The British Library's map collection is the national cartographic
collection of Britain and numbers around four million maps dating from
15 CE to 2017 CE. These include road maps drawn for 13th century
pilgrims and sea charts for 17th-century pirates. They include the first
printed map to show the Americas and the last to show English-controlled
Calais. They include the world's biggest and smallest atlases. They
include maps for kings and queens, popes, ministers, schoolchildren,
soldiers, tourists. There are maps which changed the world. As well as
comprehensively showcasing the varied and surprising treasures of the
British Library's "banquet of maps" for the first time, this book will
examine the evolution of humanity's perceptions of the world through
maps. By looking at how this map collection was assembled principally
over two and a half centuries but in reality over a millennium, the book
comprises a cartographic history of the world, as well as vivid
celebration of the world's best map collection's best maps.