late medieval map bibliography - cartographic images · (ed.), art and cartography. six historical...

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Medieval Bibliography 1 Late Medieval Map Bibliography *JS Library *Abeydeera, A., “The Portuguese Quest for Taprobane”, 4 pp. (15) *Aggeev, F., “Origin of Portulans and Accurate Ancient Maps”, State University of Land Use Planning, 2016, 56 pp (169) Alaíi, Cyrus, “The world map of Qazwini”, IMCoS Journal, 52, 1993, pp. 19-23. *Alaíi, Cyrus, “Oriental medieval maps of the Persian Gulf”, The Map Collector, 60, 1992, pp. 2-8 *Ala’i, C., “The Map of Mamun”, Mercator’s World, Volume 3, Number 1, pp. 52-57. *Al-Masudi, MapHist Disciussion Group, 6pp. (16) *Andrews, M.C., “The Study and Classification of Medieval MappaMundi”, Archeaologia, vol. LXXV, pp. 61-76,1925-26. *Appleton, Helen, “The Northern World of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 32pp. (214) Arentzen, Jörg-Geerd, Imago Mundi Cartographica: Studien zur Bildlichkeit mittelalterlicher Welt- und Ökumenekarten unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Zusammenwirkens von Text und Bild, Münstersche Mittelalter-Schriften 53. Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1984. *“A Newly Found World Map of Macrobius”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 9 (1952), pp. 93-94. (1) *“Arabic Cartography, the world centered on Bagdad”, 4 pp. (2) *“A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane” (182) 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. (c). *Bagrow, L., “Rüst's and Sporer's World Maps, Imago Mundi, Vol. 7 (1950), pp. 32-36. (17) *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. (18) *Baigent, Elizabeth, “The Rediscovery of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the Thirteenth to End of the Fifteenth Century). (19) *Baizerman, Michael, “The Enigma of the Antipodes: Medieval Fantasy” (10) *Baltimore Museum of Art, The World Encompassed, an Exhibition of the History of Maps at the Museum October 7 to November 1952, Baltimore Museum of Art, 125pp. *Barber, Peter, The Map Book, Levenger Press, Walker & Co., NY, 2005, 360 pp. *Barber, Peter. “The Evesham world map: A late medieval English view of God and the world,” Imago Mundi 47 (1995): 13-33. (20) Barber, Peter, “Visual Encyclopaedias: the Hereford and other Mappae Mundi,” The Map Collector, Autumn 1989, No. 48, Figure on p. 5. *Barringer, Levi, “Other Topologies/ Transversal Power Across the Body-Map” (21) *Baumgartner, Ingrid Nirit Ben-Aryeh Debby and Katrin Kogman-Appel, “Maps and Travel in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period” 32 pp. (195) *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, 1897-1906 edition, 3 volumes. (c)

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Page 1: Late Medieval Map Bibliography - Cartographic Images · (ed.), Art and Cartography. Six Historical Essays, 29. *Edson, Evelyn, Mapping Time and Space: How Medieval Mapmakers viewed

Medieval Bibliography

1

Late Medieval Map Bibliography *JS Library

*Abeydeera, A., “The Portuguese Quest for Taprobane”, 4 pp. (15) *Aggeev, F., “Origin of Portulans and Accurate Ancient Maps”, State University of Land Use Planning, 2016, 56 pp (169) Alaíi, Cyrus, “The world map of Qazwini”, IMCoS Journal, 52, 1993, pp. 19-23. *Alaíi, Cyrus, “Oriental medieval maps of the Persian Gulf”, The Map Collector, 60, 1992, pp. 2-8 *Ala’i, C., “The Map of Mamun”, Mercator’s World, Volume 3, Number 1, pp. 52-57. *Al-Masudi, MapHist Disciussion Group, 6pp. (16) *Andrews, M.C., “The Study and Classification of Medieval MappaMundi”, Archeaologia, vol. LXXV, pp. 61-76,1925-26. *Appleton, Helen, “The Northern World of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 32pp. (214) Arentzen, Jörg-Geerd, Imago Mundi Cartographica: Studien zur Bildlichkeit mittelalterlicher Welt- und Ökumenekarten unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Zusammenwirkens von Text und Bild, Münstersche Mittelalter-Schriften 53. Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1984. *“A Newly Found World Map of Macrobius”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 9 (1952), pp. 93-94. (1) *“Arabic Cartography, the world centered on Bagdad”, 4 pp. (2) *“A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane” (182) 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. (c). *Bagrow, L., “Rüst's and Sporer's World Maps, Imago Mundi, Vol. 7 (1950), pp. 32-36. (17) *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. (18) *Baigent, Elizabeth, “The Rediscovery of Ptolemy’s Geography (End of the Thirteenth to End of the Fifteenth Century). (19) *Baizerman, Michael, “The Enigma of the Antipodes: Medieval Fantasy” (10) *Baltimore Museum of Art, The World Encompassed, an Exhibition of the History of Maps at the Museum October 7 to November 1952, Baltimore Museum of Art, 125pp. *Barber, Peter, The Map Book, Levenger Press, Walker & Co., NY, 2005, 360 pp. *Barber, Peter. “The Evesham world map: A late medieval English view of God and the world,” Imago Mundi 47 (1995): 13-33. (20) Barber, Peter, “Visual Encyclopaedias: the Hereford and other Mappae Mundi,” The Map Collector, Autumn 1989, No. 48, Figure on p. 5. *Barringer, Levi, “Other Topologies/ Transversal Power Across the Body-Map” (21) *Baumgartner, Ingrid Nirit Ben-Aryeh Debby and Katrin Kogman-Appel, “Maps and Travel in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period” 32 pp. (195) *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, 1897-1906 edition, 3 volumes. (c)

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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. *Beazley, Raymond, “Prince Henry the Navigator, the Hero of Portugal and of Modern Discovery, 1394-1460 A.D.” (22)

Bettex, A., The Discovery of the World, pp. 28-32. Bevan, W.L. & Philot, H.W., Medieval Geography, Hereford Cathedral 1969 reprint of 1873 edition (Hereford Mappemundi).

Blumenbach, Ritter, “Beschreibung der ältesten bisher bekannten Landkarte aus Mittelalter im Besitz des Klosters Ebstorf,” Vaterländisches Archiv für Hannoverisch- Braunschweigische Geschichte (Hannover, 1834).

*Brentjes, Sonja, “Medieval Portolan Charts as Documents of Shared Cultural Spaces”, 12 pp. (23) (167) Brice, W.C., “Early Muslim Sea Charts”, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, vol. 1, pp. 53-61. *Bricker, C., Landmarks in Mapmaking, A History of Cartography: 2500 Years of Maps and Mapmakers, Elsvier, Amsterdam, 1968, 276pp. von den Brinken, Anna-Dorothee, “Monumental Legends on Medieval Manuscript Maps”, Imago Mundi, 42, 1990, pp. 9-25. *Brooks, Michael, “Visual Representations of Prester John and His Kingdom”, 30pp. (24)

*Brotton, J., Great Maps, Dorling Kindersley, 2014, 256pp. *Brown, L.A., The Story of Maps, Little Brown, Boston, 1949, 397pp.

*Brown, L. A., The World Encompassed, numbers 9, 10, and 11. *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. (25) Buczek, Karol, The History of Polish Cartography from the 15th to the 18th century, Cracow, 1963; Amsterdam: Meridian, 1982

*Callahan, William, “The Cartography of National Humiliation and the Emergence of China’s Geobody”, Public Culture 21:1, 2009, 34 pp. (212) *Campbell, Tony, “A detailed reassessment of the Carte Pisane: A late and inferior copy, or the lone survivor from the portolan charts' formative period?” (26) 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. *Cattaneo. Angelo, « European Medieval and Renaissance Cosmography: A Story of Multiple Voices », Asian Review of World Histories 4:1 (January 2016), 35-81. *Chekin, I., “The world ocean in medieval cartography”, 5 pp. (28) *Chang, Kueisheng, “Africa and the Indian Ocean in Chinese Maps of the 14th and 15th Centuries”, Imago Mundi, vol. XXIV, pp. 21-30. (27) *Choubey, Awadh Narayan and Taruna Bansal, “Maps and Mapmaking in Medieval Times: A Retrospect”, 7 pp. (29) *Codazzi, A., “Monumenta Cartographica Vaticana”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 5 (1948), pp. 15-17. (30) *Connolly, D., “Taken in the Spirit: Imagined Pilgrimage in Medieval Spirituality and Art”, Maps of Matthew Paris, 2009, 15 pp. (31) *Connolly, Daniel K., The Maps of Matthew Paris: Medieval Journeys through Space, Time and Liturgy, Boydell Press, 2009, 270pp. *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”, R.G.S. Journal, 1948 *Cortesao, Armando, “The North Atlantic nautical chart of 1424”, Imago Mundi, 10:1, (1953): 1-13. (32) *Crone, G.R., “The Hereford World Map, c. 1290”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 5 (1948), p. 14. (33) ight on the Hereford Map”, The Geographical Journal, 131, part 4, Dec 1965, pp. 447-62.

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Crone, Gerald Roe, The world map by Richard Haldingham in Herefort Cathedral . . . (London: Royal Geographical Society, 1954). *“Chinese world cartography before Ricci: the case of the Korean Kangnido”, 2 pp. (186) *“Central Asia and the Silk Road”, 48 pp. (187) *Davies, Surekha, “The Wondrous East in the Renaissance Geographical Imagination: Marco Polo, Fra Mauro and Giovanni Battista Ramusio”, History and Anthropology, 23:2, 215-234 (2012). 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. (34) 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. *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.

Denholm Joung, N., The “Mappa Mundi” of Richard of Haldingham at Hereford, Cambridge, Mass., 1958. *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. Isreal, 1964 and Imago Mundi, vol. I Supplements, vol. 4, N. Isreal. *Destombes, M., “The world map of Schönsberger 1496, Imago Mundi, 11:1 (1954), 46-46. (171)

Drögereit, Richard, “Zur Entstehung der Ebsdorfer Weltkarte,” Lüneburger Blätter 13 (1962). Drögereit, Richard, “Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte und Hildsheim,” Zeitschrift des Vereins für Heimatkunde im Bistum Hildesheim, o. J., pp. 9-44. *Dragon Tom, “Andreas Walpergers’ Map, 1448”, MapHist Group, 2006. (175) Dumrese, Hans, Einführung in die Betrachtung der Ebstorfer Weltkarte (Lüneburg: Peters, 1954).

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. (35)

*Edgerton, Samuel Y., “From mental matrix to mappamundi to Christian Empire,” in: Woodward, Davis (ed.), Art and Cartography. Six Historical Essays, 29.

*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. *Edson, Evelyn, The World Map, 1300-1492, The John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2007, 300 pp. *Edson, Evelyn, “The Oxford map of Palestine in the work of Matthew Paris”, 7pp. (205) *Edson, E. and Emilie Savage-Smith, “An Astrologer's Map: A Relic of Late Antiquity”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 52 (2000), pp. 7-29. (36) *Edson, Evelyn, “World maps and Easter tables: Medieval maps in context”, Imago Mundi, 48:1, 25-42 (1996). (37) *“Early Opinions of the Vinland Map”, 8 pp. (4) *Explorers (Zheng He, Marco Polo, Leek-Green Sea) (184) *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. (39) *Feng, Linda Rui, “Merging into the map: sources of imagined cartographic efficacy in medieval China”, 10 pp. (40)

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*Feng, Linda Rui, “Can Lost Maps Speak? Toward a Cultural History of Map Reading in Medieval China”, 4 pp. (41) *Fernandez-Armesto, F., 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., “1457 World Map; Genoese”, 10 pp. (42) *Ferrar, M.J., “A Hypothesis in Essay Format Explaining the Origin of the Portolan Charts”. 9 pp. (43) *Ferrar, M.J., “Jacobus Russus, 1533 Chart; Chaos Theory”, 28 pp. (44) *Ferrar, M.J., “Leather; Vellum; Parchment Drawing and Copying Maps and Charts”, 23 pp. (45) *Ferrar, M.J., “Portolan Charts: Construction and Copying”, 23 pp. (46) *Ferrar, M.J., “Portolan; The Charts and the Myths”, 16 pp. (47) *Ferrar, M.J., “The Nautical Chart by Albino De Canepa, 1480”, 5 pp. (48) *Ferrar, M.J., “Wind Rose Construction on a Portolan; Revisions to The Origins of the Charts Format as Drawn”, 22 pp. (49 *Ferrar, M.J., “The 1375 Atlas, Known as Catalan What Has Been Missed In Other Research?”, 10 pp. (50) *Firth-Godbehere, Richard, “The Purpose of Maps at the Time of the Crusades”, 11 pp. (51) 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. Isreal, Amsterdam reprint of 1903 Insbruck edition, 64pp. 26 plates. *Ferrar, M.J., “Ch/Ab/1 Andreas Bianco de Veneris me fecit MCCCCXXvj: Atlante Nautico of Andreas Bianco Explained, 31pp. (218) *Fotheringham, W.H., “On the Thule of the Ancients”, Antiquaries of Scotland, pp. 491-503 (217) *Foys, M.K., “The Virtual Reality of the Anglo-Saxon Mappamundi”, 17 pp. (52) *Foys, Martin, Shannon Bradshaw, “Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps” (53) Freedman, J.B., The Monstrous Races in Medieval Art and Thought, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1981. *Fuchs, Walter, “The Mongol Atlas of China”, Monumenta Serica, monograph VIII, Peiping, Fu Jen University, 1946. *Fuchs, Walter, “Was South Africa Already Known in the 13th Century?”, Imago Mundi, vol. X, pp. 5051. (54) *Galichian, R., “A Medieval Armenian T-O Map”, Imago Mundi, 60:1, pp. 87-92. (55) *Galichian, R., Countries South of the Caucasus in Medieval Maps: Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan, Printinfo Art Books, Yerevan and Gomidas Institute, London, 2001, 208pp. (56) *Galichian, R., Historic Maps of Armenia, I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd 2004, 233 pp. (57)

*Galichian, R., “A Medieval Armenian T-O Map”, 9 pp. (58) *Gallez, P., “Walsperger and His Knowledge of the Patagonian Giants, 1448”, Imago Mundi, vol. 33, pp. 91-93. (59) *Gang, Liu, “The Chinese Inventor of Bi-Hemispherical World Map”, 9 pp. (60) *Garcia-Araez Ferrer, H., La Cartogrfia Medieval Y Los Mapamundis de los Beatos, 1998, Inscripcion Registro G.P. Intel. 00/1998/11818, 178 pp. *Gaspar, Joaquim Alves, “Dead reckoning and magnetic declination: unveiling the mystery of portolan charts”, 13 pp. (61) *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”, 47pp. (158) *George, Wilma B., Animals and Maps, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1969, 235pp. *Gies, F., “Al-Idrisi And Roger’s Book”, Saudi Aramco World, Volume 28, No. 4. (62) *Görz, Günther and Norbert Holst, “The Digital Behaim Globe (1492)”, 20 pp. (63)

*Goerz, Guenther and Martin Scholz, “Semantic Annotation for Medieval Cartography: The Example of the Behaim Globe of 1492”, 14 pp. (172)

*Goldie, M. B., The Idea of the Antipodes, Places, People and Voices, Routledge, 2010, 228pp. Gore, S., Indian Maps and Plans (1989), pp. 29, 82-87.

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*Gow, Andrew, ‘Gog and Magog on Mappaemundi and Early Printed Maps: Orientalizing Ethnolography in the Apocalyptic Tradition,’ in Journal of Early Modern History (summer 1996). (162) *Goss, J., The Mapmakers Art, an Illustrated History of Cartography, Rand McNally, 1993, 376pp. *Greenlee, J.W., “Queen of All Islands": The Imagined Cartography of Matthew Paris's Britain”, 108 pp., 2013 (64)

Habib, I., “Cartography in Mughal India”, Medieval India, a Miscellany 4 (1977); India Archives 28 (1979) Hahn-Woernle, Brigit (ed.), Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte (Ebstorf: Kloster Ebstorf, 1987).

*Hale, J., Age of Exploration, Great Ages of Man, Time-Life Books, New York, 1966. (c) *Hansard, William J., “The Cartographic Quest for Prester John”, 24 pp. (210) *Hapgood, C.H., Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings, Evidence of Advanced Civilization in the Ice Age, Chilton Books, N.Y., 1966, 315pp. *Harley, J.B & D. Woodward, History of Cartography, Volume One, Cartography in Prehistoric, Ancient and Medieval Europe and the Mediterranean, University of Chicago Press, 1987, 599pp. *Harley, J.B & D. Woodward, History of Cartography, Volume Two, Book One, Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies, University of Chicago Press, 1992, 567pp. *Harris, Hendon, The Asiatic Fathers of America, Warwick House Publishers, Lynchburg, VA, 1975/2003, 148pp. *Harvey, P.D.A., Medieval Maps, The British Library Board, 1991, 96pp. *Harvey, Paul D.A., ‘The Sawley Map and Other World Maps in Twelfth-Century England’, Imago Mundi, 49 (1997). *Harvey, P.D.A., “The Hereford World Map, Medieval World Maps and their Context”, The British Library, 2006, 8 pp. (66) *Harvey, P.D.A., “The Vinland Map, R. A. Skelton and Josef Fischer”, Imago Mundi Vol. 58, Part 1: 95–99. (67) *Haywood, John, Historical Atlas of the Medieval World, AD 600-1492, Metro Books, NY, 2008. Hermann, A., Die Alteste Chinesischen Weltkarten Ostasiatische Zeitschrift, OA2, 1919, 8, 185. Hermann, A., Die Altesten Chinesischen Karten von Zentral.

Hermann, A., Die Westlander in d. chinesischen Kartographie, . . ., volume 3, pp. 91-406. *Herrera-Casais, Monica, “The 1413–14 Sea Chart of Ahmad al-Tanji”, 26 pp. (68) !

*Hessler, John and Chet Van Duzer, Seeing the World Anew, Library of Congress, Levenger Press, 2012, 112pp + 1507 and 1516 maps. *Hiatt, Alfred, Terra Incognita: Mapping the Antipodes before 1600, University of Chicago Press, 2008, 224pp.

*Hiatt, A., “The Map of Macrobius before 1100”, Imago Mundi, 59: 2, 149-176 *Holland, K., “Looking Beyond: Globalization in the Catalan Atlas of the Fourteenth Century”, 2010, 48 pp. (69) *Hoogvliet, M., “Cartography and Geographical Excursus”, 4 pp. (70)

*Hoogvliet, Margriet, “The Mystery of the Makers: Did Nuns Make the Ebstorf Map?” Mercator’s World, Volume I, no. 6 (1996), 16-24. *Hulbert, H., “An Ancient Map of the World”, American Geographic Society Bulletin, October 1904, pp. 600-605. (c) *“Henricus Martellus Germanus”, 3 pp. *Isidore of Seville, Etymologies, Volumes One and Two, Medieval MS, 2005. *“Islamic Cartography”, 4 pp. (5) Jomard, Edme Francois, Les monuments de la geographie; ou, Recueil d’anciennes cartes europeenes et orientales, (Atlas), Paris: Duprat, etc. 1842-62. Kamal, Prince Youssouf, Monumenta Cartographica Africae et Aegypti, Cairo, 5 volumes, 1926-1951. *Kenzheakhmet, Nurlan, “The Place Names of Euro-Africa in the Kangnido”, 21 pp. (72) *Kimble, G.H.T., “The Laurentian World Map with Special Reference to Its Portrayal of Africa”, Imago Mundi, Vol. 1, 29-33. (73) *Kimble, G.H.T., Geography of the Middle Ages, Russell & Russell, N.Y., 1968, 272pp. (c)

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Kimble, G., Memoir on the Catalan World Map of the R. Biblioteca Estena at Modena, Royal Geographical Society, 1934, l0pp. + map. Kimble, G., “Some Notes on Medieval Cartography, with special reference to M. Behaim's Globe”, Scottish Geographical Magazine, vol. XLIX (1933), pp. 91-98. *Kimble, G., “The Laurentian World Map, with special reference to its portrayal of Africa”, Imago Mundi, vol. I, pp. 29-33. (c) King, G.G., ‘Divagations on the Beatus’, Art Studies, VIII, Part 1 (1930), 3-58.

Klein, P., Der ältere Beatus-Kodex Vitr. 14-1 der Biblioteca Nacional zu Madrid: Studien zur Beatus- Illustration und der spanischen Buchmalerei des 10. Jahrhunderts (Hildesheim: Georg Olms, 1976). *Klein, Andrew W., “Cartographic Imaginings: Mapping Anglo-Scottish Existence in the Late Middle Ages”, 46 pp. (74)

*Kline, N. R., Maps of Medieval Thought the Hereford Paradigm, The Boydell Press, 2001, 261pp. *Kline, N. R., A Wheel of Memory: The Hereford Mappamundi (CD ROM). *Koca, Yasemin Nemlioglu, “Knowledge Sharing among Seamen: 15th – 16th century Latin and Ottoman Portolans of the Mediterranean”, 12 pp. (75) *Kominko, Maja, “The Map of Cosmas, the Albi Map, and the Tradition of Ancient Geography”, Mediterranean Historical Review, 20:2, 163 – 186. (208) *Korhonen, Pekka, “The Geography of Okakura Tenshin”, Japan Review, 2001, 13:107-128. (163) Kramers, J. H., “La question Balkhi-Istahri-Ibn Hawkal et l’Atlas de l’Islam”, Acta Orientalia 10 (1932): 9-30. Kropp, M., “ ‘Kitab al-bad’ wa-t-ta’rih’ von Abu l-Hasan ‘All ibn Ahmad ibn ‘Ali ibn Ahmad As-Sawiial-Fasl und sein Verhältnis zu dem ‘Kitab al-Ca’rafiyya’ von az-Zuhri,’” in Proceedings of the Ninth Congress of the Union Europeenne des Arabisants et Islamisants, Amsterdam, 1st to 7th September, 1978, ed. Rudolph Peters (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1981), 153-68. Kugler, Hartmut (ed.), Ein Weltbild vor Columbus: Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte. Interdisziplinäres Colloquium vom 1-5 Juni 1988 in Kloster Ebstorf, Weinhein, 1990. Kugler, Hartmut, Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte, 2 volumes, Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 2007. *Kuhnel, Bianca, Galit Noga-Banai and Hanna Vorholt, “Visual Constructs of Jerusalem”, 22 pp. (194) *Kupfer, Marcia, “The Lost Mappamundi at Chalivoy-Milon”, Speculum, LXVI, no. 3, 1991, pp. 540-71. *Kupfer, Marcia, “The Lost Wheel Map of Ambrogio Lorenzetti”, Art Bulletin, LXXVIII, no. 2, June 1996, pp. 286-310. (79) *Kupfer, Marcia, “Medieval World Maps: Embedded Images, Interpretive Frames”, Word and Image, X, no. 3, July-Sept 1994, pp. 262-88. (76) *Kupfer, Marcia, “Reflections in the Ebstorf Map”, Mapping Medieval Geographies, Cambridge University Press, 2013. (77)

*Kupfer, M., “The Noachide Dispersion in English Mappae Mundi c. 960 – c. 1130”, Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art & Architecture, Volume IV, No. 1,pp. 81-106. *Kupfer, M., “The Jerusalem Effect: Rethinking the Centre in Medieval World Maps”, Visual Constructs of Jerusalem, Brebos, pp. 353-375. (78) *Kupfer, M., “The Noachide Dispersion in English Mappae Mundi c. 960 – c. 1130”, Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art & Architecture, Vol. IV, No. 1, 2013, pp. 81-106. (80) *Kupfer, M., “Traveling the Mappa Mundi: Readerly Transport from Cassiodorus to Petrarch”, 32 pp. (81) *Kurt, Andrew, “The search for Prester John, a projected crusade and the eroding prestige of Ethiopian kings, c.1200–c.1540”, Journal of Medieval History, (2013): 25 pp. (82)

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*JS Library (XXX) electronic vopy