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Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" />
Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" />


The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-coloured copper engraved maps <ref name=Beydilli>Beydilli(1995) {{tr icon}}</ref> of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53&nbsp;cm by 72&nbsp;cm) and all the maps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref>
The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-colored copper engraved maps ☃☃ of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53☃☃cm by 72☃☃cm) and allthe m]aps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref>


From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref>
From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref>


The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose.
Ecstasy The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose.


Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref>
Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref>

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'{{italic title}} [[File:Cedid Atlas Title Page.jpg|thumb|right|Title Page of the ''Cedid Atlas'' (also known as ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi'')]] '''''Cedid Atlas''''' (or ''Atlas-ı Cedid'') is the first published [[atlas]] in the [[Muslim world]], printed and published in 1803 in [[Istanbul]], then the capital of the [[Ottoman Empire]].<ref name="hgk">[http://www.hgk.msb.gov.tr/ustbanner/turk/ilkatlas.htm First Printed Atlas in the Muslim World] {{tr icon}}</ref><ref>[http://www.antiquemapsandprintsblog.com/antique-maps/ Antique Maps - Timeline of Cartography]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=510|title=The First World Atlas Printed by Muslims (April 1803 – March 1804)|publisher=}}</ref> The full title name of the atlas reads as '''''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''''' (meaning, literally, ''"A Translation of a New Atlas"'') and in most libraries outside Turkey, it is recorded and referenced accordingly. Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" /> The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-coloured copper engraved maps <ref name=Beydilli>Beydilli(1995) {{tr icon}}</ref> of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53&nbsp;cm by 72&nbsp;cm) and all the maps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref> From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref> The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose. Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref> ==Other names== A few sources outside [[Turkey]] and the [[Muslim world]] also refer to this atlas as the '''''New Great Atlas'''''.<ref name="JCB" /> In Turkey, since the printing press of the book was located in the historical [[Üsküdar]] (Scutari) region (now a municipality) of [[Istanbul]], the atlas sometimes is referred to as the '''''Üsküdar Atlası'''''.<ref name="Uskudar" /> ==Existing copies== These are the only 11 complete copies known to exist in the world: # Turkey - Topkapı Sarayı ([[Topkapı Palace]]) - 1 copy - Complete # Turkey - Library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] (İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, formerly known as ""Engineering School (Mühendislik Mektebi")) - 2 copies - Complete (''presence of copies are not confirmed'') # Turkey - Library of the [[Boğaziçi University]] (Boğaziçi Üniversitesi, formerly known as [[Robert College]]) - 3 copies - Complete (''presence of only 1 copy is confirmed'') # Turkey - Municipality of [[Üsküdar]](Üsküdar Belediyesi) - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Library of Congress]] - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Princeton University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Netherlands - [[Leiden University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Saudi Arabia - Madinah based Antiquarian bookseller; [http://www.eqtna.com/ Eqtna for Rare Books]. The copy was displayed for sale at the [http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx Sharjah Book Fair 2015].<ref>{{Cite web|title = Rare ‘Arabian Nights’ book in Arabic at the Sharjah book fair|url = http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx|website = The Gulf Today|access-date = 2016-02-23}}</ref> - 1 copy - Complete (Contrary to sources, on-line library search at the library of [[Boğaziçi University]] shows only 1 copy according to the records, and an on-line search at the library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] shows no copies according to records. [[WorldCat]] union catalogue search of all the libraries confirms this result. Accordingly, there are only 6 complete and intact copies confirmed to exist in the world.) These are the incomplete copies known to exist in the world: # U.S.A. - [[John Carter Brown Library]] ([[Brown University]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) # U.S.A. - [[Newberry Library]] - 1 copy (missing 1 map and also 1 available map is from another copy) # Turkey - Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Turkey - Bursa İnebey Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Norway - Nasjonalbiblioteket ([[National Library of Norway]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/01/15/463209833/norways-national-library-discovers-rare-atlas-with-a-little-help-from-reddit|title=Norway's National Library Discovers Rare Atlas — With A Little Help From Reddit|date=15 January 2016|work=NPR.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2016/01/14/how-a-karma-seeking-redditor-uncovered-one-of-the-worlds-rarest-atlases/|title=How a karma-seeking Redditor uncovered one of the world’s rarest atlases|author=AbOhlheiser|date=14 January 2016|work=Washington Post}}</ref> The following libraries possess very limited portions of the atlas : # [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]] owns the initial (1+79) page-long geographical treatise "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" and one map only, title page and the remaining maps of the atlas are missing. # [[National Library of Australia]] owns only two maps of the atlas with all the rest missing. Occasionally, single maps of the Cedid Atlas are presented for sale by on-line book sellers or auctioneers. ==Maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== In addition to the (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm) monochrome celestial map, there are 24 coloured maps in the atlas; some of them are larger than (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm). In order of appearance, these maps show: # Eastern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere # South Pole and North Pole # The World # Europe (including Iceland) # Anatolia, Black Sea, Aegean Sea, Balkan Peninsula, (heel of) Italy, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus/Crete (in the south) # Adriatic Coast, Italy,Southern France, Iberian Peninsula, Libya/Tunis/Algeria (in the south) # Anatolia (the) Black Sea, Crimea, Southern Ukraine, (north of) Balkan Peninsula to Hungary # Western Anatolia, Aegean Sea, Crete (in the south), Greece # England (and Wales) # Scotland and Scottish Islands # The Low Countries : Hanau, Luxembourg, Brabant, Flanders, Northern France # France (at the time of the monarchy) # The English Channel and the Channel Islands, Western France Coast # France (at the time of the republic) # Germany (from Brandenburg to Braunschweig) # Poland, Prussia, Lithuania (to the north) # Continent of Asia # Azerbaijan, Armenia, Western Iran, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus (in the south), Anatolia # Continent of Africa # River Nile in Egypt in detail (including the Nile Delta) # Continents of America (North, Central, South) and (part of) Pacific Ocean # Eastern North America # Central/South America (Guyana) Coast # The Lesser Antilles (including) Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Tobago ==Paper used for the maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== The watermark of the papers on which the maps were printed were examined. While some [[Princeton University]] professors believe the papers are Russian-made, John Delaney, the historical maps [[curator]] for the [[Princeton University Library]], believes the paper is possibly from [[Venice]], Italy.<ref name="NJ" /> ==Gallery== {{Gallery |title=Pages from the Cedid Atlas |File:Cedid Atlas (World) 1803.jpg |World map |File:Cedid Atlas (Middle East) 1803.jpg |The Ottoman controlled Middle East |File:Cedid Atlas (Greece and the Balkans) 1803.jpg |Balkans and Anatolia |File:Cedid Atlas (Europe) 1803.jpg |Europe, including Ottoman Southeast Europe |File:Cedid Atlas (Africa) 1803.jpg |Africa, including Ottoman North Africa |File:Cedid Atlas (Egypt) 1803.jpg |[[Ottoman Egypt]] }} ==Articles and papers== * [http://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/oimp27.pdf University of Chicago - European Cartographers and the Ottoman World (1500-1750)] * [http://www.turkishculture.org/fine-art/graphic-arts/prints-graphic-arts-576.htm Turkish Cultural Foundation - Turkish Graphic Arts] * [http://www.scribd.com/doc/79494876/Jerusalem-Quarterly-Issue-48-Winter-2011 Jerusalem Quarterly - Shifting Ottoman Conceptions of Palestine : Ethnography and Cartography] * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/2242/1870 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Cengiz Orhonlu] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/16755/15942 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Deniz Ekinci] {{tr icon}} ==Books== * ''The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire''. Kinross, Patrick. Perennial, London, 1977. * ''İmparatorluğun En Uzun Yüzyılı''. Ortaylı, İlber. Hil Yayinları, İstanbul, 1983. {{tr icon}} * ''Military, Administrative, and Scholarly Maps and Plans''. Karamustafa, Ahmet T. In ''"The History of Cartography, Vol. 2, Book 1: Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies, edited by J. B. Harley and David Woodward, pp. 209–28"'', University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1992. * ''Türk Bilim ve Matbaacılık Tarihinde Mühendishane, Mühendishane Matbaası ve Kütüphanesi (1776-1826)''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1995. {{tr icon}} * ''Mühendishane ve Üsküdar Matbaalarında Basılan Kitapların Listesi ve Bir Katolog''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1997. {{tr icon}} * ''History of the Ottoman Empire, Volume 2''. Shaw, S.J. and Shaw, E.Z., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997. * ''Mahmud Raif Efendi ve Nizâm-ı Cedîd'e Dair Eseri''. Beydilli, Kemal & Şahin, İlhan. Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, Ankara, 2001. {{tr icon}} ==See also== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [[Map]] * [[Atlas]] * [[Cartography]] * [[History of cartography]] * [[Map collection]] {{col-break}} * [[Piri Reis map]] * [[Book collecting]] * [[Incunable]] * [[Printing]] * [[Printing press]] {{col-break}} * [[History of printing]] * [[Geography]] * [[Geography and cartography in medieval Islam]] * [[Table of historical maps]] * [[List of atlases]] {{col-end}} ==References== {{Reflist|30em}} ==External links== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20140320090137/http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Princeton University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/islam/pages/exchange.html Brown University Library - A Landmark Turkish Atlas] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html Brown University Library - ''The New Great Atlas : Istanbul, 1803-1804''] * [http://www.loc.gov/rr/amed/guide/nes-turkey.html Library of Congress - Near East Collections - ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html Library of Congress - "New Order" Artifacts - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.lithuanianmaps.com/Maps1801-15.html Maps: 1801-1815] * [http://maviboncuk.blogspot.com/2006/09/ottoman-printed-world-map-in-mercators.html Cornucopia of Ottomania and Turcomania - Ottoman Printed World Map] * [http://www.sochistdisc.org/news_letter_May_2002/terra-cognita_7.htm Terra Cognita - Newsletter of the Society for the History of Discoveries - ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Newberry Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/monter4.htm Turkish Incunabula in the Sweden Royal Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/Cedid_Atlas.htm Sweden Royal Library - ''Cedid Atlas''] {{col-break}} * [http://catalogue.leidenuniv.nl/primo_library/libweb/action/dlSearch.do?dscnt=1&onCampus=false&search_scope=UBL_LMS&fromLogin=true&query=any%2Cexact%2CPPN236299727&dstmp=1343486765958&group=GUEST&vid=UBL_V1&institution=UBL&fromLogin=true Leiden University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercemesi''] {{nl icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=30415134&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Copy of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=40734302&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Map From ''Cedid Atlas'' at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://trove.nla.gov.au/result?q=cedid+atlas National Library of Australia - Maps From ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/11779/20060524-0000/www.nla.gov.au/pub/gateways/archive/75/maps.html National Library of Australia - Gateways: ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=gmd&action=browse&fileName=gmd3m/g3200m/g3200m/gct00235/ct_browse.db&displayType=3&maxCols=3&recNum=0&itemLink=r?ammem/gmd:@field(NUMBER+@band(g3200m+gct00235))&title2=Cedid%20atlas%20terc%26uuml;mesi%20%2f%20Tab'hane-yi%20H%26uuml;mayun'da%20Cedid%20atlas-i%20kebir%20kit'alari%20tersim%20olunup%20tab'ana%20irade-yi%20kati-yi%20hazrat%20cihandar%26icirc;%20taalluk%20etmekle%20;%20k%26uuml;re-yi%20arz%20ve%20m%26acirc;dan%20m%26uuml;rekkep%20sark%20ve%20garp%20canup%20ve%20simal%20i'tibarile%20kati%20olunan%20k%26uuml;reler%20ve%20Avrupa%20ve%20Asya%20ve%20I%26%23x0307;frikiye%20ve%20Amrika%20ve%20baz-i%20tefsil%20haritalari.&linkText=Back+to+bibliographic+information To View All Pages of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye", Title Page, Celestial Map and all 24 Coloured Maps of ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Library of Congress Website] * [http://www.bursadakultur.org/inebey_kutuphanesi.htm Turkey : Bursa Inebey Kutuphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.ykykultur.com.tr/sermet/ Turkey : Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://historiaymapas.wordpress.com/ History and Maps - Blog in Spanish and English] {{es icon}} {{col-end}} [[Category:1803 books]] [[Category:Atlases]] [[Category:Incunabula]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{italic title}} [[File:Cedid Atlas Title Page.jpg|thumb|right|Title Page of the ''Cedid Atlas'' (also known as ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi'')]] '''''Cedid Atlas''''' (or ''Atlas-ı Cedid'') is the first published [[atlas]] in the [[Muslim world]], printed and published in 1803 in [[Istanbul]], then the capital of the [[Ottoman Empire]].<ref name="hgk">[http://www.hgk.msb.gov.tr/ustbanner/turk/ilkatlas.htm First Printed Atlas in the Muslim World] {{tr icon}}</ref><ref>[http://www.antiquemapsandprintsblog.com/antique-maps/ Antique Maps - Timeline of Cartography]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=510|title=The First World Atlas Printed by Muslims (April 1803 – March 1804)|publisher=}}</ref> The full title name of the atlas reads as '''''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''''' (meaning, literally, ''"A Translation of a New Atlas"'') and in most libraries outside Turkey, it is recorded and referenced accordingly. Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" /> The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-colored copper engraved maps ☃☃ of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53☃☃cm by 72☃☃cm) and allthe m]aps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref> From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref> Ecstasy The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose. Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref> ==Other names== A few sources outside [[Turkey]] and the [[Muslim world]] also refer to this atlas as the '''''New Great Atlas'''''.<ref name="JCB" /> In Turkey, since the printing press of the book was located in the historical [[Üsküdar]] (Scutari) region (now a municipality) of [[Istanbul]], the atlas sometimes is referred to as the '''''Üsküdar Atlası'''''.<ref name="Uskudar" /> ==Existing copies== These are the only 11 complete copies known to exist in the world: # Turkey - Topkapı Sarayı ([[Topkapı Palace]]) - 1 copy - Complete # Turkey - Library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] (İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, formerly known as ""Engineering School (Mühendislik Mektebi")) - 2 copies - Complete (''presence of copies are not confirmed'') # Turkey - Library of the [[Boğaziçi University]] (Boğaziçi Üniversitesi, formerly known as [[Robert College]]) - 3 copies - Complete (''presence of only 1 copy is confirmed'') # Turkey - Municipality of [[Üsküdar]](Üsküdar Belediyesi) - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Library of Congress]] - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Princeton University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Netherlands - [[Leiden University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Saudi Arabia - Madinah based Antiquarian bookseller; [http://www.eqtna.com/ Eqtna for Rare Books]. The copy was displayed for sale at the [http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx Sharjah Book Fair 2015].<ref>{{Cite web|title = Rare ‘Arabian Nights’ book in Arabic at the Sharjah book fair|url = http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx|website = The Gulf Today|access-date = 2016-02-23}}</ref> - 1 copy - Complete (Contrary to sources, on-line library search at the library of [[Boğaziçi University]] shows only 1 copy according to the records, and an on-line search at the library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] shows no copies according to records. [[WorldCat]] union catalogue search of all the libraries confirms this result. Accordingly, there are only 6 complete and intact copies confirmed to exist in the world.) These are the incomplete copies known to exist in the world: # U.S.A. - [[John Carter Brown Library]] ([[Brown University]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) # U.S.A. - [[Newberry Library]] - 1 copy (missing 1 map and also 1 available map is from another copy) # Turkey - Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Turkey - Bursa İnebey Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Norway - Nasjonalbiblioteket ([[National Library of Norway]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/01/15/463209833/norways-national-library-discovers-rare-atlas-with-a-little-help-from-reddit|title=Norway's National Library Discovers Rare Atlas — With A Little Help From Reddit|date=15 January 2016|work=NPR.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2016/01/14/how-a-karma-seeking-redditor-uncovered-one-of-the-worlds-rarest-atlases/|title=How a karma-seeking Redditor uncovered one of the world’s rarest atlases|author=AbOhlheiser|date=14 January 2016|work=Washington Post}}</ref> The following libraries possess very limited portions of the atlas : # [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]] owns the initial (1+79) page-long geographical treatise "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" and one map only, title page and the remaining maps of the atlas are missing. # [[National Library of Australia]] owns only two maps of the atlas with all the rest missing. Occasionally, single maps of the Cedid Atlas are presented for sale by on-line book sellers or auctioneers. ==Maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== In addition to the (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm) monochrome celestial map, there are 24 coloured maps in the atlas; some of them are larger than (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm). In order of appearance, these maps show: # Eastern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere # South Pole and North Pole # The World # Europe (including Iceland) # Anatolia, Black Sea, Aegean Sea, Balkan Peninsula, (heel of) Italy, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus/Crete (in the south) # Adriatic Coast, Italy,Southern France, Iberian Peninsula, Libya/Tunis/Algeria (in the south) # Anatolia (the) Black Sea, Crimea, Southern Ukraine, (north of) Balkan Peninsula to Hungary # Western Anatolia, Aegean Sea, Crete (in the south), Greece # England (and Wales) # Scotland and Scottish Islands # The Low Countries : Hanau, Luxembourg, Brabant, Flanders, Northern France # France (at the time of the monarchy) # The English Channel and the Channel Islands, Western France Coast # France (at the time of the republic) # Germany (from Brandenburg to Braunschweig) # Poland, Prussia, Lithuania (to the north) # Continent of Asia # Azerbaijan, Armenia, Western Iran, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus (in the south), Anatolia # Continent of Africa # River Nile in Egypt in detail (including the Nile Delta) # Continents of America (North, Central, South) and (part of) Pacific Ocean # Eastern North America # Central/South America (Guyana) Coast # The Lesser Antilles (including) Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Tobago ==Paper used for the maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== The watermark of the papers on which the maps were printed were examined. While some [[Princeton University]] professors believe the papers are Russian-made, John Delaney, the historical maps [[curator]] for the [[Princeton University Library]], believes the paper is possibly from [[Venice]], Italy.<ref name="NJ" /> ==Gallery== {{Gallery |title=Pages from the Cedid Atlas |File:Cedid Atlas (World) 1803.jpg |World map |File:Cedid Atlas (Middle East) 1803.jpg |The Ottoman controlled Middle East |File:Cedid Atlas (Greece and the Balkans) 1803.jpg |Balkans and Anatolia |File:Cedid Atlas (Europe) 1803.jpg |Europe, including Ottoman Southeast Europe |File:Cedid Atlas (Africa) 1803.jpg |Africa, including Ottoman North Africa |File:Cedid Atlas (Egypt) 1803.jpg |[[Ottoman Egypt]] }} ==Articles and papers== * [http://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/oimp27.pdf University of Chicago - European Cartographers and the Ottoman World (1500-1750)] * [http://www.turkishculture.org/fine-art/graphic-arts/prints-graphic-arts-576.htm Turkish Cultural Foundation - Turkish Graphic Arts] * [http://www.scribd.com/doc/79494876/Jerusalem-Quarterly-Issue-48-Winter-2011 Jerusalem Quarterly - Shifting Ottoman Conceptions of Palestine : Ethnography and Cartography] * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/2242/1870 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Cengiz Orhonlu] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/16755/15942 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Deniz Ekinci] {{tr icon}} ==Books== * ''The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire''. Kinross, Patrick. Perennial, London, 1977. * ''İmparatorluğun En Uzun Yüzyılı''. Ortaylı, İlber. Hil Yayinları, İstanbul, 1983. {{tr icon}} * ''Military, Administrative, and Scholarly Maps and Plans''. Karamustafa, Ahmet T. In ''"The History of Cartography, Vol. 2, Book 1: Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies, edited by J. B. Harley and David Woodward, pp. 209–28"'', University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1992. * ''Türk Bilim ve Matbaacılık Tarihinde Mühendishane, Mühendishane Matbaası ve Kütüphanesi (1776-1826)''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1995. {{tr icon}} * ''Mühendishane ve Üsküdar Matbaalarında Basılan Kitapların Listesi ve Bir Katolog''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1997. {{tr icon}} * ''History of the Ottoman Empire, Volume 2''. Shaw, S.J. and Shaw, E.Z., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997. * ''Mahmud Raif Efendi ve Nizâm-ı Cedîd'e Dair Eseri''. Beydilli, Kemal & Şahin, İlhan. Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, Ankara, 2001. {{tr icon}} ==See also== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [[Map]] * [[Atlas]] * [[Cartography]] * [[History of cartography]] * [[Map collection]] {{col-break}} * [[Piri Reis map]] * [[Book collecting]] * [[Incunable]] * [[Printing]] * [[Printing press]] {{col-break}} * [[History of printing]] * [[Geography]] * [[Geography and cartography in medieval Islam]] * [[Table of historical maps]] * [[List of atlases]] {{col-end}} ==References== {{Reflist|30em}} ==External links== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20140320090137/http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Princeton University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/islam/pages/exchange.html Brown University Library - A Landmark Turkish Atlas] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html Brown University Library - ''The New Great Atlas : Istanbul, 1803-1804''] * [http://www.loc.gov/rr/amed/guide/nes-turkey.html Library of Congress - Near East Collections - ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html Library of Congress - "New Order" Artifacts - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.lithuanianmaps.com/Maps1801-15.html Maps: 1801-1815] * [http://maviboncuk.blogspot.com/2006/09/ottoman-printed-world-map-in-mercators.html Cornucopia of Ottomania and Turcomania - Ottoman Printed World Map] * [http://www.sochistdisc.org/news_letter_May_2002/terra-cognita_7.htm Terra Cognita - Newsletter of the Society for the History of Discoveries - ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Newberry Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/monter4.htm Turkish Incunabula in the Sweden Royal Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/Cedid_Atlas.htm Sweden Royal Library - ''Cedid Atlas''] {{col-break}} * [http://catalogue.leidenuniv.nl/primo_library/libweb/action/dlSearch.do?dscnt=1&onCampus=false&search_scope=UBL_LMS&fromLogin=true&query=any%2Cexact%2CPPN236299727&dstmp=1343486765958&group=GUEST&vid=UBL_V1&institution=UBL&fromLogin=true Leiden University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercemesi''] {{nl icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=30415134&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Copy of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=40734302&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Map From ''Cedid Atlas'' at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://trove.nla.gov.au/result?q=cedid+atlas National Library of Australia - Maps From ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/11779/20060524-0000/www.nla.gov.au/pub/gateways/archive/75/maps.html National Library of Australia - Gateways: ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=gmd&action=browse&fileName=gmd3m/g3200m/g3200m/gct00235/ct_browse.db&displayType=3&maxCols=3&recNum=0&itemLink=r?ammem/gmd:@field(NUMBER+@band(g3200m+gct00235))&title2=Cedid%20atlas%20terc%26uuml;mesi%20%2f%20Tab'hane-yi%20H%26uuml;mayun'da%20Cedid%20atlas-i%20kebir%20kit'alari%20tersim%20olunup%20tab'ana%20irade-yi%20kati-yi%20hazrat%20cihandar%26icirc;%20taalluk%20etmekle%20;%20k%26uuml;re-yi%20arz%20ve%20m%26acirc;dan%20m%26uuml;rekkep%20sark%20ve%20garp%20canup%20ve%20simal%20i'tibarile%20kati%20olunan%20k%26uuml;reler%20ve%20Avrupa%20ve%20Asya%20ve%20I%26%23x0307;frikiye%20ve%20Amrika%20ve%20baz-i%20tefsil%20haritalari.&linkText=Back+to+bibliographic+information To View All Pages of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye", Title Page, Celestial Map and all 24 Coloured Maps of ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Library of Congress Website] * [http://www.bursadakultur.org/inebey_kutuphanesi.htm Turkey : Bursa Inebey Kutuphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.ykykultur.com.tr/sermet/ Turkey : Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://historiaymapas.wordpress.com/ History and Maps - Blog in Spanish and English] {{es icon}} {{col-end}} [[Category:1803 books]] [[Category:Atlases]] [[Category:Incunabula]]'
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'@@ -6,9 +6,9 @@ Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" /> -The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-coloured copper engraved maps <ref name=Beydilli>Beydilli(1995) {{tr icon}}</ref> of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53&nbsp;cm by 72&nbsp;cm) and all the maps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref> +The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-colored copper engraved maps ☃☃ of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53☃☃cm by 72☃☃cm) and allthe m]aps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref> From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref> -The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose. +Ecstasy The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose. Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref> '
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[ 0 => 'The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-colored copper engraved maps ☃☃ of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53☃☃cm by 72☃☃cm) and allthe m]aps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref>', 1 => 'Ecstasy The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose.' ]
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[ 0 => 'The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-coloured copper engraved maps <ref name=Beydilli>Beydilli(1995) {{tr icon}}</ref> of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53&nbsp;cm by 72&nbsp;cm) and all the maps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref>', 1 => 'The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose.' ]
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'{{italic title}} [[File:Cedid Atlas Title Page.jpg|thumb|right|Title Page of the ''Cedid Atlas'' (also known as ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi'')]] '''''Cedid Atlas''''' (or ''Atlas-ı Cedid'') is the first published [[atlas]] in the [[Muslim world]], printed and published in 1803 in [[Istanbul]], then the capital of the [[Ottoman Empire]].<ref name="hgk">[http://www.hgk.msb.gov.tr/ustbanner/turk/ilkatlas.htm First Printed Atlas in the Muslim World] {{tr icon}}</ref><ref>[http://www.antiquemapsandprintsblog.com/antique-maps/ Antique Maps - Timeline of Cartography]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=510|title=The First World Atlas Printed by Muslims (April 1803 – March 1804)|publisher=}}</ref> The full title name of the atlas reads as '''''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''''' (meaning, literally, ''"A Translation of a New Atlas"'') and in most libraries outside Turkey, it is recorded and referenced accordingly. Although manuscripts and hand-drawn maps were widely available throughout the [[Muslim world]], due mainly to religious reasons, the printing of books started only in 1729 by [[Ibrahim Muteferrika]] and the ''Cedid Atlas'' could only be published in 1803 by Müderris Abdurrahman Efendi in a style based on European geographical knowledge as well as European map-making methods of the day.<ref name="hgk" /> The ''Cedid Atlas'' includes a monochrome celestial chart and 24 hand-colored copper engraved maps ☃☃ of various parts of the world; the celestial chart and maps measure at least (53☃☃cm by 72☃☃cm) and allthe m]aps are actually adaptations <ref name="LOC">{{cite web|url=http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html|title=Artifacts from the 'New Order' (November 1998) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin|publisher=}}</ref> of [[William Faden]]'s <ref>[http://www.geographicus.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CAD&Product_Code=faden William Faden's Biography]</ref> ''General Atlas''. The maps are preceded by a (1+79) page-long treatise of geography, "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" by Mahmud Raif Efendi <ref>[http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/19/1151/13525.pdf Mahmud Raif Efendi As The Chief Secretary of Yusuf Agah Efendi, The First Permanent Ottoman-Turkish Ambassador to London (1793-1797)]</ref><ref>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Mahmud Raif Efendi's Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye] {{tr icon}}</ref> and a title page. The "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" of Mahmud Raif Efendi was printed one year later, in 1804, and bound together with the atlas.<ref name=TB>[http://www.tarihbilinci.com/forum/devlet-adamlari-223/mahmud-raif-efendi-15164/ Ottoman Statesmen: Mahmud Raif Efendi] {{tr icon}}</ref> From a point of view of art, the atlas is notable for the color of the maps as well as the beauty of the script on the maps.<ref name="NJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/127148311969290.xml&coll=5|title=In this map, it's still Constantinople|publisher=}}</ref> Ecstasy The ''Cedid Atlas'' was published in parallel with the developments of the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s [[Nizam-ı Cedid]], the "New-Order" or the "New System" ("Cedid" means "new" and "Nizam" means "system", "regime", or "order") and its title-name reflects this clearly. The atlas was new in terms of cartographical knowledge and well suited to the new system which tried to introduce new institutions into the [[Ottoman Empire]] while trying to replace existing ones with contemporary counterparts from the [[West]]. Introduced by the ruling [[padishah]] (the [[sultan]]) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], [[Selim III]], the "New-Order" included a series of reforms which mainly modernized and changed the structure of the then existing [[Ottoman army]] and changed the administrative structure of the Empire. It was an effort to catch up with technical, military, economic, and administrative achievements of the [[West]] against which the [[Ottoman Empire]] was losing grounds since the 17th century. New military and engineering schools were established and governmental units related with the foreign relations and affairs were re-organized to align with the new system. For these schools, governmental units, and the wholly re-organized army reformed according to the European practice, a new understanding and applications of geography of the standards of the West were necessary and the ''Cedid Atlas'' was translated and printed for this purpose. Only 50 copies of this atlas (measuring 36&nbsp;cm x 53&nbsp;cm) were printed at the press. A copy was presented to [[Selim III]]; several copies were also presented to the high-ranking officials of the Empire, some were reserved for the library of Muhendishane (military engineering school of the time), and the remaining were reserved for sale. However, during the "Alemdar Vakası", an uprising of the [[janissaries]] in [[Istanbul]] during November 15–18, 1808,<ref name=Kinross431-434>Kinross(1977), pp 431-434.</ref> a fire at the warehouse of the press destroyed an unknown (unaccounted) number of the copies reserved for sale.<ref name="Uskudar">[http://www.uskudar.bel.tr/tr-TR/haberler/Sayfalar/Haber.aspx?hid=2355 Municipality of Usküdar-Istanbul] {{tr icon}}</ref> Based on several estimates and accounting for the single maps (torn-out from bound volumes of the atlas) sold or being sold worldwide, it is believed that a maximum of 20 complete examples could be present in libraries or in private collections <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swaen.com/antique-map-of.php?id=12429|title=RAIF EFENDI - Guyana, Surinam, Amapa.|author=Antique maps Paulus Swaen Auction Galleries|publisher=}}</ref> whereas some sources suggest that there exist only 10 complete and intact copies in the world.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton">[http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Newly acquired: Cedid Atlas Tercümesi (Istanbul, 1803)]</ref><ref name="JCB">{{cite web|url=http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|publisher=The John Carter Brown Library|title=The New Great Atlas: Istanbul, 1803-1804 |author=Allison Rich|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html|archive-date=2012-06-06}}</ref> As such, it's one of the rarest printed atlases of historical value.<ref name="LOC" /><ref name="Uskudar" /><ref name="Princeton" /><ref name="JCB" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/3413648|title=[World map in Mercator's projection] [cartographic material] - National Library of Australia|publisher=}}</ref> ==Other names== A few sources outside [[Turkey]] and the [[Muslim world]] also refer to this atlas as the '''''New Great Atlas'''''.<ref name="JCB" /> In Turkey, since the printing press of the book was located in the historical [[Üsküdar]] (Scutari) region (now a municipality) of [[Istanbul]], the atlas sometimes is referred to as the '''''Üsküdar Atlası'''''.<ref name="Uskudar" /> ==Existing copies== These are the only 11 complete copies known to exist in the world: # Turkey - Topkapı Sarayı ([[Topkapı Palace]]) - 1 copy - Complete # Turkey - Library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] (İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, formerly known as ""Engineering School (Mühendislik Mektebi")) - 2 copies - Complete (''presence of copies are not confirmed'') # Turkey - Library of the [[Boğaziçi University]] (Boğaziçi Üniversitesi, formerly known as [[Robert College]]) - 3 copies - Complete (''presence of only 1 copy is confirmed'') # Turkey - Municipality of [[Üsküdar]](Üsküdar Belediyesi) - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Library of Congress]] - 1 copy - Complete # U.S.A. - [[Princeton University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Netherlands - [[Leiden University Library]] - 1 copy - Complete # Saudi Arabia - Madinah based Antiquarian bookseller; [http://www.eqtna.com/ Eqtna for Rare Books]. The copy was displayed for sale at the [http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx Sharjah Book Fair 2015].<ref>{{Cite web|title = Rare ‘Arabian Nights’ book in Arabic at the Sharjah book fair|url = http://www.gulftoday.ae/portal/903bb3f3-bca0-4220-bea8-17e83d8a7787.aspx|website = The Gulf Today|access-date = 2016-02-23}}</ref> - 1 copy - Complete (Contrary to sources, on-line library search at the library of [[Boğaziçi University]] shows only 1 copy according to the records, and an on-line search at the library of the [[Istanbul Technical University]] shows no copies according to records. [[WorldCat]] union catalogue search of all the libraries confirms this result. Accordingly, there are only 6 complete and intact copies confirmed to exist in the world.) These are the incomplete copies known to exist in the world: # U.S.A. - [[John Carter Brown Library]] ([[Brown University]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) # U.S.A. - [[Newberry Library]] - 1 copy (missing 1 map and also 1 available map is from another copy) # Turkey - Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Turkey - Bursa İnebey Kütüphanesi - 1 copy (missing several maps) # Norway - Nasjonalbiblioteket ([[National Library of Norway]]) - 1 copy (missing 2 maps) <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/01/15/463209833/norways-national-library-discovers-rare-atlas-with-a-little-help-from-reddit|title=Norway's National Library Discovers Rare Atlas — With A Little Help From Reddit|date=15 January 2016|work=NPR.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2016/01/14/how-a-karma-seeking-redditor-uncovered-one-of-the-worlds-rarest-atlases/|title=How a karma-seeking Redditor uncovered one of the world’s rarest atlases|author=AbOhlheiser|date=14 January 2016|work=Washington Post}}</ref> The following libraries possess very limited portions of the atlas : # [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]] owns the initial (1+79) page-long geographical treatise "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" and one map only, title page and the remaining maps of the atlas are missing. # [[National Library of Australia]] owns only two maps of the atlas with all the rest missing. Occasionally, single maps of the Cedid Atlas are presented for sale by on-line book sellers or auctioneers. ==Maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== In addition to the (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm) monochrome celestial map, there are 24 coloured maps in the atlas; some of them are larger than (53&nbsp;cm x 72&nbsp;cm). In order of appearance, these maps show: # Eastern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere # South Pole and North Pole # The World # Europe (including Iceland) # Anatolia, Black Sea, Aegean Sea, Balkan Peninsula, (heel of) Italy, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus/Crete (in the south) # Adriatic Coast, Italy,Southern France, Iberian Peninsula, Libya/Tunis/Algeria (in the south) # Anatolia (the) Black Sea, Crimea, Southern Ukraine, (north of) Balkan Peninsula to Hungary # Western Anatolia, Aegean Sea, Crete (in the south), Greece # England (and Wales) # Scotland and Scottish Islands # The Low Countries : Hanau, Luxembourg, Brabant, Flanders, Northern France # France (at the time of the monarchy) # The English Channel and the Channel Islands, Western France Coast # France (at the time of the republic) # Germany (from Brandenburg to Braunschweig) # Poland, Prussia, Lithuania (to the north) # Continent of Asia # Azerbaijan, Armenia, Western Iran, Iraq/Syria/Lebanon/Jordan/Palestine/Cyprus (in the south), Anatolia # Continent of Africa # River Nile in Egypt in detail (including the Nile Delta) # Continents of America (North, Central, South) and (part of) Pacific Ocean # Eastern North America # Central/South America (Guyana) Coast # The Lesser Antilles (including) Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Tobago ==Paper used for the maps in the ''Cedid Atlas''== The watermark of the papers on which the maps were printed were examined. While some [[Princeton University]] professors believe the papers are Russian-made, John Delaney, the historical maps [[curator]] for the [[Princeton University Library]], believes the paper is possibly from [[Venice]], Italy.<ref name="NJ" /> ==Gallery== {{Gallery |title=Pages from the Cedid Atlas |File:Cedid Atlas (World) 1803.jpg |World map |File:Cedid Atlas (Middle East) 1803.jpg |The Ottoman controlled Middle East |File:Cedid Atlas (Greece and the Balkans) 1803.jpg |Balkans and Anatolia |File:Cedid Atlas (Europe) 1803.jpg |Europe, including Ottoman Southeast Europe |File:Cedid Atlas (Africa) 1803.jpg |Africa, including Ottoman North Africa |File:Cedid Atlas (Egypt) 1803.jpg |[[Ottoman Egypt]] }} ==Articles and papers== * [http://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/oimp27.pdf University of Chicago - European Cartographers and the Ottoman World (1500-1750)] * [http://www.turkishculture.org/fine-art/graphic-arts/prints-graphic-arts-576.htm Turkish Cultural Foundation - Turkish Graphic Arts] * [http://www.scribd.com/doc/79494876/Jerusalem-Quarterly-Issue-48-Winter-2011 Jerusalem Quarterly - Shifting Ottoman Conceptions of Palestine : Ethnography and Cartography] * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/2242/1870 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Cengiz Orhonlu] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.iudergi.com/tr/index.php/tarih/article/viewFile/16755/15942 İstanbul Üniversitesi Dergisi - Article in Turkish by Deniz Ekinci] {{tr icon}} ==Books== * ''The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire''. Kinross, Patrick. Perennial, London, 1977. * ''İmparatorluğun En Uzun Yüzyılı''. Ortaylı, İlber. Hil Yayinları, İstanbul, 1983. {{tr icon}} * ''Military, Administrative, and Scholarly Maps and Plans''. Karamustafa, Ahmet T. In ''"The History of Cartography, Vol. 2, Book 1: Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies, edited by J. B. Harley and David Woodward, pp. 209–28"'', University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1992. * ''Türk Bilim ve Matbaacılık Tarihinde Mühendishane, Mühendishane Matbaası ve Kütüphanesi (1776-1826)''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1995. {{tr icon}} * ''Mühendishane ve Üsküdar Matbaalarında Basılan Kitapların Listesi ve Bir Katolog''. Beydilli, Kemal. Eren Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1997. {{tr icon}} * ''History of the Ottoman Empire, Volume 2''. Shaw, S.J. and Shaw, E.Z., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997. * ''Mahmud Raif Efendi ve Nizâm-ı Cedîd'e Dair Eseri''. Beydilli, Kemal & Şahin, İlhan. Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınları, Ankara, 2001. {{tr icon}} ==See also== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [[Map]] * [[Atlas]] * [[Cartography]] * [[History of cartography]] * [[Map collection]] {{col-break}} * [[Piri Reis map]] * [[Book collecting]] * [[Incunable]] * [[Printing]] * [[Printing press]] {{col-break}} * [[History of printing]] * [[Geography]] * [[Geography and cartography in medieval Islam]] * [[Table of historical maps]] * [[List of atlases]] {{col-end}} ==References== {{Reflist|30em}} ==External links== {{col-begin}} {{col-break}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20140320090137/http://blogs.princeton.edu/rarebooks/2010/05/_princeton_university_librarys.html Princeton University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/islam/pages/exchange.html Brown University Library - A Landmark Turkish Atlas] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20120606011702/http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/I%20found%20it%20JCB/apr11.html Brown University Library - ''The New Great Atlas : Istanbul, 1803-1804''] * [http://www.loc.gov/rr/amed/guide/nes-turkey.html Library of Congress - Near East Collections - ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9811/atlas.html Library of Congress - "New Order" Artifacts - ''Cedid Atlas Tercümesi''] * [http://www.lithuanianmaps.com/Maps1801-15.html Maps: 1801-1815] * [http://maviboncuk.blogspot.com/2006/09/ottoman-printed-world-map-in-mercators.html Cornucopia of Ottomania and Turcomania - Ottoman Printed World Map] * [http://www.sochistdisc.org/news_letter_May_2002/terra-cognita_7.htm Terra Cognita - Newsletter of the Society for the History of Discoveries - ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Newberry Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/monter4.htm Turkish Incunabula in the Sweden Royal Library] * [http://goran.baarnhielm.net/Islam/eng/Cedid_Atlas.htm Sweden Royal Library - ''Cedid Atlas''] {{col-break}} * [http://catalogue.leidenuniv.nl/primo_library/libweb/action/dlSearch.do?dscnt=1&onCampus=false&search_scope=UBL_LMS&fromLogin=true&query=any%2Cexact%2CPPN236299727&dstmp=1343486765958&group=GUEST&vid=UBL_V1&institution=UBL&fromLogin=true Leiden University Library - ''Cedid Atlas Tercemesi''] {{nl icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=30415134&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Copy of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye" at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://catalogue.bnf.fr/servlet/biblio?idNoeud=1&ID=40734302&SN1=0&SN2=0&host=catalogue Map From ''Cedid Atlas'' at Bibliothèque Nationale de France] {{fr icon}} * [http://trove.nla.gov.au/result?q=cedid+atlas National Library of Australia - Maps From ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/11779/20060524-0000/www.nla.gov.au/pub/gateways/archive/75/maps.html National Library of Australia - Gateways: ''Cedid Atlas''] * [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=gmd&action=browse&fileName=gmd3m/g3200m/g3200m/gct00235/ct_browse.db&displayType=3&maxCols=3&recNum=0&itemLink=r?ammem/gmd:@field(NUMBER+@band(g3200m+gct00235))&title2=Cedid%20atlas%20terc%26uuml;mesi%20%2f%20Tab'hane-yi%20H%26uuml;mayun'da%20Cedid%20atlas-i%20kebir%20kit'alari%20tersim%20olunup%20tab'ana%20irade-yi%20kati-yi%20hazrat%20cihandar%26icirc;%20taalluk%20etmekle%20;%20k%26uuml;re-yi%20arz%20ve%20m%26acirc;dan%20m%26uuml;rekkep%20sark%20ve%20garp%20canup%20ve%20simal%20i'tibarile%20kati%20olunan%20k%26uuml;reler%20ve%20Avrupa%20ve%20Asya%20ve%20I%26%23x0307;frikiye%20ve%20Amrika%20ve%20baz-i%20tefsil%20haritalari.&linkText=Back+to+bibliographic+information To View All Pages of "Ucalet-ül Coğrafiye", Title Page, Celestial Map and all 24 Coloured Maps of ''Cedid Atlas'' at the Library of Congress Website] * [http://www.bursadakultur.org/inebey_kutuphanesi.htm Turkey : Bursa Inebey Kutuphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://www.ykykultur.com.tr/sermet/ Turkey : Yapı Kredi Sermet Çifter Araştırma Kütüphanesi Incomplete ''Cedid Atlas'' Copy] {{tr icon}} * [http://historiaymapas.wordpress.com/ History and Maps - Blog in Spanish and English] {{es icon}} {{col-end}} [[Category:1803 books]] [[Category:Atlases]] [[Category:Incunabula]]'
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
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