The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

King James VI’s maps to illustrate Dundee talk

Maps tell stories of places and people interested in them

- ciaran sneddon cisneddon@thecourier.co.uk

Maps of Dundee used by King James VI are among the historical charts which will be brought to the city for a special event today.

Other maps on show at the talk will include those used by the military in the wake of the Jacobite rebellion of 1745.

Chris Fleet, senior maps curator at the National Library of Scotland, said in addition to showing what historical Dundee looked like, maps can also reveal informatio­n about a period’s culture.

“Maps are a window to the position of Dundee at a particular point in time,” he said.

“On one level they show what is in what place, but we can also ask who made the map and why they made it.

“In the 17th Century you find there are quite small-scale maps that show an overview of an area to give an impression of the whole of Scotland.

“In the 18th Century you see the growth of the port and constructi­on of harbours.”

The talk will take a fascinatin­g journey through selected maps of Dundee and its hinterland from the 16th Century to the present, based on the rich collection­s of the National Library of Scotland.

It will particular­ly look at the background to the maps, who made them and why, to explain something of their style and content.

Chris added: “It was only in 1750 that people started to use accurate instrument­s to record distances.

“It was not expected that people would try and accurately pin down features. The requiremen­t for maps has also changed over time.

“For King James VI and I, maps were particular­ly used to integrate control of the whole state.

“It didn’t require so much of the detail, just knowing the position.

The talk will also explore the work at the library to make these historic maps available online, and the use of technologi­es such as georeferen­cing and 3D overlays, to understand and visualise them better, with a brief look at the growing collection­s of born-digital mapping the library is receiving.

Entry costs £2, and begins at 2.15pm in the D’Arcy Thompson Lecture Theatre at Dundee University.

This extra talk from the local RSGS Dundee group comes towards the end of the national RSGS Inspiring People talks programme.

Susan Mains, of the Dundee RSGS group, said: “The RSGS and the University of Dundee geography programme aim to engage with as wide an audience as possible in order to share the innovative and exciting work being done in relation to how we understand places, people and changes that take place over time.”

 ??  ?? A map by John Ainslie created in 1794.
A map by John Ainslie created in 1794.
 ??  ?? This 1678 map created by Robert Edward is entitled ‘Angusia Provincia Scotiae sive’, or the Shire of Angus.
This 1678 map created by Robert Edward is entitled ‘Angusia Provincia Scotiae sive’, or the Shire of Angus.
 ??  ?? The importance of the docks soon became clear in maps.
The importance of the docks soon became clear in maps.
 ??  ?? Senior map curator Chris Fleet.
Senior map curator Chris Fleet.

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