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Deceptive simplicity. Flandria Borealis: between map and history, between image and representation

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

At the end of the sixteenth century the development of printing technology sparked a knowledge revolution featuring an unprecedented distribution and integration of texts, images, and maps. Thorough research into these texts and maps, generally disregarded as inferior, can reveal surprising and relevant historical knowledge. Using Flandria Borealis, an engraved 'history map' depicting the Northern part of Flanders with the sieges of Sluis and Ostend in 1604, this article dismisses the apparent naivety of this kind of document and shows the complex relations between their topographical, narrative, scientific, entertaining, educational, mobilizing, and aesthetical perspectives and messages. It advocates use of a propertool box and an iterative process of deconstruction which can help overcome the historian's apprehension when analysing old maps and images and can stimulate further research into these still undervalued sources.
Journal: Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis
ISSN: 0040-7518
Issue: 4
Volume: 130
Pages: 521 - 543
Publication year:2017