Strange Maps

October 16, 2007

181 - “Scotland - Land of Heroes and of Cakes”

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @

scotland1.jpg

A gallant piper, stuggling through the bogs,
His wind bag broken, wearing his clay clogs;
Yet, strong of heart, a fitting emblem makes
For Scotland - land of heroes and of cakes.

1869 saw the publication in London of a peculiar sort of atlas: ‘Geographical Fun: Being Humourous Outlines of Various Countries’. The book showed 12 anthropomorphic depictions of European nations, with as many stereotypes dressed in appropriately typical garb crouching and stretching to twist their bodies into a shape with the same outline as their countries.

The obvious intention was humourous, but in the introduction, ‘Aleph‘ (pseudonym of William Harvey) states that “it is believed that illustrations of Geography may be rendered educational, and prove of service to young Scholars who commonly think Globes and Maps but wearisome aids to knowledge (…) If these geographical puzzles excite the mirth of children, the amusement of the moment may lead to the profitable curiosity of youthful students and imbue the mind with a healthful taste for foreign lands.”

Those ‘foreign lands’ are:

Wales, in the form of Owen Glendowr
Ireland as a peasant woman, with child
France as an Empress of cooks, fashions and the dance
Spain and Portugal in an ‘eternal’ union
Germany as a dancing lady
Prussia in the form of king Friedrich Wilhelm and chancellor Bismarck
Holland and Belgium as a pair of ladies (of greatly different size and stature)
Denmark as a female ice skater
England as Queen Victoria
Russia, of course, as a bear
Scotland, shown here, is a gallant piper, struggling through the bogs.
Italy as a freedom fighter, complete with Phrygian head-gear, then en vogue with revolutionaries.

An interesting anecdote concerning ‘Geographical Fun’ was related to me by Mike Pearce, who pointed out the contribution to the book by Lillian Lancaster, a stage performer in Britain and America, best remembered for singing the song ‘Lardy Dah’ on stage in New York (the origin of the still current expression ‘la-di-dah’). It turns out Lancaster (a.k.a. Eliza Jane) drew those maps at age 15, to entertain her bedridden brother. After her stage career, and having returned to Britain, Lancaster produced many more maps. A Mr Rod Barron is doing further research on Lillian Lancaster, and can be reached at his website (www.barron.co.uk).

Many people have directed me to the ‘Geographical Fun’ maps, 9 of which can be seen here (plus accompanying poems and with a link to the introduction of the book) at themaphouse.com, a map auction website.

11 Comments »

  1. Link?

    Comment by Minivet — October 16, 2007 @

  2. Link!

    Comment by strangemaps — October 17, 2007 @

  3. Now, that’s a very funny map, the Iberian one. Why? Well, this thing’s date is 1969, 41 years before the 1910 revolution in Portugal deposed the monarchy and replaced the blue and white flag the country had back then with the current one, green and red… and yet, what colours did the artist decide to use for the portuguese clothing of the iberian bear (dog?)? Yep, green and red.

    (and isn’t the Gibraltar UJ way too big?)

    Comment by Jorge — October 17, 2007 @

  4. That is odd. According to Wikipedia, the new flag represented a clean break with tradition, so it shouldn’t be some lesser-known antecedent.

    Comment by Minivet — October 17, 2007 @

  5. And just what is that “Germany”?

    Comment by Yuval — October 17, 2007 @

  6. Yuval, I’m guessing Germany is the post-1871 German Empire minus Prussia.

    Even if you ignore tiny countries like Luxembourg and Monaco, it’s curious the European Atlas omits Switzerland, Austria, Sweden, Romania, Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, and the Ottoman Empire/ Turkey.

    Comment by Darrel Jones — October 17, 2007 @

  7. I’m puzzled by the Scottish map’s multiple use of “Frith” instead of the conventional ‘Firth’. At first glance, I can’t see any similar mis-spellings on the other maps, although that of Denmark has unusual phonetic renderings for the Skagerrak and Kattegat.

    Comment by Terry Hunt — October 26, 2007 @

  8. [...] is this map of Scotland, as a land of heroes and cakes. Something I can attest to the truth [...]

    Pingback by Alex’s blog » Blog Archive » Cartographic Joy — November 3, 2007 @

  9. The personification of Italy is not just any random freedom fighter but Giuseppe Garibaldi, complete with red shirt, threatening a terrified pope-shaped Sardina (or Sardinia-shaped pope?) with an Italian flag. The unification of the Papacy’s lands with Italy has been a major issue well into the 19th century.

    Comment by Walter Aprile — November 3, 2007 @

  10. I love how the Holland/Belgium one talks about “Dame Holland trick’d out in her gala clothes.” Who knew that slang expression was so old! ;)

    Comment by James M. — June 18, 2008 @

  11. The map of Russia has a really strange shape. I guess it only includes the European portion of Russia, but still I can’t quite place it.

    Comment by James M. — June 18, 2008 @

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