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| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Substantial Jun 28, 2006 This book is suitable for a coffee table, but also could be considered a college planning course text book. As a geographer, I found this book intriging and filled with information about the development of cities, as well as many maps, both modern and historic.
5 of 17 found the following review helpful:
A thin, lazy, uninteresting book Jun 22, 2006 The worst anthology of maps I have ever encountered, lacking depth or a point of view, and with no historical or cartographic intelligence. How can you reveal anything about a place ot a culture with two maps? How can you pretend to say anything about Rome or its cartographic history without Nolli's 1748 masterpiece? A ridiculous effort.
13 of 13 found the following review helpful:
A Unique Way to Show History Mar 10, 2006 The author has collected some 150 maps from the history of about sixty cities from around the world. I expected these maps to be beautiful works of art, but I didn't expect that the differences in the maps would show much more than that. The nature of the maps seem to show a lot about how the map maker viewed the city. The maps date from several hundred years ago when map makers were not all using Mercator projection in a more or less standard fashion.
Here are maps of many styles. Some show the roads of a city, some show the fortifications, some are more concerned with making a pictorial representation of the city. ==As the subtitle of the book says, here in only a few pages the history of the city can be seen. The cities grow, and the view of the city changes with the will and skill of the map maker.
This book gives me a completely different view of maps and what they can show. Highly recommended.
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