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The Story of Maps
List Price: $18.95
Our Price: $12.89
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Manufacturer: Dover Publications
Author: Lloyd A. Brown
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 1980-02-01
Publisher: Dover Publications
Label: Dover Publications
Number Of Pages: 464
Features:
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Editorial Review:
The first authoritative history of maps and the men who made them. The historical coverage of this volume is immense: from the first two centuries A. D. — Strabo and Ptolemy — through the end of the 19th century, with some discussion of 20th-century developments. 86 illustrations. Extensive notes and bibliography.
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Customer Reviews
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THE hiSTORY OF MAPS 2005-12-30 Brown writes The Story of Maps in a timeline through the developing and discoveries of cartography. It starts with a guy named Strabo who talks about his thoughts of Alexandria the city he was entering, first he talks about the history, astrology, and mythology of the world and Alexandria. The astronomy and mythology of the world in other people's views are made witch makes up the whole first chapter. The second chapter talks about the Tropics of Capricorn and Cancer, other lines and other ways to divide the earth. Then the world through Ptolemy view was told and how it was wrong (3rd Chapter). The middle ages or the "dark age" of cartography came when church beliefs and folklore "made" maps (4th). After time and chapters through charts, printing presses, Mercator projections, devices, circumference, and surveys developed into making a map of the world. At the end of the book it tells an awesome event that took place that captured my liking of the book that I think it will to you. Brown is an excellent writer who shows everyone's views and beliefs even though they might be wrong but that is history. That makes the book more interesting because back then they thought everything was explored and there was no more advancement in technology but they're were wrong. Maybe now there is more to explore in the world and technology can advance. Brown shows and tells how cartography expanded and evolved through out history. Lloyd A. Brown writes a book worth its read only or mostly if you are interested in history, cartography and mythology and astrology. The book maybe long but its very interesting how Brown uses words of people, pictures of old maps and facts to make a wonderful book showing the history and evolution of map making.
no había 2005-10-17 ustedes me dijeron que no tenian el libro,.¿que comentario quieren de lago que no me enviaron?
Great information but many flaws too 2005-07-29 I found reading this to be a mixed experience. Basically the book contains a historical study of cartography, from its ancient origins to 1945ish when it was written. It is an overview of largely the development of ideas and the social conditions that existed at the time in terms of cartography (and the obviously related geography and astronomy).
Its main strength is the detail of description of social conditions, especially in terms of trade and empires from the 1500s and onwards, and how this impacted mapmaking and cartography. Thus, it does not present the "science" of it in isolation. It is also very good at describing the achievements of major figures in cartography, especially Ptolemy, Mercator and John Harrison. For all these, it's definitely a worthwhile read.
And now to the flaws. It contains TOO much social context and not enough science (I think) to be a standalone work in cartography. There is much discussion on longitude and latitude but nothing on the mechanics of projections and surveying - two very important gaps. The book also seems to perpetuate the myth (or at least the exaggeration) that most people in Europe believed in a flat earth for a very long time in the middle ages. It greatly exaggerates this devoting many pages to showing how stupid the medievals were by pointing to several authors/mapmakers. The reality is that while some of them were, looking at a T and O map (or any symbollic medieval map) and figuring that the creator was a flat-earther is jumping to comclusions. Also, these authors seem to have been much lower in prominence than suggested. The book never states then how Europe "snapped out" of this belief again, the spherical earth just kinda reappears on the pages at some point WAY after the most conservative estimate of when this reappearance would have occured if it did.
Ultimately, this is a good work but very dated in terms of its scholarly approach and the rest. Even the seemingly tangential statement by the author that a Jewish teacher called Jesus was put to death by the Sanhedrin with Pilate merely tacitly approving or not stopping it shows that the text is a product of its time.
With a grain of salt, much can be gleaned from this. Without such a grain, there are probably a host of better introductions to cartography.
Lloyd A. Brown's classic work in the field of cartography 2002-12-21 As we learned from the example of Americo Vespucci, make a really good map and half the world can be named after you. In "The Story of Maps," Lloyd A. Brown provides an authoritative history of both maps and mapmakers, from the work of Strabo and Ptolemy to the 19th-century. Brown's treatise on the science of cartography and the men who set out to map the World was originally published in 1949. "The Story of Maps" is one of the standard early references for map collectors and a basic work in any cartographic reference collection. Brown covers both why maps were necessary and how they changed the world they were mapping out by impacting the economics and politics of nations (Brown's critique of the Portuguese is particularly compelling). This book contains over 80 illustrations, both photographs and drawings, which, unfortunately, suffer from being reduced in such a small format, especially for someone like me whose eyes and not what they once were, because once Brown explains the history behind such maps they are eminently more fascinating to pour over (albeit with a magnifying glass in my case).
Loved this book 2002-06-12 Extremely well written and entertaining book. Anyone who is interested in maps should read it.
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