[MapHist] Map Curators’ Group 2010 Workshop, Cambridge , England, 8-10 September.

2010-05-31 Thread Anne Taylor
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Dear all



Apologies for cross posting.



The *Map Curators’ Group* of the British Cartographic Society is pleased 
to invite map curators, map librarians, archivists and all those charged 
with the care of maps to its *2010 Workshop* at Cambridge University 
Library, in the historic city of Cambridge, England, 8-10 September 2010.




This year’s theme is */Beyond the neat line: More than just geography/*, 
and we’ll be looking at what the marginalia tells us, how early 
mass-produced paper maps were printed, and how digital initiatives are 
giving map users more possibilities than ever before.




*Wednesday 8 September*: join us for five talks this year with our 
speakers from Britain, Europe and America.


Martin Andrews, University of Reading Department of Typography, /18th 
and 19th century map printing processes/


Steve Chilton and Ifan Shepherd, Middlesex University, /Staff carriers 
and bean counters: Unravelling the who and the why of the first 6-inch 
survey of England and Wales/


Marco van Egmond, Map Curator, Utrecht University Library, /Collecting 
digital cartographic data in Utrecht: storage and accessibility/


Matt Knutzen, Geospatial Librarian, The New York Public Library Map 
Division, /m...@nypl: New collaborative methods in (re)presenting 
historical geography/


Richard Oliver, University of Exeter, Honorary Research Fellow in the 
History of Cartography, /20th century Ordnance Survey paper map 
marginalia and metadata/


Following the talks we will hold the MCG’s annual Business Meeting, and 
then delegates are invited to a wine reception at Emmanuel College.




*Thursday 9 September*: Seppe Cassettari and Fiona Cocks of The 
GeoInformation Group will lead two demonstration sessions: /A Beginner’s 
Guide to UKMap/ and /Discovering the Past through Aerial Photography/. 
The GeoInformation Group is a leading provider of high resolution aerial 
photography and geospatial information products, and is also developing 
a large scale database of the UK. After lunch we will have a “Town and 
gown” walking tour of Cambridge, and then delegates have a choice of 
visits to the *Whipple Museum of the History of Science*, whose 
internationally known collection of early scientific instruments 
includes one of the country’s finest collections of globes, or *Gonville 
 Caius College Archive*, where the collections span eight centuries and 
we will view some of their cartographic treasures. Join us in the 
evening for a meal and some collegial networking at a local traditional 
English restaurant.




*Friday 10 September*: a coach will take us to London where the *British 
Library Map Collections* will host our private guided tours of the major 
exhibition /Magnificent Maps: Power, Propaganda and Art/, conducted by 
curators Peter Barber and Tom Harper. We hope to visit the Maps Reading 
Room and the Library’s Treasures Gallery, where even more maps are on 
display.




Come along to see new things, discuss interesting subjects, meet old 
friends and make new ones!




Please see our brochure with full details at 
http://www.cartography.org.uk/downloads/MCG/MCG_Sept2010_brochure_final.pdf 
and our booking form at 
http://www.cartography.org.uk/downloads/MCG/MCG_Sept2010_booking_form_final.pdf. 
Direct online booking on the BCS website will be available at the end of 
June, but booking by post and fax is now open. You may also request an 
invoice for institutional payments. If you wish to book online, please 
contact Anne Taylor via e-mail (address below) with an expression of 
interest and to hold a place.




There is a specially priced offer for those wishing to attend the entire 
MCG event, and a la carte options as well. Early bird booking closes on 
30 July and all booking closes on 27 August, so reserve your place now!




This year the MCG has reserved a limited number of rooms at Robinson 
College, less than five minutes by foot from our main venue. Rooms are 
well appointed and some overlook a lovely garden. Bed and breakfast 
rates for single rooms are £60/night. Book early on the Robinson website 
http://rooms.robinson.cam.ac.uk/BnB/Step1.aspx using the booking 
reference 11159. If delegates wish to book extra nights, or wish to book 
one of the limited number of twin rooms, please contact Anne Taylor 
(details below).




We hope you will join us for this exciting event in the historic city of 
Cambridge!




Anne Taylor
Cambridge University Library, West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DR (Tel: 
01223-333041. Fax: 01223-333160. email: ae...@cam.ac.uk)




--
Anne Taylor
Head of Map Department, Cambridge University Library, West Road, Cambridge CB3 
9DR
Tel: 01223-333041.   Fax: 01223-333160.   email: ae...@cam.ac.uk
http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/deptserv/maps/

!!NOTE NEW VAT NUMBER: G.B. 823 8476 09!!


[MapHist] 'Magnificent Maps' (BL Exhib.): Seld's Augsburg (1521) plan

2010-05-31 Thread Francis Herbert
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Received last week was my copy of Cornerstone : the magazine of the
Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (ISSN 0969-4250), Summer
2010, 31(2). Page 68 carries - as No. 15 of the regular illustrated
series entitled ‘Architecture in art’ - “Map of Augsburg. Jörg Seld,
1521”. The writer is Robin Stummer, Editor of Cornerstone; the whole
plan is there reproduced in blurred reduction, a lower central extract
in legible size. The latter extract is, in fact, adjacent to (and
slightly overlapping) another legible extract of the plan to be seen on
p.54 in ‘the book of the exhibition’ – Peter Barber’s and Tom Harper’s
Magnificent maps : power, propaganda and art (London : The British
Library, 2010), ISBN 978-07123-5092-1 (hardback)/978-07123-5093-8
(paperback) – part of the pp.54-55 double-spread essay ‘A free imperial
city’ (with larger image of the complete plan, it should be added).

 

‘A Lert’ of London

(aka Francis Herbert)

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[MapHist] Newspaper article: 'Fun facts unfold in the Maryland state map'

2010-05-31 Thread Helen Glazer
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whole list)
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Road map aficionados will enjoy this affectionate tribute to the latest
edition of the official Maryland state road map in today¹s Baltimore Sun:

³Fun facts unfold in the Maryland state map²
Find your way from here to there with the free highway map
By Michael Dresser

http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/commuting/bs-md-dresser-getting-there31
-20100531,0,3820591.story

--Helen

ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø
Helen Glazer, Creative Director
George Glazer Gallery
http://www.georgeglazer.com
Antique Globes, Maps  Prints
ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø ø

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MapHist: E-mail discussion group on the history of cartography
hosted by the Faculty of Geosciences, University of Utrecht.
The statements and opinions expressed in this message are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the University of
Utrecht. The University of Utrecht does not take any responsibility for
the views of the author.
List Information: http://www.maphist.nl

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