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maps

Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Meet the Maps: Unconventional Views of Oxford

Focusing on four very different maps of Oxford - each of the maps has its own tale to tell, some showing Oxford as it was; others showing Oxford as it might have been; and others how Oxford never was.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Lost and found in the map library: changes in early map librarianship

Georgia Brown, UW-Milwaukee Libraries, WI, USA, gives the third talk in session 3B of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Beyond “clerical cartography”: gender and the production of Sanborn fire insurance maps in the 1920s

Jack Swab, University of Kentucky, USA, gives the second talk in session 3B in the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Where are all the women? The case of the Halls

Debbie Hall, Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in session 3B in the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

The political cartographies of Marthe Rajchman

Mike Heffernan and Benjamin Thorpe, University of Nottingham, give the first talk of session 3A in the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

From body as territory to feminicides mapping: discourses and mapping languages by Latin American feminist cartographies

Manuela Silveira, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, gives the third talk in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Mapping toward equitable solutions in public transit planning

Suzie Birdsell, Nelson\Nygaard Consulting, Boston, USA, gives the second presentation, in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

‘Octavia always enjoyed a map’: Octavia Hill, maps, and Victorian social reform

Elizabeth Baigent, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in the second session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Women and children first: gender, flood and victimhood in Dutch eighteenth-century maps of dike-breaks

Anne-Rieke van Schaik, University of Amsterdam, gives the third in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

The rise, persistence and surprising end of female personifications of the continents on maps

Chet Van Duzer, University of Rochester, NY, USA, gives the second presentation in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Where are the women on sixteenth-century French World maps?

Camille Serchuk, Southern Connecticut State University, USA, gives the first talk in the first session of the seminar.
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

Welcome and Introduction

Catríona Cannon, Deputy Librarian, Bodleian Libraries, introduces the seminar.
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars

Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years

Professor Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development at Oxford University, discusses his new book 'Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years'
Sheldon Tapestry Maps

Fitting it in, filling it out: from Christopher Saxton's survey to Ralph Sheldon's tapestry maps

This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium
Sheldon Tapestry Maps

The Catholic Gentry in Ralph Sheldon’s Midlands

This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium
Sheldon Tapestry Maps

Power, Propaganda, Magnificence: the cartographic background to the Sheldon tapestry maps

This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium
Sheldon Tapestry Maps

One stitch at the time: Returning the Sheldon Tapestry Maps to life

This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium
Mesoamerican Manuscripts

Mixtec Colonial Maps and Land Tenure

Omar Aguilar Sanchez discusses Mixtec colonial maps and land tenure.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

A history of England in five and a half maps

There is a story behind every map. Generation after generation, we have imprinted ourselves on the land we live upon. Our depictions of that land, in maps, have recorded social attitudes and social change like no other source.
History Faculty

Transnational Cartography? A Circum-Atlantic Solution to the Niger Problem, 1795-1842 - Oxford Transnational and Global History Seminar

Dr David Lambert, Reader in Historical Geography, University of London, gives a talk for The Oxford Transnational and Global History Seminar series.

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