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To study such formative and widespread civilizations as Greece and Rome without reference to adequate maps may seem blind folly. Yet throughout the present century this has been the predicament of everyone who studies classical antiquity. In the 1980s an attempt to supply the vital missing tools in line with modern scholarship and technology was at last initiated by the American Philological Association under the direction of Prof. Richard Talbert at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. This project to create the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World called for extensive planning and lengthy production stages. Princeton University Press will issue the work in September 2000. MapQuest.com (Lancaster, Pa.) assisted in the Atlas design, produced the award-winning specimen map, and continues as cartographic supplier, using the most up-to-date technology available for map development and production. The folio volume offers 99 maps in color extending over 175 map pages (mostly double spreads), and ranging from the British Isles to the Indian subcontinent and far up the Nile Valley. A Map-by-Map Directory with concise expository text and detailed reference materials forms an essential reinforcement for scholars, to be issued both in print and on CD-ROM. The physical bases for the maps are the best obtainable, derived from U.S. National Imagery and Mapping Agency charts at four standard scales ranging from 1:150,000 to 1:5,000,000. The modern landscape is returned to its ancient appearance, and classical cultural data added, by an international team of over 70 scholars, all of them established experts on their areas in antiquity. Every compilation is also confidentially reviewed by a second expert not otherwise engaged on the project. Thus the appearance of the Atlas will mark a twofold beginning. First, as a comprehensive, affordable and attractive reference tool, it will restore a fundamental dimension to the study of the ancient world. No classical atlas with remotely comparable coverage has been completed since 1874, and the best currently available offers a mere 30 map pages. Meantime, over a century of intense research and exploration awaits effective presentation in map form. For most areas no attempt at anywhere near this project's uniform scales has ever been made. The Atlas will be a revelation, therefore, displaying the classical world as never before, and opening up fresh perspectives and avenues for investigation. Its appeal will be truly international and interdisciplinary. Specialists worldwide in most ancient civilizations of Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia should find it indispensable, as should historical cartographers, archaeologists, students, and travelers. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ):
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This site is copyrighted: © 1996-1999, The Classical Atlas Project. Page last updated: 4 August 1999. Server space is provided by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Please email suggestions or questions to us at classical_atlas@unc.edu. Thank you. This site employs cascading style sheets for some of its formatting. It has been tested with, and found to display properly in, the following web browsers: Internet Explorer, version 5.x and Netscape, version 4.x. |
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