Digital Image: 1919 Soteriadis Ethnological Map: Eastern Balkans, Greece, Western Turkey

HellenismNearEast-soteriadis-1919_d
Hellenism in the Near East. An ethological map compiled from the latest statistics by Professor George Soteriadis of the University of Athens. - Main View
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Digital Image: 1919 Soteriadis Ethnological Map: Eastern Balkans, Greece, Western Turkey

HellenismNearEast-soteriadis-1919_d

This is a downloadable product.
  • Hellenism in the Near East. An ethological map compiled from the latest statistics by Professor George Soteriadis of the University of Athens.
  • Added: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 11:03:00
  • Original Document Scale: 1 : 2155000
The balkanized Balkans.
$50.00

Title


Hellenism in the Near East. An ethological map compiled from the latest statistics by Professor George Soteriadis of the University of Athens.
  1919 (dated)     26 x 20.75 in (66.04 x 52.705 cm)     1 : 2155000

Description


FOR THE ORIGINAL ANTIQUE MAP, WITH HISTORICAL ANALYSIS, CLICK HERE.

Digital Map Information

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Cartographer S


George Soteriadis (1852 - 1942) was a professor of history at the University of Athens. In the 1930s, Soteriadis undertook archaeological expeditions in the Marathon region of Greece. More by this mapmaker...


Edward Stanford (May 27, 1827 - November 3, 1904) was one of the most prolific map publishing firms of the late 19th century. The company began as a partnership in 1848 between the 21 year old Edward Stanford and the established map dealer Trelawney Saunders. By 1853 the partnership had dissolved and Edward Stanford took full control of the business. A subsequent series of expansions and exciting new map issues finally led to the production of Stanford's masterwork, "Stanford's Library Map of London". This map is still available and remains somewhat accurate. At the time of publishing it was hailed by the Royal Geographical Society as "the most perfect map of London that has ever been issued". In 1882 Edward Stanford Sr. passed the firm on to his son, Edward Stanford Jr. who continued in his father's proud tradition. Today the Stanford firm still publishes maps and remains one of the most important and prolific cartographic publishers in the world. Learn More...

Source


The Sphere, Supplement, March 1, 1919.     The Sphere (January 27, 1900 - June 27, 1964), formally known as The Sphere: An Illustrated Newspaper for the Home and later The Sphere: The Empire's Illustrated Weekly was a British newspaper. Launched at the height of the Boer War by London Illustrated Newspapers, The Sphere competed directly with two other newspapers: The Graphic and Illustrated London News. The Sphere published news from Britain and around the world, since its target audiece was British subjects living in the colonies. A total of 3,343 issuese were published, plus a special edition published in January 1965 entitled Winston Churchill: A Memorial Tribute. Two institutions, the British Library and the National Library of Scotland, hold copies of the entire print run of the newspaper.

References


OCLC 234162568, 43094725.