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ISBN: HB: 9780226316376

University of Chicago Press

February 1995

998 pp.

27.9x21.5 cm

40 colour plates, 503 halftones

HB:
£250,00
QTY:

Categories:

History of Cartography, Volume 2, Book 2

Cartography in the Traditional East and Southeast Asian Societies

The monumental "History of Cartography" is an unprecedented survey of the development of cartography both as a science and an art. This essential reference presents the enormous value of maps to societies worldwide and explores the many ways they have been used to depict the earth, sky, and cosmos from ancient times to the present.

Volume 2, book 2, considers the cartographic traditions of China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Tibet, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, and the Philippines, presenting significant new research and interpretation of archaeological, literary, and graphic sources. Richly illustrated with forty color plates and over five hundred black and white illustrations, the book includes a number of rare and elaborate maps, many previously unpublished.

Reviews

"[The six-volume set] is certain to be the standard reference for all subsequent scholarship. The editors... have assembled and analyzed a vast collection of knowledge... If the first volume is an indication, the complete set will be comprehensive and judicious" – John Noble Wilford, New York Times Book Review

"As well as enlarging the mind and lifting the spirits through the sheer magnitude of its endeavor, the collection delights the senses. The illustrations are exquisite: browsing fingers will instinctively alight on the sheaf of maps reproduced on stock slightly thicker than that of the text. The maps are so beguiling in the tantalizing glimpses they offer of other, seemingly incomprehensible, worlds, that the sight of them will stir the connoisseur in even the most-guarded scholar" – Ronald Rees, Geographical Review

"The corpus it brings to light, along with the extensive references, bibliography, and exhaustive appendices containing valuable comments about many of the pieces discussed, together make this book an important resource for the scholar" – Robert Provin, Professional Geographer