Map Scarcity in Early Colonial New England

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Nathan Braccio
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

abstract:This article argues that English colonists in New England chose not to make maps between 1620 and 1642 because they had more suitable techniques and technologies available to them, including the superior knowledge of their Algonquian neighbors and their own traditional approaches to measuring land. However, internal and external pressures eventually forced the colonists to begin making maps. As population and demand for land rapidly increased in New England in the 1640s and beyond, the early attempts of the English at cooperative distribution of land were abandoned in favor of a system that emphasized private property, and, consequently, precise boundaries. In these new circumstances, maps served as a powerful tool that settlers used to claim land and defend it from encroachment. Finally, the creation of the Dominion of New England and the arrival of royal officials and map makers in the 1680s completed the transition to a cartographic spatial culture. Despite this, New Englanders had ignored revolutionary developments in map making taking place in England for decades and created a spatial culture unique to New England.
早期新英格兰殖民地地图的稀缺性
本文认为,1620年至1642年间,新英格兰地区的英国殖民者选择不绘制地图,是因为他们拥有更合适的技术和技术,包括他们的阿尔冈琴邻居的优越知识和他们自己传统的测量土地的方法。然而,内部和外部的压力最终迫使殖民者开始制作地图。17世纪40年代及以后,随着新英格兰地区人口和对土地需求的迅速增长,英国人早期合作分配土地的尝试被放弃,取而代之的是一种强调私有财产和精确边界的制度。在这些新情况下,地图成为定居者用来宣称拥有土地并保护其不受侵犯的有力工具。最后,1680年代新英格兰自治领的建立以及皇家官员和地图绘制者的到来完成了向地图空间文化的过渡。尽管如此,新英格兰人忽略了几十年来在英格兰发生的地图制作的革命性发展,创造了新英格兰独有的空间文化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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