and savants, and nineteenth-century biblical scholars and explorers like Robinson and Smith, culminating in the late-nineteenth century surveyors working for the Palestine Exploration Fund. This original and valuable book shows, with full illustrations, how maps of the Transjordan region developed through the centuries, and with its detailed tables and bibliography will aid future scholars in further research.The author took part in archaeological excavations and surveys in Jordan, was Associate Professor of Biblical Studies and Fellow at Trinity College Dublin, has published research papers and books on ancient Jordan. John Bartlett  was the editor of the Palestine Exploration Quarterly, and until recently was the Chairman of the Palestine Exploration Fund.

chapter Two|22 pages

Medieval Scholars, Travellers and Mapmakers

chapter Three|15 pages

The First Printed Maps

chapter Five|23 pages

The Sixteenth-Century Cartographers

chapter Six|5 pages

Seventeenth-Century Publications

chapter Seven|8 pages

John Speed and Thomas Fuller

chapter Ten|13 pages

The Triangulation of Transjordan

chapter Eleven|15 pages

The Modern Identification of Ancient Sites