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Java: Residentie Besoeki

event1895

location_onIndonesia

There are over 100 sheets of this very large-scale (1:20,000) topographic map of the regency of Besoeki, Java. Cities and villages, roads, railways and rivers, crops and many more features are all shown in great detail.

Java

event1894

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This detailed late 19th century map shows Java divided into regencies, and features mountains, land and sea routes, and an inset map of the port city of Batavia (Jakarta). It was designed to be folded within book covers so it could be easily carried.

Kaart der landbouw-ondernemingen in Oost-Java

event1892

location_onIndonesia

This map shows agricultural enterprises in eastern Java in the late 19th century. Land ownership, crops (cassava, kapok, peanuts, tobacco), factories (oil, sugar, coffee), and the offices of government officials are also shown.

Kaart van den gemiddelden regenval op Java, tevens situatie-schets van de djati- en wildhoutbosschen

event1892

location_onIndonesia

This late 19th century map records the average rainfall at a variety of locations—marked with blue dots—on Java. Three types of forest are also shown: cultivated forest, wild forest under management, and wild forest not under management.

Java

event1890

location_onIndonesia

This detailed late 19th century map shows Java divided into regencies, and features mountains, roads, railways, and rivers. There is also an inset map of the port city of Batavia (Jakarta).

Java en Madoera

event1875

location_onIndonesia

This detailed late 19th century map shows Java and Madura divided into regencies, and features mountains, roads, railways, and rivers.

Java en Madoera

event1873

location_onIndonesia

This detailed late 19th century map shows Java and Madura divided into regencies, and features mountains, roads, railways, and rivers.

Kaart van het eiland Java

event1845

location_onIndonesia

This map of Java uses hachures: short lines/dashes that give a sense of the shape and steepness of terrain. The coast is marked with shoals and reefs (dotted lines and crosses), bathymetry (sea depth, in figures) and anchor points (anchor symbols).

Chart of the East India Islands: exhibiting the several passages between the Indian and Pacific Oceans

event1824

location_onBrunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Southeast Asia, Myanmar

To aid navigation, this map shows small islands, shoals and reefs, maritime routes for use during monsoons or at particular times of the year, bathymetry (sea depth), past explorers’ routes, shipwrecks and text about monsoons, typhoons and currents.

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Current results range from 1824 to 1895