Mapping the World
Professor Jerry Brotton uncovers how maps are snapshots of a moment in history and offer visions of distant lands, tempting explorers to plunder and conquer.
In the last of a three-part series about the extraordinary stories behind maps, Professor Jerry Brotton uncovers how maps are snapshots of a moment in history and offer visions of distant lands, tempting explorers to plunder and conquer.
However, adventurers first had to tackle the great challenge of mapping the globe onto a flat surface. There is no perfect solution, but the father of geography, Claudius Ptolemy, had some clever ideas.
Explorers like Christopher Columbus sailed into the unknown in search of riches and discovered a whole new continent that would become the most powerful on earth, while Amerigo Vespucci gave it his name.
Sir Walter Raleigh's treasure map of El Dorado in South America ultimately lost him his head. But the myth of El Dorado lived on, sending hundreds of men to their death in fruitless attempts to find the golden city.
As navigation became easier, maps enabled nations and enterprises like the Dutch East India Company to plunder far-off territories for spices, natural resources and gold. Even today, a project to map the North Pole is the flashpoint for the so-called 'Cold Rush' - the dash to exploit oil, gas and mineral reserves as the Arctic ice melts.
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Clip
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Episode 3 - Mapping the World
Duration: 01:51
Music Played
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Explosions in the Sky
So Long Lonesome
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Jerry Brotton |
Series Producer | Annabel Hobley |
Executive Producer | Chris Granlund |
Broadcasts
- Sun 2 May 2010 21:00
- Sun 2 May 2010 22:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ HD
- Mon 3 May 2010 01:30
- Tue 4 May 2010 19:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ HD
- Thu 6 May 2010 21:00
- Fri 7 May 2010 01:20
- Fri 7 May 2010 03:50
- Thu 10 Mar 2011 20:00
- Wed 6 Jul 2011 20:00
- Thu 7 Jul 2011 01:00
- Sat 8 Nov 2014 20:00
- Sun 9 Nov 2014 03:00
- Thu 22 Jan 2015 22:35
- Tue 17 Nov 2015 23:00
- Fri 14 Sep 2018 00:00
- Thu 19 Sep 2019 20:00
- Sun 4 Jul 2021 20:15