An innovative, interdisciplinary approach to the understudied Icelandic
mappae mundi.
The Icelandic mappae mundi (maps of the world), drawn between c. 1225
and c. 1400, are contemporary with the breathtaking rise of its
vernacular literary culture, and provide important insights into the
Icelanders' capacious geographical awareness in the thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries. However, in comparison with those drawn elsewhere,
among them the English Hereford mappa mundi, they have received little
critical attention.
This book explores the Icelandic mappae mundi not only for what they
reveal about the Icelanders' geographical awareness, but as complex
registers of Icelandic national self-perception and imagining, situating
them in their various literary, intellectual, and material contexts. It
reveals fully how Icelanders used the cartographic medium to explore
fantasies of national origin, their political structures, and place in
Europe. The small canon of Icelandic world maps is reproduced here
photographically, with their texts presented alongside English
translations to enable a wider understanding.