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Book cover image of Map Book by Peter Barber

Authors: Peter Barber
ISBN-13: 9780802714749, ISBN-10: 0802714749
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Walker & Company
Date Published: November 2005
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Peter Barber

Peter Barber trained as a diplomatic historian. He has published extensively on medieval world maps, and on map use and the relationship between mapping and government in the early modern period. In addition to being Head of Map Collections at the British Library, he is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Geographical Society, and an honorary editorial board member of Mapforum.

Book Synopsis

'Journey over all the universe in a map, without the expense and fatigue of traveling, without suffering the inconveniences of heat, cold, hunger, and thirst.' --Miguel de Cervantes, in Don Quixote

 

From the earliest of times, maps have fired our imaginations and helped us make sense of our world, from the global to the very local.  Head of Map Collections at the British Library, Peter Barber has here compiled an historic and lavish atlas, charting the progress of civilization as our knowledge of the world expanded.

 

Simply organized as a progression through time, The Map Book collects some 175 maps that span four millennia - from the famed prehistoric Bedolina (Italy) incision in rock from around 1500 B.C. to the most modern, digitally enhanced rendering.  Many of the maos are beautiful works of art in their own right.  From Europe to the Americas, Africa to Asia, north to south, there are maps of oceans and continents charted by heroic adventurers sailing into the unknown, as accounts spread of new discoveries, shadowy continents begin to appear n the margins of the world, often labeled 'unknown lands.'  Other maps had a more practical use: some demarcated national boundaries or individual plots of land; military plans depicted enemy positions; propaganda treatises showed one country or faction at an advantage over others.

 

So much history resides in each map--cultural, mythological, navigational--expressing the unlimited extent of human imagination.  This is captured in the accompanying texts--mini essays by leading map historians--that are as vivid and insightful as the maps themselves.  They make The Map Book as much a volume to be read as to be visually admired.

Library Journal

In the fine tradition of J.R. Short's The World Through Maps: A History of Cartography (Firefly) and Peter Whitfield's New Found Lands: Maps in the History of Exploration (Routledge), Barber (head of Map Collections, British Library) has assembled yet another feast for the eyes of map mavens. More than 165 maps are chronologically arranged in this beautiful volume, each with a descriptive and interpretative text by one of 68 international scholars. They are divided into sections by four essays: "Map Signs" (the pictorial vocabulary of maps), "Maps, Mankind & Morality" (maps with a moral message), "Maps, Mammon & Monarchs" (maps in the service of empire building), and "Maps & Design" (maps as propaganda and corporate tools). Globes are included as well as such unusual items as a folding map screen fashioned to reduce drafts in the home of a London merchant. The survey ends with a remote sensing image of Mount St. Helens and the question brought on by the convergence of modern technologies: "So what makes a map a map?" Bottom Line This handsome collection of antique and modern cartography, brilliantly reproduced in full color, is highly recommended for all libraries, particularly those with cartographical or related collections.-Edward K. Werner, St. Lucie Cty. Lib. Syst., Ft. Pierce, FL Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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