
Imaginary Cartographies
Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille
Daniel Lord Smail(Author)
Cornell University Press
1st Edition
Published on 18. October 2018
280 pages
978-1-5017-1809-0 (ISBN)
System requirements
for PDF without DRM
E-Book Single Licence
You are acquiring a single user licence for this eBook, which you might not transfer. [L]
Available for download
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
How, in the years before the advent of urban maps, did city residents conceptualize and navigate their communities? In his strikingly original book, Daniel Lord Smail develops a new method and a new vocabulary for understanding how urban men and women thought about their personal geography. His thorough research of property records of late medieval Marseille leads him to conclude that its inhabitants charted their city, its social structure, and their own identities within that structure through a set of cartographic grammars which powerfully shaped their lives.Prior to the fourteenth century, different interest groups-notaries, royal officials, church officials, artisans-developed their own cartographies in accordance with their own social, political, or administrative agendas. These competing templates were created around units ranging from streets and islands to vicinities and landmarks. Smail shows how the notarial template, which privileged the street as the most basic marker of address, gradually emerged as the cartographic norm. This transformation, he argues, led to the rise of modern urban maps and helped to inaugurate the process whereby street addresses were attached to citizen identities, a crucial development in the larger enterprise of nation building.Imaginary Cartographies opens up powerful new means for exploring late medieval and Renaissance urban society while advancing understanding of the role of social perceptions in history.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
NY
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Digital original
Illustrations
3 maps, 7 halftones, 16 tables
3 maps, 7 halftones, 16 tables
ISBN-13
978-1-5017-1809-0 (9781501718090)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
12/1999
Cornell University Press
€82.94
Shipment within 10-20 days
Person
SmailDaniel Lord:
Daniel Lord Smail is the author of Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille, also from Cornell, winner of the American History Association's Herbert Baxter Adams prize.
Daniel Lord Smail is the author of Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille, also from Cornell, winner of the American History Association's Herbert Baxter Adams prize.
Content
- Cover
- IMAGINARY CARTOGRAPHIES
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- A Note on Names
- Abbreviations
- INTRODUCTION IMAGINARY CARTOGRAPHIES
- The Public Notariate
- The Bureaucratic Science of Classification
- Marseille: A Case Study
- CHAPTER ONE MARSEILLE
- Social Topography and Political Structures
- The City Imagined
- CHAPTER TWO THE NOTARY AS CARTOGRAPHER
- Notarial Cartography
- Making the Map
- CHAPTER THREE SEIGNEURIAL ISLANDS
- The Cartography of the Episcopal Curia
- The Cartography of the Royal Curia
- The Cartography of the City Council
- The Decline of the Insular Template
- CHAPTER FOUR VERNACULAR CARTOGRAPHY
- The Templates of Vicinity and Landmark
- Contested Sites
- The Decline of the Artisanal and Retail Vicinity
- CHAPTER FIVE IDENTITY AND ADDRESS
- Shaping Identities
- Identity and Address in Notarial Casebooks
- Addresses in Seigneurial Records
- EPILOGUE
- APPENDIX 1: LEXICAL TERMS USED IN THE REGISTER OF THE CONFRATERNITY OF ST. JACQUES DE GALLICIA, BY CATEGORY
- APPENDIX 2: THE PROSOPOGRAPHICAL INDEX
- Bibliography
- Index
System requirements
File format: PDF
Copy protection: without DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Use the free software Adobe Reader, Adobe Digital Editions, or any other PDF viewer of your choice (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/Smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or another reading app for eBooks, e.g., PocketBook (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (only limited: Kindle).
The file format PDF always displays a book page identically on any hardware. This makes PDF suitable for complex layouts such as those used in textbooks and reference books (images, tables, columns, footnotes). Unfortunately, on the small screens of e-readers or smartphones, PDFs are rather annoying, requiring too much scrolling.
This eBook does not use copy protection or Digital Rights Management.
For more information, see our eBook Help page.