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This book gathers 22 papers which were presented at the 6th
International Symposium of the ICA Commission on the History of
Cartography in Dubrovnik, Croatia on 13-15 October 2016. The
overall conference theme was 'The Dissemination of Cartographic
Knowledge: Production - Trade - Consumption - Preservation'. The
book presents original research by internationally respected
authors in the field of historical cartography, offering a
significant contribution to the development of this field of study,
but also of geography, history and the GIS sciences. The primary
target audience includes researchers, educators, postgraduate
students, map librarians and archivists.
In 1540, in the wake of the tumult brought on by the Protestant
Reformation, Saint Ignatius of Loyola founded the Society of Jesus,
also known as the Jesuits. The Society's goal was to revitalize the
faith of Catholics and to evangelize to non-Catholics through
charity, education, and missionary work. By the end of the century,
Jesuit missionaries were sent all over the world, including to
South America. In addition to performing missionary and
humanitarian work, Jesuits also served as cartographers and
explorers under the auspices of the Spanish, Portuguese, and French
Crowns as they went into remote areas to find and evangelize to
native populations. In Encounters in the New World, Mirela Altic
analyzes more than one hundred fifty of their maps, most of which
have never previously been published. She traces the Jesuit
contribution to mapping and mapmaking from their arrival in the New
World into the post-suppression period, placing it in the context
of their worldwide undertakings in the fields of science and art.
Altic's analysis also shows the incorporation of indigenous
knowledge into the Jesuit maps, effectively making them an
expression of cross-cultural communication-even as they were tools
of colonial expansion. This ambiguity, she reveals, reflects the
complex relationship between missions, knowledge, and empire. Far
more than just a physical survey of unknown space, Jesuit mapping
of the New World was in fact the most important link to enable an
exchange of ideas and cultural concepts between the Old World and
the New.
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