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Cartographic style in the first urban maps of Cadiz, Spain: A technique in transition

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/1509
ISSN: 87041
DOI: 10.1080/00087041.2018.1554372
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Author
Granado Castro, Gabriel; Aguilar Camacho, Joaquín
Date
2019
Subject/s

Cartografía

Cádiz

Historia urbana

Topografía

Fortificaciones

Edificación militar

Urbanismo

Unesco Subject/s

3305.34 Topografía de la Edificación

3305.26 Edificios Públicos

5402 Geografía Histórica

5404.01 Geografía Urbana

5506.25 Historia de la Guerra

5506.01 Historia de la Arquitectura

5103.05 Guerra

Abstract

This article deals with the cartometric analysis of various seventeenth-century urban maps of the city of Cadiz (Spain), from among which the so-called Vista Arámburu and the map belonging to the atlas of the Marquis of Heliche, discovered in the Krigsarkivet (Military Archive) of Stockholm, stand out for their uniqueness. These hitherto relatively unknown documents present evidence of an evolution of cartographic style towards greater topographic accuracy and hence cannot just be considered as simple drawings. In this seventeenth-century period of transition, the cartography of the city evolved from sixteenth-century aerial-view perspectives to the exhaustive planimetric maps of the eighteenth century, made by Spanish and French Military Corps of Engineers. These documents hold great historical value, not only due to the importance of Cadiz during the Modern Age but also because these maps constitute a graphic testimony of the fortification and growth of the city in this period. © 2019 British Cartographic Society.

This article deals with the cartometric analysis of various seventeenth-century urban maps of the city of Cadiz (Spain), from among which the so-called Vista Arámburu and the map belonging to the atlas of the Marquis of Heliche, discovered in the Krigsarkivet (Military Archive) of Stockholm, stand out for their uniqueness. These hitherto relatively unknown documents present evidence of an evolution of cartographic style towards greater topographic accuracy and hence cannot just be considered as simple drawings. In this seventeenth-century period of transition, the cartography of the city evolved from sixteenth-century aerial-view perspectives to the exhaustive planimetric maps of the eighteenth century, made by Spanish and French Military Corps of Engineers. These documents hold great historical value, not only due to the importance of Cadiz during the Modern Age but also because these maps constitute a graphic testimony of the fortification and growth of the city in this period. © 2019 British Cartographic Society.

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