Cultural history has investigated the appropriation of mountain wilderness in considerable detail, without however systematically including the contributions of science and technology in the process. This paper suggests a way of filling this gap. It argues that cartography was instrumental in giving mountains their modern shape. In the course of the nineteenth century, mountains arguably gained a new factual existence at the intersection of new aesthetic, scientific, economic, and political concerns with landscape. Taking the case of Swiss cartography, the paper shows how mapmakers strived to represent this matter of concern in ever more perfect ways, culminating in the three-dimensional rendering of mountains as plaster reliefs. The paper ...
For centuries high mountains and glaciers have been a source of both paralyzing fear and strange fas...
Aimé Civiale's attempt at a complete photographic coverage of the High Alps seems to be a peculiar p...
From Philip V of Macedonia to Horace de Saussure. From Horace to Albrecht Haller. On the history of ...
Swiss Mountains : Inventing and Using a Representation of the Landscape (18th-20th Century) This h...
Among the processes of “conquering, developing and appropriating mountains” is occupied by the emerg...
Among the processes of “conquering, developing and appropriating mountains” is occupied by the emerg...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 80-82)Throughout the history of cartographic terrain depi...
Abstract. — Since the 18th century, geographers have been curiously attracted by mountains, and most...
Mountainous regions have long been considered dangerous and difficult to penetrate. Only few people ...
Abstract: The Alps: between myth and reality. The complexity of the Alps has influenced the represen...
Since Antiquity, the European mountains were dreaded and avoided by travelers who had to go through ...
The period between the 1750s and 1830s witnessed a major change in travel practices in Europe, movin...
The Alps - a productive territory - thanks to mining activity, to the exploitation of the woods - se...
Glaciers have long been synonymous with exploration, scientific inquiry, fear and fascination, and r...
International audienceAt the end of the eighteenth century, the Alpine landscape becomes a subject f...
For centuries high mountains and glaciers have been a source of both paralyzing fear and strange fas...
Aimé Civiale's attempt at a complete photographic coverage of the High Alps seems to be a peculiar p...
From Philip V of Macedonia to Horace de Saussure. From Horace to Albrecht Haller. On the history of ...
Swiss Mountains : Inventing and Using a Representation of the Landscape (18th-20th Century) This h...
Among the processes of “conquering, developing and appropriating mountains” is occupied by the emerg...
Among the processes of “conquering, developing and appropriating mountains” is occupied by the emerg...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 80-82)Throughout the history of cartographic terrain depi...
Abstract. — Since the 18th century, geographers have been curiously attracted by mountains, and most...
Mountainous regions have long been considered dangerous and difficult to penetrate. Only few people ...
Abstract: The Alps: between myth and reality. The complexity of the Alps has influenced the represen...
Since Antiquity, the European mountains were dreaded and avoided by travelers who had to go through ...
The period between the 1750s and 1830s witnessed a major change in travel practices in Europe, movin...
The Alps - a productive territory - thanks to mining activity, to the exploitation of the woods - se...
Glaciers have long been synonymous with exploration, scientific inquiry, fear and fascination, and r...
International audienceAt the end of the eighteenth century, the Alpine landscape becomes a subject f...
For centuries high mountains and glaciers have been a source of both paralyzing fear and strange fas...
Aimé Civiale's attempt at a complete photographic coverage of the High Alps seems to be a peculiar p...
From Philip V of Macedonia to Horace de Saussure. From Horace to Albrecht Haller. On the history of ...