Ever since I was a small boy, I've had a fascination with maps. Read about it here:
Mapping the globe. An excerpt:
One of my prized possessions is a 1901 Cram’s Modern Atlas of the World which
I purchased at an antique shop in my hometown at age 16. It’s a hefty
volume with numerous indices and other helps in addition to the maps of
every country in the world. The United States had only 45 states. Canada
had seven provinces. To my delight, this atlas boasted a large map of
Cyprus, nominally part of the Ottoman Empire but administered by Great
Britain. My paternal grandparents would have been quite young in that
year.
So what’s the allure? For one thing, I think in terms of maps.
Familiarity with maps allows one to navigate the surface of God’s good
earth. As I write, we have just returned from visiting family in the
Chicago area. I know by heart the roads in the western suburbs and could
easily find my way around, despite all the changes that have occurred
since my youth. If I navigated by landmarks, I’d be lost in my own
homeland.
Read the entire article here.
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