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Cartography of Ukraine

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Map of the Odessa Military District (1866)

The cartography of Ukraine involves the history of surveying and the construction of maps of Ukraine.

Early maps

Maps of Ukraine have been produced since the late mediaeval period. During the Turkish wars between 1568 and 1918, high-quality French maps were kept[by whom?] as state secrets amid diplomatic negotiations, while 20th-century maps have reflected the region's multiple changes of government.

Ukraine is largely absent from the maps of the Turkish manuscript mapping-tradition that flourished during the reign of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II the Conqueror (r. 1444–1446, 1451–1481); the Mediterranean received its own section in world maps,[1]: 5  but typical Turkish maps of the period omitted the Black Sea, and the entire region of the Rus' appeared as just a small portion of Asia between the Caspian and the Mediterranean.[1]: 7 

17th century

Two centuries later Guillaume le Vasseur, sieur de Beauplan became one of the more prominent cartographers working with Ukrainian data. His 1639 descriptive map of the region was the first such one produced, and after he published a pair of Ukraine maps of different scale in 1660, his drawings were republished[by whom?] throughout much of Europe.[2] A copy of de Beauplan's maps played a crucial rôle in negotiations between the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire in 1640; its depiction of the disputed Kodak Fortress was of such quality that the head Polish ambassador, Wojciech Miaskowski, deemed it dangerous to exhibit it to his Turkish counterparts.[3]

Giacomo Cantelli da Vignola's 1684 map of Tartaria d'Europa[4] includes "Vkraina o Paese dei Cossachi de Zaporowa" [Ukraine or the land of the Zaporozhian Cossacks].

18th century

English-language maps of 1769 depicted the Crimean Khanate as part of its suzerain, the Ottoman Empire, with clear boundaries between the Muslim-ruled states in the south and the Christian-ruled states to the north. Another map from the eighteenth century, inscribed in Latin, was careful to depict a small buffer zone between Kiev and the Polish border.[5][need quotation to verify]

Modern maps

In more recent history, maps of the country have reflected its tumultuous political status and relations with Russia; for example, the city known as "Lvov" (Template:Lang-ru) during the Soviet era (until 1991) was depicted as "Leopol" or "Lemberg" during its time (1772-1918) in the Habsburg realms, while post-Soviet maps produced in Ukraine have referred to it by its endonym of "Lviv"[5] (Template:Lang-uk). (Under Polish rule (1272-1772) it went by the Polish name of Lwów).

List

Year Original Name Name in English Author Description Map
1154 Map of al-Idrisi Abu Abdullah Muhammad al-Idrisi al-Qurtubi al-Hasani al-Sabti The map of al-Idrisi in 1154 shows not only the territorial placement of Ukraine, but also for the first time the name "Rusia" (Rusia, meaning Kievan Rus). The inscriptions on the map include "Ard al Rusia" - the land of Rus (the territory of Right-bank and Left-bank Ukraine), "muttasil ard al Rusia" - the connected land of Rus, "minal Rusia al tuani" - dependent on Rus. The rivers - Dnipro, Dniester, Danube - are marked and labeled, as well as Kyiv (Kiau) and other Ukrainian cities.
Map of al-Idrisi in 1154
1375 Catalan Atlas (Portolan) Abraham Cresques The cartography was done during the decline of the Galicia-Volhynia state.
1544 "Cosmographia". Map of the Polish region Sebastian Münster Rus (Peremyshl, Lviv, Lutsk, Kyiv), Podolia (Kamianets-Podilskyi, Horodets, Bastarnia), Bessarabia, Scythia, Crimea (Perekop, Kaffa); Muscovy, Pskov region, Tataria; Livonia (Riga), Sarmatia, Lithuania (Vilnius, Hrodna), Prussia (Marienburg, Danzig), Mazovia, Greater Poland, Lesser Poland, Hungary, Wallachia, Moldavia.
1550 Black Sea basin Portolan Battista Agnese Rus', Tataria and Muscovy
1559 Black Sea Portolan Diogo Homem
1568 …dirego della seconda… Forlani
1571 Tabula Sarmatiae from Strabonis Rerum Geographicarum Ptolemy's map Sebastian Münster European Sarmatia with the cities of Olbia, Heraclea, Theodosia, Claypida and geographical features such as the Carpathian Mountains, the Dnieper (Borysthenes), the Dniester (Tyras), Tauria, the Sea of Azov (Paludes Meotidis), the Black Sea (Ponti Evxini), Amadotian Lake and others.
1613 Magni Ducatus Lithuaniae Caeterarumque Regionum Illi Adjacentium . . . Anno 1613 (I) Radziwiłł map Hessel Gerritsz,
Willem Janszoon Blaeu
The map shows "Eastern Volhynia, which was also called Ukraine and Niz." between Rzhyshchiv and Kaniv in central Podniprovia. One of the earliest cartographic sources with the mention of "Ukraine".[6]
1648 …Delineatio generalis Camporum Desertorum vulgo Ukraina General Description of the Deserted Camps, in other words — Ukraine Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan
1649 Typus Generalis Vkraine General description of Ukraine Jan Janssonius Typus Generalis Ukrainae sive Palatinatuum Podoliae, Kioviensis et Braczlaviensis terras nova delineatione exhibens, 1681
1659—1685 Ukrainae pars quae Kiovia Palatinatus vulgo dicitur Ukrainian lands, Kyiv Voivodeship Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan, Covens & Mortier
XVII century Ukraine Pars qva Podolia… Ukrainian lands, Podillia Covens & Mortier The Covens map was created based on the map by Boplan.
XVII century Ukrainae pars quae Barclavia… Ukrainian lands, Bracław region Covens & Mortier Published in Amsterdam.
1662 Ukraine Pars qva Pokutia… Ukrainian lands, Carpathians. Joan Blaeu Modern Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast. Created by cartographer Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan.
1665 Russie Noire Black Rus Nicolas Sanson Black Rus (Galicia)
1665 Tartarie Europeenne ou Petite Tartarie… European Tartaria, so-called A Little Tartary Nicolas Sanson Tartary, Ukraine - the state of the Cossacks, Muscovy and Poland.
1665 Haute Volhynie, ou Palatinat de Lusuc; tire de la Grande Carte d'Ukraine. Volyn, so-called Lutsk lands; part of the Great Map of Ukraine Nicolas Sanson
XVII century Vkraina Ukraine Wilhelm Pfann
1670 Regni Polonia magni ducatus Lithuania Poland and Lithuania Carlo Alard Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine as part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
1674 …Vkraine ou Pays des Cosaques Ukraine - State of the Cossacks Guillaume Sanson
1684 Tartaria d Europa ouero Piccola Tartaria European Tartary or Little Tartary Giacomo Cantelli Dnieper Ukraine marked as "Ukraine or the land of the Zaporozhian Cossacks" (Vkraina o Paese de Cossachi di Zaporowa). To the east of it is another Ukraine - "Ukraine or the land of the Don Cossacks, dependent on Moscow" (Vkraina ouero Paese de Cossachi Tanaiti Soggetti al Moscouita).
1705 Королевства Польского и Великого княжества Литовского чертеж Plan of the Kingdom of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania Peter Picart The map depicts the territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. There are also markings for Ukraine (Ꙋkraіna) and Part of Moscow State.
1705 Le mar noire… Et les pars Cosaques… The Black Sea... And the Lands of the Cossacks... Nicolas de Fer The northern Black Sea coast - the lands of the Cossacks - Ukraine, and Little Tataria.
1710(?) Ukraine grand pays de la Russie Rouge avec une partie de la Pologne, Moscovie… Great Country - Ukraine, Red Ruthenia, bordering with Poland, Muscovy, Wallachia... Pierre Van Der Haeghen;
1710 Ukraina Ukraine Abraham Allard Map of Poland and Muscovy (including Lithuania, Ukraine, Russia, Volhynia, Courland, Crimea, Wallachia, Livonia)
1711 Ukraine… Guillaume Delisle Map of Ukraine, Kiev Voivodeship.
1720 Vkrania que terra Cosaccorvm… Ukraine - land of the Cossacks Johann Baptist Homann Map "Ukraine or Cossack land with neighboring provinces of Wallachia, Moldavia, and Little Tartary" by Johann Baptist Homann, Nuremberg, 1716. Western and central parts of Ukraine are shown. Near UKRANIA is marked as RUSSIA RUBRA. According to one version, the man sitting and smoking a pipe surrounded by associates depicted on the cartouche is Ivan Mazepa.
1723 Unnamed map in Travels through Europe, Asia and into parts of Africa Aubry de La Mottraye [fr] The author served king Charles XII of Sweden, staying with his army in Bender, Moldova during 1709–1713 after their retreat from the 1709 Battle of Poltava. Most details concern western Black Sea coastal towns between Bender on the Dniester and Constantinople (modern Istanbul), with few details on the area he called "UCKRANIA" except "Pultava" (Poltava, marked with crossed swords) on the left bank and a few towns including "Kiow" (modern Kyiv) on the right bank. Mottraye published Travels through Europe, Asia and into parts of Africa in London in 1723 (dedicated to George I), including this map with (dedicated probably to Robert Sutton (diplomat)).
1730 Nova Mappa Maris Nigri… New map of the Black Sea Matthäus Seutter
1740 Nova Et Accurata Tartarie Europe Seu Minoris… European Tartary Matthäus Seutter Little Tartary and Ukraine - land of the Cossacks.
1740 Nova et accurata Turcicarum et Tartaricarum Provinciarum Matthäus Seutter Malo-Tartary and Ukraine - Cossack State.
1770 Amplissima Ucraniae Regio… Ukraine and regions Tobias Conrad Lotter Ukrainian lands
1781 Russia Rossa Antonio Zatta Translates to "Dry Rus". According to another version - "Red Rus".
1919 Carte de Ukraine A map presented by the delegation of the UNR at the Paris Peace Conference.
1920 World Map with the Distribution of Ukrainians "World Map with the Distribution of Ukrainians" by Georg Hasenko, 1920.
1928 Contemporary Division of Eastern Slavs by Language Modern division of Eastern Slavs by language Kudryashov K. V. A map published in the "Russian Historical Atlas" in Moscow, which received the first prize of the TsEKUB and the Central Executive Committee of the USSR.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Pinto, Karen. "The Maps are the Message: Mehmet II's Patronage of an 'Ottoman Cluster'". Imago Mundi 63.2 (2011): 155-179. DOI: 10.1080/03085694.2011.568703.
  2. ^ Borschak, Elie. "Beauplan, Guillaume Le Vasseur de". Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 2009. Accessed 2014-08-11.
  3. ^ Pernal, Andrew B. "Two Newly-Discovered Seventeenth-Century Manuscript Maps of Ukraine". Od Kijowa do Rzymu. Białystok : Instytut Badań nad Dziedzictwem Kulturowym Europy, 2012, 188.
  4. ^ Tartaria d'Europa
  5. ^ a b Kendall, Bridget. "Ukraine Maps Chart Crimea's Troubled Past", BBC, 2014-03-13. Accessed 2014-08-11.
  6. ^ "Magni Ducatus Lithuaniae Caeterarumque Regionum Illi Adjacentium . . . Anno 1613 (I)". vkraina.com. Vkraina. Archived from the original on January 16, 2020. Retrieved April 18, 2020.