Showing posts with label Atlas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlas. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Irancarto

 [First posted in AMIR 13 November 2011. Updated 25 January 2012]

Irancarto
http://www.irancarto.cnrs.fr/data/preface/title_fr.png
Irancarto est un site de recherche consacré aux études cartographiques sur l’Iran et le monde iranien actuel ou passé : société, démographie, économie, politique, culture, histoire, linguistique, arts, villes, campagnes...


Irancarto publie des cartes d’archive, des atlas et de nouveaux travaux géographiques.
L’actualité sur les ressources et les recherches cartographiques en cours sur le monde iranien est consultable dans le volume Bazarcarto. 


Irancarto est publié à Paris par l’Unité mixte de recherche 7528 Mondes Iranien et Indien (CNRS, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, INALCO, EPHE).


Irancarto is a scientific research website devoted to cartographic studies on Iran and the Iranian world current or past: society, demography, economics, politics, culture, history, language, arts, cities, countryside...


Irancarto publishes new cartographic studies and digital editions of previously printed atlases.
Bazarcarto is a hub of information and exchange for Iranian cartography.


Irancarto is published in Paris by Mondes Iranien et Indien (Joint Research Unit 7528: CNRS, University Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle, INALCO, EPHE).


ایران کارتو: این وب سایت به نقشه ها و نمایش جغرافیایی پژوهشهای علمی در باره ایران و جهان ایرانی (زمان حال یا گذشته) اختصاص داده شده. این پژوهشها زمینه های گوناکونی را در مقیاس های روستا، شهر، استان و ... پوشش میدهند از جمله زمینه های پژوهشی در باره جامعه، جمعیت شناسی، اقتصاد، سیاست، فرهنگ، تاریخ، زبان، هنر و ...
ایران کارتو: نسخه آنلاین اطلسهای چاپ شده و نقشه های آنلاین پژوهشهای تازه.
بازارکارتو:میدانی آنلاین برای داد و ستد پژوهشی و گفتگو درباره نقشه ها و نمایش جغرافیایی پژوهشهای علمی.

Sommaire

1. Bazarcarto
2. Atlas d'Iran 1998
3. Atlas de Téhéran métropole
4. Atlas de l'Iran rural
5. Atlas d'Iran 2006
6. Démographie
7. Politique Economie Société
8. Histoire
9. Langues et linguistique
10. Ethnologie : Alborz central
11. Ethnologie : Zâgros

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Holy Land Maps from the Eran Laor Cartographic Collection

Holy Land Maps from the Eran Laor Cartographic Collection
http://www.jnul.huji.ac.il/dl/maps/pal/html/SharedImages/LS/Header.jpg
The Holy Land has been the subject of a relatively large number of maps, chiefly due to its religious importance. Some of the earliest maps reflected ancient traditions of mapping such as that of Ptolemy; others were meant to illustrate the Holy Scriptures. Some maps were printed separately; while others were published as part of atlases, itineraries and travel books. Owners who could afford the expense added coloring to their maps.

Many maps of the Holy Land are oriented to the east (orient=from the Latin word for east), reflecting the view point of European mapmakers looking in the direction of the Holy Land. However, there are a few maps oriented to the south, and to the west and naturally to the north. Many Biblical elements from the Old and New Testament can be traced in the maps, such as the route of the Exodus, the Tabernacle, the division of the Land among the Tribes, Moses and Aaron, the travels of Jesus and the Apostles, and others. Toward the end of the 18th century a new genre of maps emerged, characterized by the diminished use of pictorial elements. These were replaced by symbols such as letters and numbers, for example to mark the Tribes. The legends appear in the margins.

The introduction of surveying at the beginning of the 19th century brought about a significant change in the mapping of the Holy Land. Maps by Jacotin, a cartographer who accompanied Napoleon on his journey to Egypt and Palestine, were the first to be based upon scientific measurements. Later researchers such as Robinson, Kiepert and Van de Velde produced scientific maps, and in 1880, the Palestine Exploration Fund produced more accurate maps, thereby firmly establishing the basis of scientific Holy Land research.

This beautiful collection of ancient maps of the Holy Land is part of a much larger collection that includes ancient maps of the world, early printed atlases and travel books. The entire extraordinary collection was donated by its renowned owner, Eran Laor in 1975 to the Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem. The late Mr. Laor is the author of: Maps of the Holy Land, New York, 1986.

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