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Picturing France in the fifteenth century: The map in BNF MS Fr. 4991

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Picturing France in the fifteenth century: The map in BNF MS Fr. 4991
Abstract
A map of France is included in a manuscript, dated to around 1460, entitled A tous nobles, which contains a historical account and genealogy of the French kings. The map was produced in the wake of the Hundred Years War, when conflict with the English challenged both French identity and territory. The map, however, smooths over a century of war to reveal a nation both strong and independent. Through the mapmaker's selection of places, and his use of fluvial boundaries to define the area concerned, he has created an image of France shaped by ideology and history that is wholly in keeping with its location in the manuscript, where the renaming of Gaul as France is described. The map reveals the territory of France to be a critical link between the mythical past and the political present. This connection between history and territory, also reiterated in the text itself, is presented in a graphic format that may be related to contemporary practice of using maps along with legal documents in the resolution of territorial disputes. Seen in the light of the king's claim to the lands ruled by his ancestors, the map thus constitutes a rare medieval example of French national identity expressed in relation to French territory. © 2006 Imago Mundi Ltd.
Publication
Imago Mundi
Date
2006
Volume
58
Issue
2
Pages
133-149
Journal Abbr
Imago Mundi
Citation Key
serchukPicturingFranceFifteenth2006
ISSN
03085694 (ISSN)
Archive
Scopus
Language
English
Extra
5 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Serchuk, C. (2006). Picturing France in the fifteenth century: The map in BNF MS Fr. 4991. Imago Mundi, 58(2), 133–149. Scopus. https://doi.org/10.1080/03085690600687180