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date: 07 February 2025

Cartography and Environment in Colonial Latin American Historylocked

Cartography and Environment in Colonial Latin American Historylocked

  • Karl OffenKarl OffenDepartment of Geography and the Environment, Syracuse University

Summary

Maps and their makers have long influenced and documented Latin American history. By the late 20th century, scholars have reconsidered the historical significance of maps and mapmaking, and the methodological approaches to both. Four historical periods are important in this regard: the early mapping of the New World and the representation of its peoples and environments; Indigenous mapping traditions and the Relaciones Geográficas of New Spain; the middle colonial period, coinciding with Jesuit mapping and the expansion of Northern Europeans into the hemisphere; and the late colonial period, defined by Bourbon reforms, cartographic professionalism, scientific and military mapping, and the Enlightenment. There is no single or generalizable relationship between cartography and the environment; instead, there are trends and developments that emerged over time that reflect geographical knowledge, intent and purpose, audience and expectation, politics and power.

Subjects

  • History of the Caribbean
  • History of Central America
  • History of Northern and Andean Spanish America
  • History of Southern Spanish America
  • History of Latin America and the Oceanic World
  • 1492–1824

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