Sponsored in partnership with California, Chicago, New York, Philip Lee Phillips, Rocky Mountain, and Texas Map Societies.
Location: Zoom
Time: 7:00 PM ET/ 6:00 PM CT/ 5:00 PM MT/ 4:00 PM PT
Title: “Mapping Greenland, from the 18th to 20th Centuries”
Speaker: Henrik Dupont, Retired Map Curator, Royal Library, Copenhagen, Denmark
Summary: The mapping of the world’s largest island is a fascinating story with many heroic adventures, tragic expeditions, and struggles between nations and single people. It involves the necessary help from indigenous people who lived and traveled in the harsh conditions of the high latitudes close to the North Pole. This story will tell about the colonization of the island from the first Danish missionary Hans Egede who settled in 1721, not knowing much about the geography and people of the area. Gradually the Danes colonized the west coast while other nations explored the east and north. Finally in 1907 the last coastline was visited, and Greenland became a Danish colony in 1917, with the agreement of the United States, authorized in 1933 by the International Court in den Haag. The mapping is a complex history which will be shown in this presentation.
Planning to attend?
Click here to register for this Zoom event. After you have registered, you will receive an email with the Meeting ID and passcode for the event.
© 2021 Washington Map Society. All Rights Reserved.
Contact Us