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Cartographic Bibliography 1 *Abeydeera, A., “The Portuguese Quest for Taprobane”, 4 pp. *Adams, Percy G., Travelers and Travel Liars, 1660-1800, Dover Publications, N.Y., 1980 reprint of 1962 edition, 292pp. *“A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane” *Aggeev, F., “Origin of Portulans and Accurate Ancient Maps”, State University of Land Use Planning, 2016, 56 pp. AlaíI, Cyrus, “The world map of Qazwini”, IMCoS Journal, 52, 1993, pp. 19-23. *The Agile Rabbit Book of Historical and Curious Maps, Pepin Press, 127pp. *Akalin, Sukru Haluk, One Thousand Years Ago, One Thousand Years Later: Mahmud Kasgari and Diwan Lugat at-Turk, Turkish Language Association Publications, Ankara, 2010, 160pp. *AlaíI, Cyrus, “Oriental medieval maps of the Persian Gulf”, The Map Collector, 60, 1992, pp. 2-8 *Albu, Emily (2005). “Imperial Geography and the Medieval Peutinger Map”, Imago Mundi, 57:2, 136-148. Almagia, Roberto, Monumenta Cartographica Vaticana, Vatican City, 1944-55, 4 vols. *Allen, John L., "Lands of Myth, Waters of Wonder: The Place of the Imagination in the History of Geographical Exploration". *Allen, Phillip, The Atlas of Atlases, Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Publishers, N.Y., 1992, 160pp. *Al-Masudi, MapHist Disciussion Group, 6pp. *Andrews, M.C., "The Study and Classification of Medieval MappaMundi", Archeaologia, vol. LXXV, pp. 61-76,1925-26. *“A Newly Found World Map of Macrobius”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 9 (1952), pp. 93-94. *Appleton, Helen, “The Northern World of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 32pp. *“Arabic Cartography, the world centered on Bagdad”, 4 pp. Arentzen, Jorg-Geerd, Imago Mundi Cartographica: Studien zur Bildlichkeit mittelalterlicher Welt- und ÷kumenekarten unter besonderer Beruksichtigung des Zusammenwirkens von Text und Bild, Munstersche Mittelalter-Schriften 53. Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1984. *Ayusawa, Shintaro, "The Types of World Maps Made in Japan's Age of National Isolation", Imago Mundi, Vol. X, pp. 123-128. *Babcock, W.H., Legendary Islands of the Atlantic, 1975 reprint of 1922 #8 American Geographical Society Research Series, Book for Library Press, N.Y. (a study in medieval geography). *Barber, Peter, The Map Book, Levenger Press, Walker & Co., NY, 2005, 360pp. *Barber, P., “The Evesham World Map: A Late Medieval English View of God and the World”, 20pp. *Baddeley, J.F., “Father Matteo Ricci’s Chinese World Maps, 1584-1608”, R.G.S. Journal, vol. L (1917). *Bagrow, Leo, History of Cartography, revised ~ enlarged by R.A. Skelton, Harvard University Press, London: C.A. Watts, 1964; republished and enlarged Chicago: Precedent Publishing, 1985, 312pp. *Bagrow, L., “Rüst's and Sporer's World Maps, Imago Mundi, Vol. 7 (1950), pp. 32-36. *Bagrow, L., “The Maps from the Home Archives of the Descendants of a Friend of Marco Polo”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 5 (1948), pp. 3-13. *Bagrow, Leo, “The Origin of Ptolemy's Geographia”, Geografiska Annaler 27 (1945): pp. 318-87. *Baigent, Elizabeth, “The Rediscovery of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the Thirteenth to End of the Fifteenth Century). *Baizerman, Michael, “The Enigma of the Antipodes: Medieval Fantasy” *Bake, Jill Withrow, “The Maps that Columbus Used”, 21pp. *Barringer, Levi, “Other Topologies/ Transversal Power Across the Body-Map” *Baumgartner, Ingrid Nirit Ben-Aryeh Debby and Katrin Kogman-Appel, “Maps and Travel in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period” 32 pp. *BaytonWilliams, R., Investing in Maps, Transworld Publishers Ltd., Corgi Books, 1969, 160pp.

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Page 1: Cartographic Bibliography - Index to Maps & Monographs › gen-biblio2.pdf · *Braun/Hogenber, Cities of the World, Civitates Orbis Terrarum, 2011, 504pp. *Bremmer, Rolf H., “Inventing

Cartographic Bibliography

1

*Abeydeera, A., “The Portuguese Quest for Taprobane”, 4 pp. *Adams, Percy G., Travelers and Travel Liars, 1660-1800, Dover Publications, N.Y., 1980 reprint of 1962 edition, 292pp. *“A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane” *Aggeev, F., “Origin of Portulans and Accurate Ancient Maps”, State University of Land Use Planning, 2016, 56 pp. AlaíI, Cyrus, “The world map of Qazwini”, IMCoS Journal, 52, 1993, pp. 19-23. *The Agile Rabbit Book of Historical and Curious Maps, Pepin Press, 127pp. *Akalin, Sukru Haluk, One Thousand Years Ago, One Thousand Years Later: Mahmud Kasgari and Diwan Lugat at-Turk, Turkish Language Association Publications, Ankara, 2010, 160pp. *AlaíI, Cyrus, “Oriental medieval maps of the Persian Gulf”, The Map Collector, 60, 1992, pp. 2-8 *Albu, Emily (2005). “Imperial Geography and the Medieval Peutinger Map”, Imago Mundi, 57:2, 136-148. Almagia, Roberto, Monumenta Cartographica Vaticana, Vatican City, 1944-55, 4 vols. *Allen, John L., "Lands of Myth, Waters of Wonder: The Place of the Imagination in the History of Geographical Exploration". *Allen, Phillip, The Atlas of Atlases, Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Publishers, N.Y., 1992, 160pp. *Al-Masudi, MapHist Disciussion Group, 6pp. *Andrews, M.C., "The Study and Classification of Medieval MappaMundi", Archeaologia, vol. LXXV, pp. 61-76,1925-26. *“A Newly Found World Map of Macrobius”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 9 (1952), pp. 93-94. *Appleton, Helen, “The Northern World of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 32pp. *“Arabic Cartography, the world centered on Bagdad”, 4 pp. Arentzen, Jorg-Geerd, Imago Mundi Cartographica: Studien zur Bildlichkeit mittelalterlicher Welt- und ÷kumenekarten unter besonderer Beruksichtigung des Zusammenwirkens von Text und Bild, Munstersche Mittelalter-Schriften 53. Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1984. *Ayusawa, Shintaro, "The Types of World Maps Made in Japan's Age of National Isolation", Imago Mundi, Vol. X, pp. 123-128. *Babcock, W.H., Legendary Islands of the Atlantic, 1975 reprint of 1922 #8 American Geographical Society Research Series, Book for Library Press, N.Y. (a study in medieval geography). *Barber, Peter, The Map Book, Levenger Press, Walker & Co., NY, 2005, 360pp. *Barber, P., “The Evesham World Map: A Late Medieval English View of God and the World”, 20pp. *Baddeley, J.F., “Father Matteo Ricci’s Chinese World Maps, 1584-1608”, R.G.S. Journal, vol. L (1917). *Bagrow, Leo, History of Cartography, revised ~ enlarged by R.A. Skelton, Harvard University Press, London: C.A. Watts, 1964; republished and enlarged Chicago: Precedent Publishing, 1985, 312pp. *Bagrow, L., “Rüst's and Sporer's World Maps, Imago Mundi, Vol. 7 (1950), pp. 32-36. *Bagrow, L., “The Maps from the Home Archives of the Descendants of a Friend of Marco Polo”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 5 (1948), pp. 3-13. *Bagrow, Leo, “The Origin of Ptolemy's Geographia”, Geografiska Annaler 27 (1945): pp. 318-87. *Baigent, Elizabeth, “The Rediscovery of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the Thirteenth to End of the Fifteenth Century). *Baizerman, Michael, “The Enigma of the Antipodes: Medieval Fantasy” *Bake, Jill Withrow, “The Maps that Columbus Used”, 21pp. *Barringer, Levi, “Other Topologies/ Transversal Power Across the Body-Map” *Baumgartner, Ingrid Nirit Ben-Aryeh Debby and Katrin Kogman-Appel, “Maps and Travel in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period” 32 pp. *BaytonWilliams, R., Investing in Maps, Transworld Publishers Ltd., Corgi Books, 1969, 160pp.

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*Beazley, C.R., The Dawn of Modern Geography: A History of Exploration and Geographical Science from the Conversion of the Roman Empire to A.D. 900, London, 1949 reprint of 1897-1906 edition, 3 volumes. (c) Beazley, C.R., “New Light on Some Medieval Maps”, Geographical Journal 14 (1899): 620-29; 15 (1900): 130-41, 378-89; 16 (1900): 319-329. *Bergreen, L., Over the Edge of the World, Harper Collins Publishers, 2003. Bettex, Albert, Discovery of the World, Simon & Schuster, N.Y., 1960. Bevan, W.L. & Philot, H.W., Medieval Geography, Hereford Cathedral, 1969 reprint of 1873 edition (Hereford Mappamundi). *Black, Jeremy, Great Maps, Smithsonian, DK Publishing, 2014, 256pp. *Black, Jeremy, Great City Maps, Smithsonian, DK Publishing, 2016, 256pp. Black, J.D., Blathwayt Atlas, Brown University Press, 197075, vol. 1 maps, 48 fold; vol. 2 commentary, 235pp. Blakemore, M.J. & Harley, J.B., “Concepts in the History of Cartography: A Review and Perspective”, Monograph 26, Cartographica 17, no. 4 (1980) *Blanding, Michael, The Map Thief, Gotham Books, 2014, 300pp. *Boland, Charles M., They All Discovered America, Doubleday, 1961, 384pp. *Boorstin, Daniel J., The Discoverers, Random House, N.Y., 1983, 745pp. Brice, W.C., "Early Muslim Sea Charts", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, vol. 1, pp. 53-61. *Braun/Hogenber, Cities of the World, Civitates Orbis Terrarum, 2011, 504pp. *Bremmer, Rolf H., “Inventing Frislanda Insula In The Sixteenth Century or How the Venetian Zeno Brothers Manipulated the Map of the North Atlantic”, 2019 *Brentjes, Sonja, “Medieval Portolan Charts as Documents of Shared Cultural Spaces”, 12 pp. *Bricker, C., Landmarks in Mapmaking, A History of Cartography: 2500 Years of Maps and Mapmakers, Elsvier, Amsterdam, 1968, 276pp. *Bridges, Robert S. “On the Edge of the Map: The Search for Portuguese Influence on the Piri Reis Map of 1513”, 34pp. *von den Brinken, Anna-Dorothee, “Monumental Legends on Medieval Manuscript Maps”, Imago Mundi, 42, 1990, pp. 9-25. Brodersen, Kai, Dionysios von Alexandria, das Lied von der Welt (Hildesheim, Zurich, New York: Olms, 1994) Brodersen, Kai, Pomponius Mela, Kreuzfahrt durch die Alte Welt (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1994) *Brooke-Hitching, The Phantom Atlas, Chronicle Books, 2016, 256pp. *Brooks, Michael, “Visual Representations of Prester John and His Kingdom”, 30pp. *Brotton, J., Great Maps, Dorling Kindersley, 2014, 256pp. *Brown, L.A., The Story of Maps, Little Brown, Boston, 1949, reprint: Dover, 1979, 397pp. *Brown, L.A., The World Encompassed, an Exhibition of the History of Maps at the Baltimore Museum of Art, October 7 to November 1952, Baltimore, 125pp. *Bunbury, E.H., A History of Ancient Geography among the Greeks and Romans from the Earliest Ages till the Fall of the Roman Empire, 1883, republished with new introduction by W.H. Stahl, New York: Dover Publications, 1959, 2 vols., 1426pp.(c) *Brunnlechner, Gerda, “The so-called Genoese World Map of 1457: A Stepping Stone Towards Modern Cartography?” Peregrinations, Volume IV, No. 1 (2013), pp. 56-80. Burland, C.A., “American Indian Mapmakers”, Geographical Magazine, 1947. Burris, E.J., Kino and the Cartography of Northwestern New Spain, Arizona Pioneers' Historical Society, Tucson, 1965, 104pp. *Bywater, Robert and Jean-Pierre Lacroix, “East Asian Shorelines on the Piri Reis map of AH 919 (AD 1513)”, 2004 *Callahan, William, “The Cartography of National Humiliation and the Emergence of China’s Geobody”, Public Culture 21:1, 2009, 34 pp.

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*Campbell, Tony, “A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane: A late and inferior copy, or the lone survivor from the portolan charts' formative period?” *Cams, Mario (2017), “Not Just a Jesuit Atlas of China: Qing Imperial Cartography and Its European Connections”, Imago Mundi, 69:2, 188-201. Cao, Wan-Ru, with Zheng Xihuang, An Atlas of Ancient Maps in China, Beijing, Cultural Relics Publishing House, 1990. Cao, Wan-Ru, “Research on Chinaís cartographic history: review for the past 40 years”, Studies in the History of Natural Sciences, 9:3, 1990, pp. 283-289. Cao, Wan-Ru, “A preliminary inquiry into the interchange of maps between China and other countries”, Studies in the History of Natural Sciences, 12:3, 1993, pp. 287-295. *Casson, Lionel, Travel in the Ancient World, The John Hopkins University Press, 1994, 391pp. *Chang, Kueisheng, “Africa and the Indian Ocean in Chinese Maps of the 14th and 15th Centuries”, Imago Mundi, vol. XXIV, pp. 21-30. (c) Cardini, F. (ed.), Europe 1492, Portrait of a Continent Five Hundred Years Ago, Facts-on-File, New York, 1989, 238pp. *Casale, Giancaelo, “The Ottoman Age of Exploration”, 302pp. *Cattaneo, A., Fra Mauro's Mappa Mundi and Fifteenth-Century Venice, Terrarum Orbis, Brepols, 2011, 470pp. *Cattaneo, Angelo, “European Medieval and Renaissance Cosmography: A Story of Multiple Voices”, Asian Review of World Histories 4:1 (January 2016), 35-81. *Cavero, Alicia Migue Lez, Mapping the History of a Map. Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Lorvão Beatus World Map, Portuguese Studies on Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts,2014. *“Central Asia and the Silk Road”, 48 pp. *”Chaldean Conception of the Shape Of The Earth” *Chang, Kueisheng, “The Han Maps: New Light on Cartography”, Imago Mundi, vol. 31, pp. 9-18. *Chang, Kuei-Sheng, “Africa and the Indian Ocean in Chinese Maps of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 24 (1970), pp. 21-30. Chavannes, E., “Les Deux Plus Anciens Specimens de la Cartographie Chinoise”, Bulletin de l’Ecolefrancaise de l’Extreme Orient, Hanoi, 1903, 3, 214.

*Chekin, Leonid S. (1999), “Easter tables and the Pseudo-Isidorean Vatican map”, Imago Mundi, 51:1. *Chekin, I., “The world ocean in medieval cartography”, 5 pp. *“Chinese world cartography before Ricci: the case of the Korean Kangnido”, 2 pp. *Choubey, Awadh Narayan and Taruna Bansal, “Maps and Mapmaking in Medieval Times: A Retrospect”, 7 pp. *Chrysochoou, Dr. Stella A., “Ptolemy’s Geography in Byzantium”, 23pp. *Codazzi, A., “Monumenta Cartographica Vaticana”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 5 (1948), pp. 15-17. *Connolly, Daniel, The Maps of Matthew Paris, Boydell Press, 2009, 270pp. *Connolly, D., “Taken in the Spirit: Imagined Pilgrimage in Medieval Spirituality and Art”, Maps of Matthew Paris, 2009, 15 pp. *Contreras, Veronica, “Globes from Ships to Classrooms”, 28pp. *Cortazzi, Hugh, Isles of Gold, Antique Maps of Japan, Weatherhill, Inc., 1983/92, 177pp. Cortesão, A., The History of Portuguese Cartography, 2 volumes, Coimbra: Junta de Investigacoes do UltramarLisboa, 1969-71. *Cortesao, Armando, “The North Atlantic nautical chart of 1424”, Imago Mundi, 10:1, (1953): 1-13. *Cowan, J. A Mapmaker's Dream, 1996, 152pp. *Crone, G.R., Maps and Their Makers: An Introduction to the History of Cartography, London: Hutchinson,1953, 5th ed., Archon Books, 1978,181pp. (c) *Crone, G.R., “The Hereford Map”, Royal Geographical Society Journal, 1948. Crone, Gerald R., “New Light on the Hereford Map”, The Geographical Journal, 131, part 4, Dec 1965, pp. 447-62. Crone, G.R., The Strange Case of the Vinland Map. *Cumming, Quinn, Hiller, & Williams, Exploration of North America, 1630-1776, New York, 1974.

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*Cumming, W.P., The Southeast in Early Maps, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1962, 284pp. Cumming, W.P., Quinn, D.B., & Skelton, R.A., Discovery of North America, N.Y., 1972. *Davies, A., “Behaim, Martellus and Columbus”, The Geographical Journal (R.G.S.), Nov. 1977, 143, 3, pp. 450-59. (c) *Davies, Surekha, “The Wondrous East in the Renaissance Geographical Imagination: Marco Polo, Fra Mauro and Giovanni Battista Ramusio”, History and Anthropology,Vol. 23, No. 2, June 2012, pp. 215–234. *Davies, Surekha, “America and Amerindians in Sebastian Münster’s Cosmographie universalis libri VI (1550)”, Renaissance Studies, Vol. 25, No.3, pp. 351-373. Daly, C.P., “On the Early History of Cartography; or, What We Know of Maps and Mapmaking before the Time of Mercator”, Annual Address. Bulletin of the American Geographical Society II (1879): 140 *Davies, Arthur (1954), “The Egerton MS. 2803 map and the Padron Real of Spain in 1510”, Imago Mundi, 11:1, 47-52. *Day, J., Maps of Texas, 1827-1900, Austin Pemberton Press, 1964, 156pp. *Dekker, Elly & Peter van der Krogt, Globes from the Western World, Zwemmer, 1993, 183pp. Delano-Smith, Catherine, “Geography or Christianity: Maps of the Holy Land Before 1000”, Journal of Theological Studies, new series, XLII, part 1, April 1991, pp. 143-52. *De Keyzer, Maika, Iason Jongepier, and Tim Soens, “Consuming Maps and Producing Space. Explaining Regional Variations in the Reception and Agency of Mapmaking in the Low Countries during the Medieval and Early Modern Periods”, Journal Continuity and Change, Volume 29, Issue 02, 2014, pp. 209-240. *Delumeau, Jean, History of Paradise: The Garden of Eden in Myth and Tradition, University of Illinois Press, 2000, 288 pp. DeMely, F., “Le 'de Monstris' Chinois et les Bestraires Occidentaux”, Revue Archeologique, 1897 (3e sei), 31, 353. *Destombes, M. (ed.), Mappemondes, A.D. 1200-1500 via Monumenta Cartographica vetustioris aevi,: Catalogue preparte par la Commission des Cartes Anciennes de l'Union Geographique Internationale, N. Israel, 1964 and Imago Mundi, vol. I Supplements, vol. 4, N. Israel (c). *Destombes, M., “The world map of Schönsberger 1496, Imago Mundi, 11:1 (1954), 46-46. *Destombes Marcel (1955), “The chart of Magellan”, Imago Mundi, 12:1, 65-88. *Dilke, O.A.W., Greek and Roman Maps, Thames & Hudson Ltd, London, 1985, 224 pp., 62 illustrations. *Divine, D., The Opening of the New World, G.P. Putman's Sons, N.Y., 1973. (c) *Dragon Tom, “Andreas Walpergers’ Map, 1448”, MapHist Group, 2006. *Drakoulis, Dr Dimitris, “The study of late antique cartography through web base sources”, e-Perimetron, Vol. 2, No. 3, Summer 2007 [16-0-172]. *Dueck, D., Geography in Classical Antiquity, Cambridge University Press, 2012, 141pp. Durand, Dana Bennett, The Vienna-Klosterneuburg Map Corpus of the 15th Century: A Study in the Transition from Medieval to Modern Science, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1952. *Durst, Arthur, “Die Weltkarte von Albertin de Virga von 1411 oder 1415 – Translation”, Cartographica Helvetica, 1996. *Edson, Evelyn, Mapping Time and Space: How Medieval Mapmakers viewed their World, The British Library Studies in Map History, Volume I, 1997, 210pp. Edson, Evelyn, “The oldest world maps: classical sources of three eighth-century mappaemundi”, Ancient World, 24:2, 1993, pp. 169-184. *Edson, Evelyn, “Matthew Paris’ “other” map of Palestine”, The Map Collector, 66, 1994, pp. 18-22. *Edson, Evelyn, The World Map, 1300-1492, The John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2007, 300 pp.

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*Edson, E. and Emilie Savage-Smith, “An Astrologer's Map: A Relic of Late Antiquity”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 52 (2000), pp. 7-29. *Edson, Evelyn, “World maps and Easter tables: Medieval maps in context”, Imago Mundi, 48:1, 25-42 (1996). *Edson, Evelyn, “The Oxford map of Palestine in the work of Matthew Paris”, 7pp. *Emiralioglu, Pınar, “Relocating the Center of the Universe: China and the Ottoman Imperial Project in the Sixteenth Century”, The Journal of Ottoman Studies, 28pp. *Enterline, J.R., Erikson, Eskimos & Columbus, The John Hopkins University Press, 2002, 342pp. *“Early Opinions of the Vinland Map”, 8 pp. *Fadlan, Ibn, Ibn Fadlan and the Land of Darkness, Arab Travelers in the Far North, Penguin Classic, 2012, 239pp. *Falchetta, P. Fra Mauro’s World Map with a Commentary and Translations of the Inscriptions, Brebols, 2006, Terrarum Orbis + CD ROM *Falchetta, P., “Fra Mauro’s World Map: A History”, Imago, 124 pp. *Feng, Linda Rui, “Merging into the map: sources of imagined cartographic efficacy in medieval China”, 10 pp. *Feng, Linda Rui, “Can Lost Maps Speak? Toward a Cultural History of Map Reading in Medieval China”, 4 pp. *Fernandez-Armesto, F. (ed.), The Times Atlas of World Exploration, 3,000 years of Exploring, Explorers and Mapmaking, Times Books/Harper Collins Publishers, N.Y., 1991, 286pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “The Roman Survey of the World Before; After; Legacy” *Fingerhut, Eugene R., Who First Discovered America?, A Critique of Pre-Columbian Voyages, Regina Books, 1984, 147pp. *Ferrar, Michael J., “The Fano Chart of Biblioteca Comunale Federiciana; Analysis and Comparison to Evaluate Origin”, ChFANO/1, 35pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “1457 World Map; Genoese”, 10 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “A Hypothesis in Essay Format Explaining the Origin of the Portolan Charts”. 9 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “Jacobus Russus, 1533 Chart; Chaos Theory”, 28 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “Leather; Vellum; Parchment Drawing and Copying Maps and Charts”, 23 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “Portolan Charts: Construction and Copying”, 23 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “Portolan; The Charts and the Myths”, 16 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “The Nautical Chart by Albino De Canepa, 1480”, 5 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “Wind Rose Construction on a Portolan; Revisions to The Origins of the Charts Format as Drawn”, 22 pp. *Ferrar, M.J., “The 1375 Atlas, Known as Catalan What Has Been Missed In Other Research?”, 10pp. *Ferrar, Michael, “ChJLC1; The 1500AD La Cosa chart analysed and historically detailed” *Firth-Godbehere, Richard, “The Purpose of Maps at the Time of the Crusades”, 11 pp. * Fisher, Doug, “Discovered: Agrippa's Orbis Terrarum on the Bottom of a 16th Century Globe”, 2009, 4pp. Fisher, J. & Wieser, F.R. von, The Oldest Map with the Name America of the Year 1507 and the Carta Marina of the Year 1516 by Martin Waldseemuller, N. Israel, Amsterdam reprint of 1903 Insbruck edition, 64pp. 26 plates. *Fite, E.D., & Freeman, A., A Book of Old Maps Delineating American History from earliest days down to the close of the Revolutionary War, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1926, 299pp. *Fitzgerald, Joseph H., Changing Perspectives: Mapping the Shape of Florida, 1502-1982, a special exhibition at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, 22 September - 18 *Fotheringham, W.H., “On the Thule of the Ancients”, Antiquaries of Scotland, pp. 491-503 *Foys, Martin, Shannon Bradshaw, “Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps” *Foys, M.K., “The Virtual Reality of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 17 pp.

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*Tooley, R.V., “Dictionary of Mapmakers”, Map Collectors' Circle, vols. X/XI, #91/ 99/100/110, 1974/75. *Tooley, R.V., “French Mapping of the Americas, The De l'Isle,Buache, Dezauche Succession (1700-1830)”, Map Collectors' Circle, #33, 1967. *Tooley, R.V., “A Sequence of Maps of America”, Map Collectors' Circle, vol. X, #92, 1973. *Tooley, R.V., “A Sequence of Maps of Africa”, Map Collectors' Circle, #82, 1972. *Tooley, R.V., “One Hundred Foreign Maps of Australia, 1773-1887”, Map Collectors' Circle, #12, 1964. *Tooley, R.V., “Printed Maps of America, Parts I, II, III, & IV”, Map Collectors' Circle, vol. X, #68/69/80/96, 1974. *Tooley, R.V., “Printed Maps of Australia”, Map Collectors' Circle, vol. X, #93, 1973. *Tooley, R.V., “Maps of Africa, a selection of printed maps from the 16th to the l9th century, Part I”, Map Collectors' Circle, #47, 1968. *Tooley, R.V., “Printed Maps of the Continent of Africa and Regional Maps South of the Tropic of Cancer, Parts I & II, 1500-1600”, Map Collectors' Circle, #29/30, 1966. *Tooley, R.V., “Some Portraits of Geographers, and other persons associated with maps”, Map Collectors' Circle, vol. XI, #104/105, 1975. *Tooley, R.V., "Title Pages from the 16th to the l9th Century", Map Collectors' Circle, vol. XI, #107, 1975. *“Top 10 Maps from Muslim Civilisation, when North was South and South was North, towards Mecca” Tozer, H.F., A History of Ancient Geography, 1897, reprinted New York: Biblo and Tannen, 1964. *True, David O., “The Freducci Map of 1514-1515, What it Discloses of Early Florida History”. Tequesta *True, David O., “Some early maps relating to Florida”, Imago Mundi XI, pp. 73-80. Tudeer, L.O.T., “On the Origin of the Maps Attached to Ptolemy’s Geography”, Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. XXXVII, 1917. Uhden, Richard, "Die Weltkarte des Isidorus von Sevilla", Mnemosyne: Bibliotheca Classica Batavia, 3rd ser., III, part 1, 1935-6, pp. 1-28. Uhden, Richard, "Die Weltkarte des Maritianus Capella", Mnemosyne, 3rd ser., III, part 3, 1935-6, pp. 97-124, with fold-out map. *Unger, E., “From Cosmos Picture to the World Map”, Imago Mundi, vol. II, pp.17. (c) Unger, E., “Ancient Babylonian Maps and Plans”, Antiquity 9 (1935): pp. 311-22. *Unger, Richard W., Ships on Maps, Palgrave MacMillan, 2010, 233 pp Unno, Kazutaka, “Bankoku-sekai-igyo-zu” ni tsuite [On the map of all countries and picture of the strange peoples of the world], Biblio: Bulletin of Tenri Central Library, 99, 1992, pp. 20-33 *Van Duzer, Chet, Johann Schöner’s Globe of 1515, American Philosophical Society, 2010 *Van Duzer, C., “Waldseemüller’s World Maps of 1507 and 1516: Sources and Development of his Cartographical Thought”, The Portolan, Winter 2012, pp. 8-20. *Van Duzer, C., “A Newly Discovered Fourth Exemplar of Francesco Rosselli’s Oval Planisphere of c. 1508”, Imago Mundi, 60:2, pp. 195-201. *Van Duzer, C., “Details, Date, and Significance of the Fifth Set of Waldseemüller’s Globe Gores Recently Discovered in the Munich University Library” *Van Duzer, C., “Hic sunt dracones: The Geography and Cartography of Monsters” *Van Duzer, C., Sea Monsters on Medieval and Renaissance Maps, The British Library, 2013. *Van Duzer, C., The World for a King, British Library, 2015, 192pp. *Van Duzer, C., “A Neglected Type of Medieval Mappamundi and its Re-Imaging in the Mare Historiarum (BNF MS LAT. 4915, FOL. 26V)”, Viator 43 No. 2 (2012) 277–302. *Van Duzer, Chet and Ilya Dines, "The Only Mappamundi in a Bestiary Context: Cambridge, MS Fitzwilliam 254”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 58, Part 1: 7–22.

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*Van Duzer, C., “Benedetto Cotrugli's Lost Mappamundi Found—Three Times”, Imago Mundi: 65:1, 1-14. *Van Duzer, Chet, “Nautical Charts, Texts, and Transmission: The Case of Conte di Ottomano Freducci and Fra Mauro”, 65 pp. *Van Duzer, Chet, “The Mythic Geography of the Northern Polar Regions: Inventio fortunata and Buddhist Cosmology”, 12 pp. *Van Duzer, Chet (2010) A Northern Refuge of the Monstrous Races: Asia on Waldseemuller's 1516 Carta Marina”, Imago Mundi, 62:2, 221-23. *Van Duzer, Chet, “Cartographic Invention: The Southern Continent on Vatican MS Urb. Lat. 274, Folios 73v–74r (c.1530)”, Imago Mundi, 59:2, 193-222. *Van Duzer, Chet, Martin Waldseemüller’s ‘Carta marina’ of 1516, Study and Transcription of the Long Legends”, Springer Open, 2020, 155pp. *Van Sertima, They Came Before Columbus, The African Presence in Ancient America, Random House, 1976, 284pp. Vaughn, Richard, ed., The Illustrated Chronicles of Matthew Paris, Cambridge, 1993. *Verdera, Nito “The River System of South America is Shown on the Henricus Martellus Map (1489)”. *Vietor, Alexander O., “A Pre-Columbian Map of the World, Circa 1489”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 17 (1963), pp. 95-96. *Virga, Vincent, Cartographia, Mapping Civilizations, Little, Brown & Co., 2007, 266pp. *Von Den Brincken, Anna-Dorothee, “Monumental Legends on Medieval Manuscript Maps on Designed Capital Letters on Maps of Large Size (Demonstrated from the Problem of Dating the Vercelli Map, Thirteenth Century)”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 42, 9-25. Vrijy Marijke de, The World on Paper, T.O.T. Amsterdam, 1967, l04pp. *Wade, G., “1421 Review”, 13 pp. *Wade, G., “Liu Gang's statement on the purported 1418 map” Wagner, H. R., Cartography of the Northwest Coast of North America to 1800, N. Israel, Amsterdam, 1968 reprint of 1937 edition, 526pp, 13 maps. *Waldseemuller, Martin, Cosmographie Introductio, 1507, Readex Microprint, 1966 (English translation of Joseph Fisher and Franz von Wieser). *Wallis, H. M., “Missionary Cartographers in China”, Geographical Magazine, Sept. 1975, pp. 751-759. *Wallis, Helen (1965), “The influence of Father Ricci on Far Eastern cartography”, Imago Mundi, 19:1, 38-45. *Wallis, H. M. & A. H. Robinson, Cartographic Innovations, An International Handbook of Mapping Terms to 1900, Map Collector Publications Ltd., in association with the International Cartographic Association, 1987. *Wallis, H. M. & S.J. Tyacke, My Head is a Map, essays and memnoirs in honour of R.V. Tooley, Francis Edwards & Carta Press, London, 1973, 148pp. Washburn, W.E. (ed.), Proceedings of the Vinland Map Conference, University of Chicago Press, 1971. Weber, Ekkehard, ed., Tabula Peutingeriana: Codex Vindobonensis 324, Graz, 1976, 2 vols. *Weerdt, Hilde De, “Maps and Memory: Readings of Cartography in Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Song China”, 24 pp. Werckmeister, Otto-Karl, ‘Pain and Death in the St Sever’, Studi Medievali, 3rd ser., XIV, part 2, (1973) 565-626. *Westrem, S.D., The Hereford Map, a Transcription and Translation of the Legends with Commentary, 2001, + CD, Brepols Terrum Orbis, 476pp. *Westrem, S.D., “Learning from Legends on the James Ford Bell Library Mappamundi”, The James Ford Bell Lectures, No. 37. *Westrem, S.D., “Making a Mappamundi: The Hereford Map” *”What is the Size of the Inhabited World?”, 5 pp

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*“What If the Earth is the Sphere?” Wheat, C.I., Mapping the Transmississippi West, 1550-1880, Worcester, Mass., San Francisco Institute of Historical Cartography, 1954, 5 volumes. Whitfield, Susan, Life Along the Silk Road, University of California Press, 1999, 242pp. *Whittington, K., Body-Worlds, Opinicus de Canistris and the Medieval Cartographic Imagination, Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies (PIMS), 212pp, 2014. *Whittington, K., “The Psalter Map: A Case Study in Forming a Cartographic Canon for Art History”, 8 pp. *Wigal, Donald, Historical Maritime Maps, 1290-1699, Parkstone Press, NY, 2000, 264pp Wieder, F.C., Monumenta Cartographica, (reproductions) M. Nijhoff, The Hague,1925-33,126 plates, 5 volumes. *Williams, John Welsley, The Illustrated Beatus, A Corpus of the Illustrations of the Commentary on the Apocalypse, 5 volumes, London, Harvey Miller, 1995. *Williams, John Welsley, "Isidore, Orosius and the Beatus Maps", Imago Mundi, 49, 1997. Williams, John Welsley and Barbara Shailor, eds., A Spanish Apocalypse: The Morgan Beatus Manuscript, New York, 1991, a facsimile of Morgan MS 644. *Winsor, Justin., Narrative and Critical History of America, Houghton Mifflin, Boston,1884-89, 8 volumes. (c) Wilson, The Making of the Nuremberg Chronicle, Nico Israel, 1977, 253pp. *Winter, H., “A Circular Map in a Ptolemaic MS”, Imago Mundi, vol. X, pp.15-22. *Winter, H., “Notes on the World map in “Rudimentum Novitiorum”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 9 (1952), p. 102. *Winter, Heinrich, “The Origin of the Sea Chart”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 13 (1956), pp. 39-44. *Winter, H., “The Fra Mauro Portolan Chart in the Vatican”, 22pp. *Winther, Rasmus Grønfeldt, “Why Maps? When Maps Become the World”, 29pp. *Witt, M.M., “Vincenzo Coronelli as Cartographer”, The Mariners' Mirror: The Journal of the Society for Nautical Research, London, May 1974, 60:2:143-152. (c) *Wittmann, Kevin R., “‘Closest to Where the Sun Sets’: The Fortunate Islands and the Limits of the World in Medieval Geography and Cartography”, 18pp.

*Woldan, Erich (1954) “A circular, copper-engraved, medieval world map”, Imago Mundi, 11:1, 13-16. Wolf, Armin, “News on the Ebstorf World Map: Date Origin, Authorship”, Geographie du Monde au Moyen Age et a la Renaissance, ed. by Monique Pelletier, Paris, 1989, pp. 51-68. *Wolf, Armin, “The Ebstorf Mappamundi and Gervase of Tilbury: The Controversy Revisited”, Imago Mundi: The International Journal for the History of Cartography, 64:1, 1-27. *Wolff, Hanns. (ed.), America, Early Maps of the New World, Prestel, 1992, 192pp. *Wood, Denis, The Power of Maps, Guilford Press, 1992, 248pp. *Woodward, David (ed.), Art & Cartography, University of Chicago Press, 1987, 249pp. *Woodward, David, Five Centuries of Map Printing, University of Chicago Press, 1975, 177pp. *Woodward, D., “The Study of the History of Cartography: A Suggested Framework”, The American Cartographer, vol. 1, no. 2, 1974, pp. 101-115. Woodward, D., “Reality, Symbolism, Time and Space in Medieval World Maps”, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 75, no. 2 (1985), pp. 510-21. *“World's oldest map: Spanish cave has landscape from 14,000 years ago” *Wright, J.K., The Geographical Lore at the Time of the Crusades: A Study in the History of Medieval Science and Tradition in Western Europe, Dover Publications, 1965 reprint of 1925 edition, 535pp. *Wright, J.K., The Leardo Map of the World, 1452 or 1453, American Geographical Society, Library Series #4, 1928. *Wroth, L.C., The Voyages of Giovanni da Verrazano, 1524-28, Yale Univ. Press, 1970. (c) Wroth, L.C., Early Cartography of the Pacific, Bibliographical Society of America Papers, N.Y., 1944, 22 maps. *Wulffson, Don, Before Columbus, Early Voyages to the Americas,

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Xi Huidong, “The Silk Road and East-West Cartographic Exchange from the 14th to the 17th Century”, The Dimension of Civilization, 31 pp. *Yamashita, M., Marco Polo, A Photographer's Journey, White Star Publishers, 2002, 496pp. *Ying-yan, Gong, “On the "Overall Map of the Geography of All Under Heaven" and Zheng He's Fleet”, 34 pp. *Yonah, Avi, “Madaba Mosaic Map”, 3 pp. *Young, Sandra, “Early modern geography and the construction of a knowable Africa”, Atlantic Studies: Global Currents, (2015), 25 pp. *Young-woo, Han, Ahn Hwi-Joon, Bae Woo Sung, The Artistry of Early Korean Cartography, Tamal Vista Publications, Lacksupr, CA, 1999, 210pp. *Zacharakis, C.G., “A Catalogue of Printed Maps of Greece and Greek Regions”, Map Collectors' Circle, vols. X/XI, #98/102, 1974. *Jim Siebold Library