Collection “Maps and cartographic documents” of the Royal Academy of History. It consists of only three documents: the Tagus River (1641), a map of Mexico City (1753) and a sketch of the Pacaya volcano (1775)
Collection “Maps and cartographic documents” of the Royal Academy of History. It consists of only three documents: the Tagus River (1641), a map of Mexico City (1753) and a sketch of the Pacaya volcano (1775)
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
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
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
Kyoto University’s Digital Archive of Rare Materials, including maps of Japan in the Modern Age
Historic Cities, a project on urban cartography and early modern maps by the Department of Geography of the University of Jerusalem and the Jewish National Library
Leiden University Maps and Atlases Collection, a repository of over 100,000 maps collected and held by the Leiden University Library since its creation in 1587
Atlas of routes and roads in France, called Atlas de Trudaine, produced between 1745 and 1780 and digitised by the National Archives of France
Map of France in the mid-16th century by the cartographer Oronce Finé (1494-1555) and digitised by Gallica (National Library of France)
Maps from the work “Totius Galliae descriptio, cum parte Angliae, Germaniae, Flandriae, Brabantiae, Italiae, Roman usque, by Oronce Finé, posthumous work 1561 and digitised by Gallica (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)