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The Historic New Orleans Collection
Antique map of the Americas depicting sea monsters, ships, and detailed coastlines. Illustrative borders show people and mythical figures, hinting at 16th-century cartography style. Landmasses have Latin inscriptions with decorative compass roses.

Cartographic Legacies

Maps are more than visual representations of landscapes and geographic features; they’re also storytellers.

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Maps are more than visual representations of landscapes and geographic features; they’re also storytellers. Cartographers imprint their views of the world on the maps they make, leaving significant messages in tiny details. 

In this series of videos, the Historic New Orleans Collection’s Chief Curator Jason Wiese demystifies some of the museum’s most significant maps. Wiese curated the exhibition Cartographic Legacies: Historical Maps at the Williams Research Center and was a key contributor to HNOC’s landmark 2003 publication Charting Louisiana: Five Hundred Years of Maps

Together, the videos present stories that emerge from the lines of these documents, including sea monsters, a novel 19th-century invention, a foundational French chart that miraculously survived both fire and the ravages of time, and a two-sided look at the Battle of New Orleans. 

A (New) World of Cartography

Rolling Down the River

Copycat Cartography

Both Sides of the Battle

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November 24, 2021

Related Exhibitions

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Exhibitions

Cartographic Legacies: Historical Maps at the Williams Research Center

September 28 to December 11, 2021

Related Books

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Books

Charting Louisiana: Five Hundred Years of Maps

A vintage map of the Gulf Coast region, including parts of modern-day Louisiana, Florida, and Texas, is displayed on a green background. The text reads Charting Louisiana and Five Hundred Years of Maps - The Historic New Orleans Collection.
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