Mapping the North
Myth, Exploration, Encounter
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bodleian Library
Publishing:18th Sep '25
£25.00
This title is due to be published on 18th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Featuring stunning full colour illustrations, this book explores the rich history of how mapmakers have understood and processed knowledge about a region they described as ‘the north’.
Maps have played a central role in our understanding of what and where the north is. At the same time, the northernmost reaches of our world have, for much of history, been difficult to navigate and verify, from the mythical islands on medieval maps to the itineraries of Arctic explorers in the nineteenth century. This has inspired inventive mapping strategies, as well as ongoing struggles to define what constitutes believable cartographic information.
This beautifully illustrated book takes the reader on a journey to examine the rich, and sometimes contentious, history of how mapmakers have understood and processed knowledge about a region they described as ‘the north’. In the process of mapping, the north as a place changed from an inaccessible and vividly imagined unknown to a region claimed and exploited by southern nations. What emerges is a riveting story of exploration, survival and cartographic skill bound up with conceptions of nature, religion and politics extending far beyond the Arctic.
This beguiling book offers a detailed history of cartographies of the farthest north: not only the real regions of ice and the aurora, but also the fabulous otherworldly norths of rumour and fable.
-- Peter Davidson, author of The Lighted Window and The Idea of NorthSwedish historian Charlotta Forss offers a lively tour through the archive of the planetary attic. Armed with an eclectic set of maps, she sets off on a cartographic journey across six centuries: from the fears and fantasies of medieval mappae mundi to the vivid views of seafaring Europeans and indigenous hunters. Along the way, readers are treated to brisk readings of images both familiar and strange. A sure delight for the map-curious.
-- Kären Wigen, editor of Territorial Imaginaries: Beyond the SovereignISBN: 9781851245727
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages