The phantom atlas The greatest myths, lies and blunders on maps

Edward Brooke-Hitching

Book - 2018

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Subjects
Genres
Maps
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Edward Brooke-Hitching (author)
Item Description
"First published in Great Britain in 2016 by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd. A CBS company"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
256 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781452168401
  • Introduction
  • Strait of Anian
  • Antillia
  • Atlantis
  • Aurora Islands
  • Australia's Inland Sea
  • Bermeja
  • Bradley Land
  • Buss Island
  • City of the Caesars
  • Sea Monsters of the Carta Marina
  • Island of California
  • Cassiterides
  • Crocker Land
  • Croker's Mountains
  • Davis Land
  • Isle of Demons
  • Dougherty Island
  • Earthly Paradise
  • El Dorado
  • Flat Earth
  • Fonseca
  • Formosa (of George Psalmanazar)
  • Fusang
  • Gamaland and Compagnies Land
  • Great Ireland
  • Great River of the West
  • Groclant
  • Hy Brasil
  • Java La Grande
  • Juan De Lisboa
  • Lost City Of The Kalahari
  • Mountains Of Kong
  • Korea as an Island
  • Lost Continents of Lemuria and Mu
  • Maria Theresa Reef
  • Mayda
  • Mountains of the Moon
  • Lands of Benjamin Morrell
  • Norumbega
  • Creatures of the Nuremberg Chronicle Map
  • Patagonian Giants
  • Pepys Island
  • Territory Of Poyais
  • Kingdom of Prester John
  • Rhipaean Mountains
  • Rupes Nigra
  • St Brendan's Island
  • Sandy Island, New Caledonia
  • Sannikov Land
  • Satanazes
  • Saxenburgh Island
  • Sea of the West
  • Taprobana
  • Terra Australis
  • Thule
  • Sunken City of Vineta
  • Wak-Wak
  • Phantom Lands of the Zeno Map
  • Select Bibliography
  • Index
  • Acknowledgements and Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This collection of cartographic errors from maps throughout history provides an entertaining glimpse into the spread of misinformation during the age of exploration. Brooke-Hitching (Fox Tossing) arranges his subjects alphabetically and begins with the "Strait of Anian," a misconceived western terminus to the Northwest Passage from the 14th century, and ends with the "Zeno Map," based on an unsubstantiated exploration of the North Atlantic by the Zeno brothers in the 15th century. Reproductions of mistaken maps accompany each entry, along with theories of the errors' possible origins and accounts of their final erasures from the annals of geography. Some entries are for places that exist, but at one point were improperly described, as with a California that appears as its own island on hundreds of maps from the 17th and 18th centuries, a mistake that the author tracks back to the 1602 voyage of Sebastian Vizcaíno. Though much of the book covers familiar ground in documenting accounts of nonexistent lands such as Atlantis, El Dorado, Hy Brasil, and Thule, a section on the fantastic creatures, including the Sea Pig and the Hippocentaur, that appear in the marginalia of many maps sets this atlas apart from the mass of other books on the subject. Cartophiles will find much to amuse themselves. Color illus. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this atlas of the world "as it was thought to be," cartophile Brooke-Hitching documents the persistence of fictitious places-Sandy Island in the eastern Coral Sea, for example, "existed" a full seven years after the launch of Google Maps. Early ghost places are understandable, explains the author-maps exaggerating the might of God's creation were common in the Middle Ages, for instance, and the dearth of accurate instruments on early ships are another culprit, as sailors often took mirages or clouds as landforms. Maps showing such intentional or accidental slips are apparently legion, and 58 of them, marking well-known "places" such as Atlantis as well as real locations that were mapped incorrectly ("Korea as an Island") are reproduced in color here, with the mistake (or wholesale fabrication) outlined in a few absorbing pages per entry. Additional images provide magnified views of portions of maps and period paintings, engravings, etc. The images are small, sometimes making map labels illegible, though as this is more a browsing item than a scholarly one, it is still suitable as a library purchase. VERDICT An intriguing look at how maps can shape our worldview; optional for history collections.-Henrietta Verma, National Information Standards Organization, Baltimore © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.