This is a 1935 British War Office edition of the Baghdad sheet of the International Map of the World. The International Map of the World was a multi-national effort initiated in the early 20th century to create a uniform large-scale map of the world. Although the effort ultimately floundered and was left incomplete, many individual sheets were prepared, this being the Baghdad sheet.
A Closer Look
The map depicts central Iraq, with Baghdad just below center. Color indicates altitude.The International Map of the World
First proposed in 1891 by German geographer Albrecht Penck, the International Map of the World was a project to create a world map at a uniform scale and to internationally agreed standards. The project was discussed at geographical conferences for the next 15 years until, at the 1909 First International Conference in London, representatives of 10 nations agreed on standards and guidelines. Over the next four years, a grid reference system was finalized. The Ordnance Survey in London hosted the Central Bureau for the Map of the World, and by 1939, 350 of the 1,000 planned maps had been completed. The United Nations took over management of the project after World War II, and progress continued into the 1950s. However, the project began to lose supporters by the mid-1960s, being criticized by some and being of 'no practical use.' UNESCO declared the project unfeasible in 1989 and stopped monitoring progress. Today, scholars have taken a more complex view of the entire project and have proposed that it be evaluated for its importance to international relations and other aspects of global life instead of simply a question of cartography.Publication History and Census
This map was created by the Geographical Section, General Staff of the War Office, and originally published in 1928. The present example represents the 2nd edition, which was published in 1935. Examples of the Baghdad sheet of the International Map of the World North I-38 are cataloged in OCLC in various editions. A single example of the 1928 edition is cataloged in OCLC and is part of the collection at the American University of Beirut. We have not found another cataloged example of the present 1935 edition.
Cartographer
The British War Office (1857 - 1964) was a department of the British Government responsible for the administration of the Royal Army until 1964, when its functions were transferred to the Ministry of Defense. The War Office was to the Royal Army what the Admiralty was to the Royal Navy, and later, the Air Ministry. Within the War Office, the General Staff Topographical Section was responsible for thousands of maps issued for British intelligence and military use. The Topographical Section was renamed Geographical Section in April 1907. Many, once their military use passed, were offered through licensed agents to the general public. The sole London agent for War Office material was Edward Stanford. More by this mapmaker...
Very good. Light wear along original fold lines. Manuscript number on recto in margin.