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De la Tartarie.

Description: Map shows late eighteenth century boundaries, regions, and cities of Russian Siberia and Tartarie, Grand Tartarie, Persia, and parts of China and India. Includes text in two panels flanking left and right of map. Scale not given.
Date: [1775..1795]
Partner: University of Texas at Arlington Library

Europe en 1815.

Description: Map shows extent of the French, Austrian, Russian, and Ottoman Empires at the end of the reign of Emperor Napoleon I. Insets: "Théâtre des deux invasions" [Theatre of the two invasions], "Théâtre des guerres de Vendée" [Theatre of war in Vendee], and "Bassin du Pô" [Po River Basin]. Relief shown by hachures. Scale not given.
Date: [1850..1870]
Creator: Delamarche, Alexandre, 1815-1884
Partner: University of Texas at Arlington Library

L'Empire Romain et les barbares du nord au IVéme Siécle et avant la Grande Invasion.

Description: Map shows the extent of the Roman Empire and other kingdoms and empires in Europe, the Middle East, and northern Africa before the invasion of the Huns. Inset: Arrivée des Huns sur le Danube 376 [Arrival of the Huns on the Danube 376]. Relief shown by hachures. Scale not given.
Date: [1850..1870]
Creator: Delamarche
Partner: University of Texas at Arlington Library

Carte de L'Europe et des états Barbares au VIème Siècle

Description: Map shows Europe, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean area at the time of the "Great Invasion," and the barbaric states during the 6th century. Inset: Départ itinéraire et etablissement des Peuples Barbares dans le Grande Invasion [Departure route and establishment of the Peoples in the Great Barbarian Invasion]. Includes notes and dates. Relief shown by hachures. Scale not given.
Date: [1850..1870]
Creator: Delamarche
Partner: University of Texas at Arlington Library

Figure de la ville de Jerusalem.

Description: Map shows buildings inside Jerusalem. According to its French inscription, this map purports to show how Jerusalem and its environs looked from the time of David, ca. 1010 B.C. until its destruction at the time of Roman Emperor Titus in 70 A.D. The map was intended to help illuminate the third chapter of the Bible book of Nehemia, and it possibly came from a seventeenth century French Huguenot or Swiss Protestant Bible. Relief shown pictorially. Includes legend. Text in French, building names a… more
Date: 1750?
Partner: University of Texas at Arlington Library
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