Search preferences
Direkt zu den wichtigsten Suchergebnissen

Suchfilter

Produktart

  • Alle Product Types 
  • Bücher (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Magazine & Zeitschriften (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Comics (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Noten (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Kunst, Grafik & Poster (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Fotografien (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Karten (1)
  • Manuskripte & Papierantiquitäten (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)

Zustand Mehr dazu

  • Neu (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Wie Neu, Sehr Gut oder Gut Bis Sehr Gut (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Gut oder Befriedigend (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Ausreichend oder Schlecht (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Wie beschrieben (1)

Einband

  • alle Einbände 
  • Hardcover (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Softcover (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)

Weitere Eigenschaften

Sprache (1)

Preis

  • Beliebiger Preis 
  • Weniger als EUR 20 (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • EUR 20 bis EUR 45 (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)
  • Mehr als EUR 45 
Benutzerdefinierte Preisspanne (EUR)

Gratisversand

  • Kostenloser Versand nach USA (Keine weiteren Ergebnisse entsprechen dieser Verfeinerung)

Land des Verkäufers

  • 1934 Survey of India Map of Nepal (1st modern map of Nepal)

    Erscheinungsdatum: 1934

    Anbieter: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, USA

    Verbandsmitglied: ABAA ESA ILAB

    Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen 5 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

    Verkäufer kontaktieren

    Karte Erstausgabe Signiert

    EUR 5.966,87

    EUR 14,66 für den Versand innerhalb von/der USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Very good. Laid on original linen. Some soiling, wear on old fold lines, and even toning. Three sheets, joined by publisher. Size 37.25 x 67.5 Inches. A striking 1934 Survey of India wall map of Nepal. This is the 'first edition' of the first trigonometrical survey of Nepal, completed by the all-Indian Nepal Detachment of the Survey of India at a time when Nepal was still closed to foreigners under the Rana Dynasty's isolation policy. It is a mapmaking triumph considered the world's first serious look at the interior cartography of Nepal. The map was issued in the wake of the 1934 Great Bihar-Nepal Earthquake, an 8.0 magnitude earthquake considered one of the most destructive in history. A Closer Look The massive map covering the totality of Nepal is presented on a polyconic projection. Nepal is meticulously detailed, with special attention given to river systems and topography, with contours set at 1000-foot intervals. The key suggests that some borders are 'undemarcated' or 'approximate,' but this may be a layover from the 1928 preliminary printing, as we note clear borders. Red printing indicates trails suitable for pack animals, with suspension bridges noted. Also noted are major mountains, including Mt. Everest, which is identified with both its English and Tibetan name, Chomolungma. (At the time, Everest did not have a Nepali name.) The surrounding areas of Tibet and India are included without topographic detail, but it is of interest that train lines markedly skirt or terminate at the Nepali border. The First Survey of Nepal (1925-1927) In the early 1920s, Nepal remained a closed country under the autocratic and isolationist yet strongly pro-British Rana Dynasty. In December 1923, Britain and Nepal signed a 'treaty of perpetual peace and friendship,' upgrading the British resident in Kathmandu to an envoy and deepening diplomatic relations. At the same time, foreign military, business, and personal travel to and within Nepal was forbidden. As late as 1928, it was estimated that only 120 English and 10 other Europeans visited the Kathmandu Valley. Nonetheless, the Rana, whose forces fought alongside the British in several external conflicts, were keenly aware of the importance of advancing the Kingdom's bureaucracy, laws, and infrastructure. In 1924, Maharaja Sir Chandra Shamsher Jung Bahadur Rana (1863 - 1929) requested the assistance of the Survey of India in compiling a modern trigonometrical and topographical map of the Kingdom, with the stipulation that only 'Indian Surveyors' be used, as the British were still refused admittance. The Rana fully financed the survey and supported it with military assistance. Over two years (three seasons), the team of 14 Indian surveyors and ever-growing support staff ranged throughout Nepal, conducting and compiling trigonometrical measurements at the field scale of 4 miles to the inch. The completed survey is one of the greatest achievements of early 20th-century mapmaking. Quoting the 1927 Survey of India Report This Enlightened Act has resulted in one of the greatest single contributions to Himalayan Geography which has ever been made, by giving us for the first time accurate knowledge of the drainage and structure of 55,000 square miles of country (an area approximately equal to that of England and Wales), extending over the greatest mountains of the world, and including the highest known peak, Mount Everest, which is over 29000 feet above sea level. Photo-zincography and Helio-zincography Photo-zincography and helio-zincography are two very similar reprographic processes originally made famous by their use by the British Ordnance Survey. In 1859, photo-zincography was developed relatively simultaneously by John Walter Osborne in Australia and by two soldiers at the Ordnance Survey in Southampton, Captain Alexander de Courcy Scott and Lance-Corporal Rider, who were working under the command of Colonel Henry James, who immediately took credit for the innovation. Essentially, phot.