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              <text>Battista Agnese (d. 1564)</text>
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              <text>&lt;a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/bibliotecabne/12185583143" target="_blank"&gt;Go to the flickr post&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Atlas de Battista Agnese</text>
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                <text>Kelly O'Neill</text>
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                <text>The Hejaz Rail ran from Damascus to Medina with a branch through the port city of Haifa. Palestine Railways linked El Kantara, Egypt to Haifa by way of Jerusalem. These railways once served to connect the region but were discontinued in 1948.</text>
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                <text>The majority of ink on this map serves to detail bodies of water. This is stark because of the Palestine's reputation for drought and water shortages. The bodies of water flow from the Jordan River, the Kineret, and the sea and branch out through the region. They also serve to connect different areas. </text>
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                <text>There are minimal border lines on this map which poses a stark contrast to the present day Middle East. &#13;
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                <text>The casual labels on this map reflect that political divisions of territory were less clear during this time period. The map was drawn at a time after the Ottomans lost control of the region but the British and French had not yet imposed their own labels and territorial divisions. &#13;
The labels reflect the previous demarcation of the region in Ottoman Palestine and are simply the names of central cities: Damascus, El-Kuds, and Beirut. There are also smaller titles demarcating regions in contemporary Jordan.  The only label that corresponds to a modern nation state is that of Egypt.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>The map itself has Europe, Asia, and Africa connected and labeled. The map also has North America, South America, Artic Land, and Green Land connected and labeled. This layer traces just the outlines of the coasts of these two major connected landmasses. </text>
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                <text>This layer consists of the boundaries of the Arrondissements (administrative districts of Paris), the Murs d’Octroi, which marked the edges of Paris, and the towns of the surrounding area, which are named but not circumscribed. The names of towns are circled if the population is listed and underlined if not. It is perhaps strange that map-makers should take such care to demark municipal authorities, especially as these distinctions were created in 1795, and were not necessarily representative of qualitative distinctions in districts. It maybe speaks to the influence of government centralisation on spatial awareness and identity (government districts were meaningful divisions which people identified with), or that this map was made to educate students about their government (perhaps supported by the stamp on the map “Instruction Publique. M. Lebel, Auguste”). The division between Paris proper and the towns of the surrounding area is emphasised by their very different representation, and by highlighting the larger towns (the names of which are printed in larger, non-italicised type, and accompanied by the number of inhabitants) you can get a rough sense of the distribution of population in the areas around Paris. Updated versions of this map made in 1863 and 1866, after the city limits had been extended to the Murs d’Enceinte extend the visual language of central Paris to the extended city.&#13;
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                <text>The map takes great care to pick out Paris’ fortifications. The Murs d’Enceinte, walls built in the 1840s around Paris are highlighted in orange, and forts in the Paris region, which would not fit onto the map, are included with lines indicating truncated distances. While I could find one other civilian map of Paris that similarly emphasised fortifications, the only other ones to do so are military maps. Furthermore, the Murs d’Enceinte were unpopular in Paris, as it was suspected they had been built to hem Paris in rather than to defend it. This layer is interesting when considered in relation to the railways and monuments, and the political developments in France at the time: the map was published three years after the establishment of the Second Empire, which used the memory of Napoleonic military glory to legitimise itself. In elevating Paris’ military fixtures to the level of public monuments, this map seems to be making (or perhaps accepting or reflecting) an argument for the importance of the military to Paris and to France.</text>
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                <text>Important monuments such as Notre Dame and the Louvre are identified by large engraved depictions, which contrast with the two-dimensional design of the map. While these pictures seem to be scaled to fit roughly in the area on the map the building they depict occupies, they still dominate the surrounding area. It is interesting to look at which buildings make the cut: functioning medieval relics such as Notre Dame and the Hôpital St. Louis, former royal palaces such as the Louvres and Tuileries, administrative buildings such as the town hall, senate and legislature, monuments to the revolution (place de la Bastille) and famous cemeteries at Montmartre and Pere Lachaise. On my layer I categorised these places accordingly. It is difficult to identify a particularly political project in this selection, though the equivalence of representation seems to tie these disparate sites together, both serving as a guide for tourists and as an expression of a unified national tradition.</text>
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