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      • Cartography is making maps. It is part of geography. How people make maps is always changing. In the past, maps were drawn by hand, but today most printed maps are made using computers and people usually see maps on computer screens. Someone who makes maps is called a cartographer.
      simple.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cartography
  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CartographyCartography - Wikipedia

    Cartography (/ kɑːrˈtɒɡrəfi /; from Ancient Greek: χάρτης chartēs, 'papyrus, sheet of paper, map'; and γράφειν graphein, 'write') is the study and practice of making and using maps.

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  3. James Wilson (United States, 1763–1835), first maker of globes in the United States. George Washington (United States of America, 1732–1799), first president of the United States; cartographer. Henri Michelot (France, born c. 1664), Marseilles, France, hydrographer and pilot of the Royal Galley.

  4. The history of cartography refers to the development and consequences of cartography, or mapmaking technology, throughout human history. Maps have been one of the most important human inventions for millennia, allowing humans to explain and navigate their way through the world.

    • Before 1400
    • 15th Century
    • 16th Century
    • 17th Century
    • 18th Century
    • 19th Century
    • 20th Century
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    • References
    Anaximander, Greek Anatolia(610 BC–546 BC), first to attempt making a map of the known world
    Hecataeus of Miletus, Greek Anatolia (550 BC–476 BC), geographer, cartographer, and early ethnographer
    Jacobus Angelus, Florence, translated Ptolemy into Latin c.1406
    Sebastian Cabot (1476–1557), Venetianexplorer
    Giovanni Battista Agnese (c. 1500–1564), Genoese, cartographer, author of numerous nautical atlases
    Hacı Ahmet, Tunisian cartographer, translated 16th c. map into Turkish for the Ottoman Empire.
    Peter Apian (1495–1552), also known as Peter Bienewitz, German geographer and astronomer, author of the Apianus projection
    João Teixeira Albernaz I (Portugal, died c. 1664), prolific cartographer, son of Luís Teixeira
    Pedro Teixeira Albernaz (Portugal, c. 1595–1662), Portuguese cartographer author of an important atlas of the Iberian Peninsulaand a map of Portugal (1656)
    John James Abert (United States, 1788–1863), headed the Corps of Topographical Engineers for 32 years and organized the mapping of the American West
    Louis Albert Guislain Bacler d'Albe (France, 1761–1824), also artist and longtime strategic advisor to Napoleon
    Regina Araújo de Almeida (Brazil, 1949– ), professor of geography at the University of Sao Paulo, tactile mappingcartographer
    Cynthia Brewer (United States, 1957– ), developed ColorBrewer, professor and department head at Penn State University
    Hubert Cancik and Helmuth Schneider (ed.): "Marinus", Brill's New Pauly, Brill, 2010: M. of Tyre (Μαρῖνος; Marînos), Greek geographer, 2nd century AD
    "General Depiction of the Empty Plains (in Common Parlance, the Ukraine) Together with its Neighboring Provinces". World Digital Library. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
    Borschak, Elie. "Beauplan, Guillaume Le Vasseur de". Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
    Emanuel Bowen
  5. Feb 19, 2024 · The art and science of cartography, or map-making, is as ancient as civilization itself. From etchings on cave walls to digital maps on smartphones, the journey of cartography is a fascinating reflection of human ingenuity and our desire to understand and navigate our world.

  6. Cartography is making maps. It is part of geography. How people make maps is always changing. In the past, maps were drawn by hand, but today most printed maps are made using computers and people usually see maps on computer screens. Someone who makes maps is called a cartographer.

  7. Gerardus Mercator was a Flemish cartographer whose most important innovation was a map, embodying what was later known as the Mercator projection, on which parallels and meridians are rendered as straight lines spaced so as to produce at any point an accurate ratio of latitude to longitude.

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