General map of posts and crossings of France made by Nicholas Langlois (1640-1703) at the end of the 17th century and digitised by Gallica (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)
General map of posts and crossings of France made by Nicholas Langlois (1640-1703) at the end of the 17th century and digitised by Gallica (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)
Famous map made by Christophe Tassin, ordinary geographer of the French monarchy, around 1638 and digitised by Gallica (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)
Famous map made by Nicolas de Fer around 1725 for the French monarchy and digitised by Gallica (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)
Lexilogos “Maps and Documents” collection: list of pages with old cartographic resources on France, from the 16th century to the present day
Collection “Working Maps: 17th-19th Century French Manuscript Maps” from “Making Maps: CIY Cartography”, where more than 4,000 maps extracted from 17th, 18th and 19th century French manuscripts are digitised
Collection “Maps” of the Mapoteca Digital, a cartographic project of the National Library of Colombia, where they have digitised the cartographic heritage referring to Colombia, although not exclusively (rest of the American colonies, global maps) from 1561 to the present day, being able to search by centuries
Map and table of elements “Galliae seu Franciae Tabula qua omnes Provinciae, viae angiariae et aliae res dignae distincte et accurate ostenduntur by Nicholas Visscher (1618-1679) produced in 1665 and digitised by Gallica (National Library of France)
The collection is divided into two sections, documents and publications, where you can access maps from 1600 to 1970 through a repository to the historical cartography of the territory of the current autonomous community of Andalusia
Historical-administrative map of France from the division into departments in 1790 to the present day, created through the platform Le Splaf, Site sur la Population et les Limites Administratives de la France
Atlas Tyrolensis, produced by Ignaz Weinhart, Peter Anich, Blasius Hueber and Johann Ernst Mansfield in 1774 at the request of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. It is the first historical map of the Tyrol and is of great scientific value because of the work that went into its production and the geodetic technique used in its final composition