1. Opening and freezing of rivers, lakes and canals of European Russia and the time of navigation on them in 1864–1874: [diagram] (1875), I. Borkovsky. (comp.), St. Petersburg, MPS, 1 l. (In Russ.).
2. General map of European Russia with indication of the degree of population [Maps] (1862), comp. according to the latest official and private information from Shubersky, the current member of the Imperial Russian geographical region. St. Petersburg, (type. D. Quesneville). (In Russ.).
3. General map of a part of Russia divided into provinces and counties with indication of postal roads and border customs [Maps] (1808), composed, grav. and an imprint in 1808, St. Petersburg. (In Russ.).
4. Gibson K. (2021), The problem of creating an ethnographic atlas of Russia in Peter Koeppen's correspondence with the Academy of Sciences, Russian Research, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 977-994. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.15826/qr.2021.3.622.
5. Grishin E. S., Umansky L. A. (2022), Methodological foundations of regional historical mapping based on the unified digital model of the European part of the Russian Empire, Historical and Geographical Journal, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 6–28. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.58529/2782-6511-2022-1-1-6-29.
6. The road map of the Russian Empire, to all postal, country roads, carriageways capable of the shortest passage to anyone in general, and even more necessary for the transportation of goods to trading merchants and other industrialists [Maps] (1809), op. in 1809, [St. Petersburg]. (In Russ.).
7. Dubrovsky A. V., Petrovsky A. N. (1880), Map of European Russia, showing the percentage of boys studying in rural schools to the population of school age in the provinces, showing the percentage of girls studying in rural schools to the population of school age in the counties, Cartographic institution of A. Ilyin, Cartographic Fund of the Russian Geographical Society. (In Russ.). URL: https://geoportal.rgo.ru/record/12730.
8. Map of the most important productivity sectors of European Russia, namely: arable farming, forestry, cattle breeding, tobacco cultivation, beetroot, flax, hemp, grapes, madder, sericulture, distribution of minerals and distribution of commercial and industrial points [Maps] (1872), comp. and ed. at the Center. stat. com., St. Petersburg. (In Russ.).
9. Map of European Russia and the Caucasus region [Maps] (1862), comp. according to the latest information at the Military Topographical Depot. [St. Petersburg], Imperial Russian Geographical Society. (In Russ.).
10. Map of European Russia with population indication by counties with cities in 1880 [Maps] (1880), comp. by A. Ilyin, St. Petersburg.
11. Map of railways, highways and inland waterways of the Russian Empire [Maps] (1890), publication of the Ministry of Railways; comp. The Statistical Department of the Ministry of Railways, [Saint Petersburg], Cartography, Ilyin's establishment. (In Russ.).
12. A map of the industry of European Russia with indications of factories, factories and crafts, administrative places for the manufacturing part, the main fairs, water and land communications, ports, lighthouses, customs, the main marinas, quarantines, etc. [Maps] (1852), comp. Pavel Kryukov, 2nd edition, ispr. and add, St. Petersburg. (In Russ.).
13. Map of Russia and the tribes inhabiting it (1866), Comp. and fig. Nestor Terebenev, St. Petersburg, Publishing house of M. L. Sveshnikov, Chromolite. Illovaisky. (In Russ.).
14. Köppen P. I. (1852), On the ethnographic map of European Russia, St. Petersburg, Tip. Imp. akad. Nauk, 40 p. (In Russ.).
15. Kondakova T. Y. (2023), Socio-economic statistics of the second half of the XIX — early XX century. as a source base for historical and geographical research of economic regions of Russia, Izvestiya Rossijskoj akademii nauk. Seriya geograficheskaya, vol. 87, no. 5, pp. 766-780. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.31857/S2587556623050059.
16. Laptev V. V. (2021), Graphical representation of state statistics in albums and atlases of the second half of the 19th century, Izvestiya Rossijskoj akademii nauk. Seriya geograficheskaya, vol. 85, no. 6, pp. 936-951. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.31857/S2587556621060108.
17. Mzhelskaya T. V., Lobanova A. A. (2016), Maps of Siberia as a source for the study of socio-economic issues of the 19th — early 20th centuries, Interexpo GEO-Siberia-2016. XII International Scientific Congress. International Scientific Conference “Global changes in the region: the experience of history and modernity”, sat. mater. in 2 volumes, Novosibirsk, SGIT, vol. 1, pp. 58-61. (In Russ.).
18. The National Atlas of Russia in four volumes [Maps] (2004–2008), Chief editors: A.V. Borodko (prev.), V. V. Sveshnikov (chief editor), etc. Moscow, Roskartografiya, vol. 4. (In Russ.).
19. A new geographical roadmap of the Russian Empire with the designation of 57 provinces, 8 regions, 4 townships, 4 administrations, 8 voivodeships, the Lands of Bolshaya and Malaya Kabarda and Kirghiz Kaysaks. with indications of educational districts, cities, notable places, water messages, postal roads, and the distance between them in versts (1833), compl. and publ. by Captain Mednikov, an employee at the Military Printing Depot, St. Petersburg. (In Russ.).
20. Petronis V. (2010), Pinge, divide and rule: the mutual influence of ethnic cartography and national politics in Late Imperial Russia (the second half of the nineteenth century), Moscow, pp. 308–329. (In Russ.).
21. Polyan P. M. (2012), Mathematical maps of V. P. Semenov-Chan-Shan and his predecessors in the analytical field of the XXI century, Izvestiya Rossijskoj akademii nauk. Seriya geograficheskaya, no. 6, pp. 98–106. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.15356/0373-2444-2012-6-98-106.
22. Postal map of European and Asian Russia with the designation of stations and the number of versts between them [Maps] (1844), compiled according to the latest information in 1844, Semenov. Ed. 2-E. [St. Petersburg]. (In Russ.).
23. Postal map of the Russian Empire Compiled by the Postal Department from the latest information collected from local Provincial Authorities, in 2 hours, part 1, containing all the inner provinces, the Kingdom of Poland and other newly annexed regions (1824), comp. By Mail Dept. from the latest information collected from local gubernatorial authorities, St. Petersburg. (In Russ.).
24. Russia. Atlas. Maps of Russian lands: an essay on the history of geographical study and mapping of our fatherland (1996), A. V. Postnikov, ONEXIM Bank, Russian State Bank, V. L. Yanin [et al.] (eds.), Moscow, Our House — Magazine for People, 194 p. (In Russ.).
25. Statistical Atlas the main branches of the factory industry in European Russia with a named list of factories and plants [Maps] (1873), D. A. Timiryazev, St. Petersburg, Societies. use. (In Russ.).
26. Economic and statistical atlas of European Russia [maps] (1852), ed. MGI with an explanatory description, comp. special appendix to the atlas. Ed. 2, St. Petersburg, 1 atlas (32 l.), 89 p. (In Russ.).
27. The ethnographic map of European Russia in 1875 by Alexander Rittikh was compiled on behalf of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society by a full member of IT A. F. Rittikh (1875), Cartographic institution of A. A. Ilyin. (In Russ.).
28. Palski G. (2008), Communications and exchanges in European thematic cartography. On the example of cartographic maps of the XIX century, Belgeo. Revue Belge de Géographie, no. 3–4, pp. 413–426.
29. Tikunov V. S., Janvareva L. F. (2017), History and current state of thematic mapping in Russia, European George. Study guide, no. 4 (1), pp. 43–58. https://doi.org/10.13187/egs.2017.1.43.
30. Yatsunsky V. K. (1975), Unpublished statistical atlas of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia in 1850, compiled by N. A. Milyutin, Cartography, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 115–119.
Comments
No posts found