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Mapping the Sovereign State: Technology, Authority, and Systemic Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2011

Jordan Branch
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley. E-mail: jbranch@berkeley.edu

Abstract

This article examines the effect of cartography on the development of the modern state system. I argue that new mapping technologies in early modern Europe changed how actors thought about political space, organization, and authority, thus shaping the creation of sovereign states and international relations. In particular, mapping was fundamental to three key characteristics of the medieval-to-modern shift: the homogenization of territorial authority, the linearization of political boundaries, and the elimination of nonterritorial forms of organization. Although maps have been interpreted as epiphenomenal to political change, each of these three transformations occurred first in the representational space of maps and only subsequently in the political practices of rulers and states. Based on evidence from the history of cartographic technologies and their use by political actors, the practices and texts of international negotiations, and the practical implementation of linearly bounded territoriality by states, this article argues that changes in the representational practices of mapmaking were constitutive of the early-modern transformation of the authoritative structure of politics. This explanation of the international system's historical transformation suggests useful new directions for investigations into the possibility of fundamental political change due to the economic, social, and technological developments of globalization.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 2011

In the modern international system, both the character of states and their interactions are structured by exclusive territorial sovereignty. This foundation—with linearly bounded territorial authority functioning as the dominant principle of political organization—is unique to the modern world and was the consequence of a complex transformation in early modern Europe. The development of modern cartography was a key part of this process: new mapmaking technologies changed how actors thought about political space, political organization, and political authority. This change was fundamental to the creation of modern states and international relations, which were built around exclusive territorial sovereignty, discrete boundaries, and formal equality.

Although the ideational and material implications of cartographic technologies were not the only factors involved in the development of the state system, certain fundamental features of modern political structures can best be understood as the result of the cognitive and social impact of cartography. In particular, the treatment of political authority exclusively in terms of homogenous territorial areas separated by discrete boundary lines, which is unique to the modern state system, resulted from the development, distribution, and use of modern mapping. Because maps depicted political authority as homogenously territorial and linearly bounded even before political practices and institutions were operationalized as such, this article posits that maps reshaped actors' perceptions of the legitimate form of political authority and organization. Cartography, in short, was necessary to the transformation from medieval to modern political structures.

This transformation involved two parallel processes: a revolution in the nature of territorial authority and the disappearance of nonterritorial authorities. Together, these reorganized the authoritative basis of politics, resulting in the particular character of the modern state system. Because of changes in cartographic depictions and their use, Europeans shifted from seeing the world as a series of unique places to conceiving of the globe as a homogenous geometric surface. This shift had direct implications for how they understood political space and territorial political authority. Medieval territorial authority over a collection of locations, such as towns, was replaced by modern authority over a uniform, linearly bounded space. Simultaneously, nonterritorial authorities such as feudal bonds were undermined, eliminating the medieval variety of forms of political organization. With the increased use of maps at all levels of society in early modern Europe, forms of political authority not amenable to cartographic depiction were neglected, resulting in the uniformly territorial authority of the modern state system. This exclusively territorial definition of political authority and organization—as well as the particular, boundary-focused character of territoriality—is unique to the modern state system.

This article discusses the connection between cartographic technology and systemic political change. The empirical foundation is provided by changes in political practices driven by developments in cartographic technologies, in particular the fundamental revolution represented by the cartographic grid of latitude and longitude and the mapping of space as homogenous and linearly divisible. Theoretically, this article brings into international relations a useful body of literature on the social history of cartography, connects material technological drivers of change to processes of normative and ideational political transformation, and contributes to debates concerning the origins, character, and future trajectory of the modern state system.

The first section outlines this article's theoretical context and existing explanations of the origins of the sovereign state system. The second section draws out the theoretical connections between mapping technologies and political authority structures. The bulk of the article then closely examines the links between cartographic practices and political ideas and structures in early modern Europe, proposing a new understanding of this epochal transformation. The conclusion suggests implications for contemporary international political change.

Authority, Sovereignty, and Political Structure

This article contributes to several ongoing theoretical debates in international relations: the interplay between material and ideational sources of political change, the interaction between agents and the structures, and the nature of what constitutes an international system. Each is addressed in terms of the transition from medieval to modern political structures and the origins of sovereign territorial statehood.

Within the constructivist tradition, ideas, norms, and beliefs are understood to be an integral part of political structures, providing meaning to material facts and structuring practices and outcomes.Footnote 1 From early critiques of neorealismFootnote 2 to subsequent refinements,Footnote 3 this approach to international relations has provided a framework for analyzing the origins of the sovereign state system in early modern Europe and the medieval political practices that preceded it.Footnote 4 By examining the ideational effects of material cartographic technology, this article offers a useful means of studying technological drivers of change while acknowledging that the effects of such material factors are constructed by, and operate through, the ideas that give them meaning.Footnote 5 In particular, my focus on techniques of representation builds on Ruggie's theorization of the role of epistemic transformation and collective imaginings in the construction of the uniquely modern form of political organization known as the sovereign state.Footnote 6 Changes in representational technologies structured political interactions, but only because those technologies altered ideas about the appropriate and legitimate forms of political authority.

This historical study illustrates the complexity of the relationship between agents and structures, in which actors promulgate structural conditions and simultaneously are subject to them.Footnote 7 A mutually constitutive relationship exists between representations of political space, the ideas held by actors about the organization of political authority, and actors' authoritative political practices manifesting those ideas. Actors are constrained by the structural ideas and practices of the system but also create those constraints through their ongoing interactions. Exogenous sources of change act through this relationship: the cartographic revolution in early modern Europe created new representations that led to, first, changes in ideas of authority and, subsequently, a transformation in the structures and practices of rule. This development accords with theories of structural change that allow for the possibility of transformation in the agent-structure dynamic, such as theories of cognitive evolutionFootnote 8 and morphogenesis.Footnote 9

This article also contributes to the theorization of international systems and efforts to delineate the character, origins, and future trajectory of modern sovereign states.Footnote 10 These political structures have been seen as recurring patterns throughout history, as inventions of the late Middle Ages, or as constructs implemented only in the much more recent past.Footnote 11 My focus on the connection between representational technologies and the authoritative basis of political structures builds on the constructivist approach to understanding when modern states and international relations appeared. Considering how political authority is represented, understood, and operationalized reveals the historical novelty and unique character of our sovereign state system—in particular, the exclusive reliance on territorial authority and discrete boundaries to define the highest level of political organization.

A broad literature has sought to explain the origins of modern territorial statehood and international relations, with theories generally falling into two categories: those focusing on material driving forces, such as military technology,Footnote 12 organizational competition,Footnote 13 property relations,Footnote 14 and economic systems,Footnote 15 and those relying on changes in ideas, including new representational epistemes,Footnote 16 shifts in religious norms,Footnote 17 and developments in political theory.Footnote 18 While not denying the importance of those factors, I argue that a key constitutive driver of this transformation has been neglected, largely because existing explanations have not focused on certain key features of modern territorial statehood: the exclusively linear character of boundaries and the homogenously territorial authority claimed within those lines. Cartography's social and ideational effects provided a new framework that structured the impact of other causal processes, leading to the implementation of an exclusively territorial—and discretely bounded—notion of political authority and organization.

Existing explanations account for certain aspects of the modern state system but are more effective when combined with the impact of cartography. For example, Tilly's work on the competitive advantages enjoyed by larger states in terms of extraction and coercion explains why, in early modern Europe, larger and more centralized political units became dominant.Footnote 19 Similarly, Spruyt points out the importance of institutional competition among diverse late-medieval actors, in which larger territorial states won out because of their efficiency advantages in several domains.Footnote 20 Yet neither theory accounts for the particular form that states assumed by the early nineteenth century: exclusively territorial entities separated by discrete boundaries. Territorial organization based on authority and control over a collection of places, rather than linearly divided space, could just as easily have satisfied the need for efficient extraction and organization. Competitive pressures may have been a necessary component of this systemic transformation, but they are not a sufficient explanation for the particular form of sovereign states.

Alternatively, Ruggie's brief examination of the origins of modern statehood combines material changes, strategic incentives, and “a transformation in social epistemology … the mental equipment that people drew upon in imagining and symbolizing forms of political community.”Footnote 21 While this adds the key element of how power and authority are understood—and hence instantiated in practice—Ruggie's focus on single-point perspective as the representational embodiment of political change relates to the shift from multiple sources of authority to a single, centralized sovereign: “political space came to be defined as it appeared from a single fixed viewpoint.”Footnote 22 This does not address another fundamental change in the nature of political organization: the homogenization of territorial authority over spaces defined and separated by discrete, linear boundaries.

Thus, I examine the role of cartography in shaping the dual transition in political authority—the transformation of territoriality and the elimination of nonterritorial authorities—that constituted the shift from medieval heteronomous complexity to modern territorially exclusive statehood.Footnote 23 The undermining of medieval structures of rule combined with the new possibilities suggested by mapping resulted in sovereign territorial statehood as we know it today. This ideational effect of cartography explains why, in a period with a number of possible political structures, the particular model of the sovereign territorial state was implemented as the only legitimate form of rule.Footnote 24 Functional efficiency alone does not explain this outcome, unique to the modern system of states.Footnote 25

The fundamental character of the international system is structured by ideas and practices concerning political authority.Footnote 26 For example, sovereignty is typically conceptualized in international relations as having internal and external aspects, both of which are constituted by the character of the authority that a state or ruler holds, claims, or is assigned. Additionally, the functional dimension of sovereign authority (the range of activities over which authority is claimed) can be distinguished from the constitutive dimension (the principle by which actors claim “ultimate or final authority”).Footnote 27 The constitutive dimension is my focus because it differentiates the fundamental principle of sovereign authority across diverse international systems and historical periods.

I draw a distinction between spatial authorities (territoriality) and those not defined spatially (nonterritorial authorities). Within those categories, territoriality can vary in terms of how space is understood (exclusive or overlapping, center- or boundary-focused), and nonterritorial forms of authority range from personal authoritative bonds to authority over economic or social issues.Footnote 28 These ideas structure the identities, interests, and behaviors of political actors because notions of what is politically appropriate or even conceivable will offer both constraints and incentives for particular actions.Footnote 29 These norms constitute part of the structure of the international system—a structure that is unobservable in itself, but observable in its implications for actors' ideas and practices.

In early-nineteenth-century Europe, rule came to be defined exclusively in terms of territories with boundaries between homogenous spatial authority claims. My argument challenges theories that have pushed sovereign statehood back much further, seeing key aspects of sovereignty in the late Middle Ages,Footnote 30 in the sixteenth century,Footnote 31 or after the Westphalian settlement.Footnote 32 These studies point toward the origins of certain aspects of statehood but do not explain the modern system's exclusive reliance on territorial authority and linear boundaries to define states. Defined broadly, states and state systems may have existed during many historical periods, including sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe.Footnote 33 Yet on the key dimension of how political authorities are defined, claimed, and separated, modern territorial statehood is distinct and a historically recent arrival.

Cartography and Political Authority: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations

The political authorities that constitute the international system are structured by a number of factors, including the understanding of space in representations such as maps. My approach to the social and political effects of mapmaking grows out of historical and theoretical literature on the interrelations among maps, their producers, their consumers, and their social context.Footnote 34 These theories offer a useful foundation for understanding the cartographic construction of modern state sovereignty. In short, maps and mapmaking are never value-neutral scientific practices.

Contrary to the conventional distinction between scientific maps (as good) and propaganda maps (as bad), all maps elide certain aspects of the world and construct a particular representation through what they depict. Thus all maps can be examined in terms of what they include and exclude, what is emphasized or elided, and how social relations or understandings enter into map creation and map reading. Besides conscious decisions to leave off classified or embarrassing information, elisions and distortions are often produced unintentionally, shaped by mapmaking practices and the unconscious prejudices or understandings of the mapmakers and their social context.Footnote 35 Moreover, the relationship between what is considered important and what is mapped goes both ways: the use of maps depicting certain spaces or features further emphasizes the normative importance of those elements.

In terms of the transformation of European authority structures, the early modern cartographic revolution was fundamental to the construction of modern states built on territorial exclusivity. Without the production and extensive use of Ptolemaic mapping, three key features of modern political authority would likely be absent: the homogeneity of territory as a geometrically measured space, the purely linear character of political boundaries, and the elimination of nonterritorial authorities. The resulting dominance of boundary-defined territorial authority is a unique feature of modern statehood. Furthermore, cartographers did not set out to reshape ideas of political authority. Maps had particular characteristics—the coordinate grid, linear spatial divisions, homogenous territorial coloring—not due to explicit demands for such maps by rulers interested in promoting a particular political vision, but instead due to a commercial market for printed objects. Political actors then used these objects as a means of understanding their world.

The impact of map use involved a long-term change in normative structures and mentalities, not a sudden transformation of an individual actor's point of view. These changes occurred through generational turnover and socialization, as political advisors and decision makers were educated in an increasingly map-filled environment.Footnote 36 Maps became one of the primary means of understanding the world and its political structures: “Cartographic reason seems to have been so powerful a force in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that it came to signify the most important forms of reason. To map was to think.Footnote 37 Such changes in basic cognitive frameworks are slow and unintended and may have effects far beyond what actors themselves are aware of.

This cognitive impact of mapping has implications for how one studies its political effects. Technological changes are directly observable, as are transformations of material political practices. Yet ideas about political authority and organization are not directly observable, particularly when changes are intergenerational, as individual actors might not note in journals or letters that their thinking has changed. I argue that certain representational technologies (namely, maps) structure the basic understandings that actors have about their world without their being directly aware of either the cause or even the effect: what actors consider normal or even imaginable is structured without their conscious knowledge.Footnote 38

Methodologically, the best means of documenting changes in ideational frameworks is to study their observable implications or effects.Footnote 39 Thus, using historical narrative analysis,Footnote 40 I examine changes in practices, both cartographic and political, and theorize an explanation that accounts for the changes I observe.Footnote 41 New mapping technologies put new representations and new tools into the hands of political actors; the effects of cartographic practices on rulers and decision makers are then observable in subsequent changes in their political goals and practices. As actors altered their ideas about the appropriate or possible definition of political authority, one can observe them pursuing new interests built on those new ideas.

One means of entering this causal chain at the level of ideas is to examine political documents such as peace treaties. These expose the mental framework of political interaction, since the character of what is offered or claimed in treaties reveals not just the particular interests of actors but also the nature of what they are arguing over, and thus how they conceive of political authority and organization.Footnote 42 Observable changes in treaty texts fit between new mapping practices and transformed material political practices, establishing a causal connection from cartographic practices through ideas to political practices and outcomes. Studying this intersection between technological change, political ideas, and the material practices of rule provides a new lens through which to understand both this epochal political transformation and the interplay between material and ideational change more generally.

Early Modern Cartography and State Formation

In order to demonstrate the role of mapping in the shift from medieval heteronomy to modern statehood, the next five sections examine the following: medieval mapping techniques and political structures, the Renaissance cartographic revolution, the political effects of this technological change, early modern France as a representative case, and the unique character of European cartography and political structures.

Medieval Cartography and Political Authority

The mutually constitutive relationship between maps and political authority is illustrated by medieval European cartographic and political practices. Political organization and interactions in late medieval Europe were structured by a complex mix of authority types, involving both territorial and nonterritorial authorities in overlapping, decentralized arrangements. Territory, furthermore, was understood very differently from today: medieval actors claimed authority over collections of places rather than geometrically defined spaces, with centers of strong authority weakening outward into unclear zonal frontiers. Nonterritorial authorities were common, including the personal bonds of feudal ties, oaths of allegiance between monarchs and subjects, and authorities over economic or religious issues. This complex mix of authority types involved significant overlaps, both of territorial control (shared authority, territorial enclaves, and unclear zonal frontiers) and of nonterritorial forms such as multiple homage in feudalism. Consequently, political interactions involved a wide variety of actors and organizations, including city-states, monarchies, the papacy, corporate groups, and city-leagues. The relations among actors incorporated a complex mix of hierarchical and anarchical forms, making the modern division between internal and external politics unclear or inconceivable within Christendom.Footnote 43

Medieval mapping both illustrated and shaped these ideas about political authority. Mappae mundi, for instance, were large world maps that schematically depicted the three continents of the Old World and contained images and text representing and describing religious and historical places and events (Figure 1). These not only distorted geography (to our eyes) but also emphasized the importance of places such as cities over the spaces in between them.Footnote 44 Other types of maps were used for travel, on land with itinerary maps and by sea with portolan charts (Figures 2 and 3). Itinerary maps visually schematized the idea of the world as a series of places—such maps showed only the places along routes, with no effort to depict accurate geographic relationships. Portolan charts, though intended for navigation in the Mediterranean and dominated by compass bearings and coastal landmarks, often included one element of political information: flags bearing a ruler's coat of arms placed on towns.Footnote 45 The form of territoriality represented—and reinforced—by point indicators such as flags involves a claim radiating outward from a center. Other representational forms, such as bird's eye views of cities, similarly reflected a focus on centers rather than boundaries.Footnote 46

FIGURE 1. Hereford Cathedral Mappa Mundi, circa 1290 A.D.

Note: As with many mappae mundi, this map depicts Europe, Asia, and Africa, with east at the top and Jerusalem in the center.

Source: Reproduced with the permission of the Dean and Chapter of Hereford Cathedral and the Mappa Mundi Trustees.

FIGURE 2. Medieval itinerary map, Matthew Paris, 1255 A.D.

Note: These are two pages from an itinerary of the route from London to Jerusalem. On the left is southern England and northern France, on the right is northern Italy.

Source: Courtesy of the British Library. Copyright British Library Board (Royal MS 14 C.vii)

FIGURE 3. Portolan chart, Albino de Canepa, 1489 (detail)

Source: Courtesy of the James Ford Bell Library, University of Minnesota.

These maps both depicted and reinforced medieval political ideas. Medieval kingdoms, though lacking a single center, were nonetheless understood—and represented—as collections of centers, rather than bounded territories. Terrestrial maps, by not depicting linear boundaries between political units, reflected the absence of such divisions on the ground. None of these mapping traditions was built on the geometric foundation that all modern maps incorporate: the latitude-longitude grid.

Maps were exceedingly rare in the Middle Ages, mainly because they were expensive, hand-drawn manuscripts. Many of the purposes that maps are used for today, such as property ownership or travel directions, were fulfilled instead by texts.Footnote 47 Thus nonterritorial forms of authority were both made legitimate by and represented in these written texts, which—unlike maps—have no inherent bias toward spatial forms of authority; personal or jurisdictional authorities could be catalogued alongside lists of places. In the Treaty of Verdun (843 A.D.), for example, Charlemagne's empire was divided based on an exhaustive listing of jurisdictional rights, offices, and revenues, not on delimited territories.Footnote 48

These connections between mapping and understandings of political space were mutually reinforcing because users and creators of maps shared a single set of spatial assumptions and operationalized them in both cartographic and political practices. It would take a change in mapping technology, exogenous to political concerns, to shift the relationship from mutual reinforcement to transformation, as Renaissance mapping techniques would create new maps that undermined medieval notions of space and suggested a new, geometrically derived ideal of exclusively territorial political authority.

The Cartographic Revolution of the Renaissance

Modern cartography can be traced back to the fifteenth-century transformation of techniques of map creation, production, and distribution that began with the translation of Ptolemy's Geography into Latin. In addition to geographic information, this classical Greek work contained instructions for basing maps on the coordinate grid of latitude and longitude. This celestial coordinate grid (or graticule) has served as the foundation for mapmaking ever since. Compare, for instance, a medieval mappa mundi (Figure 1) against world maps from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, which use the graticule (Figure 4). The latter project the earth onto the grid, however inaccurately, while the mappa mundi differs in form as well as content from world maps today. Subsequent centuries' developments in projection methods, position-finding, and surveying all incorporate the basic principle of Ptolemaic mapping: a grid system based on celestial coordinate position, with a geometric correlation between the earth's surface and the map. Combining with this qualitative shift toward the use of the Ptolemaic grid was the quantitative explosion in map production due to the printing press: from “a few thousand maps in circulation” before 1470 to “millions” in the sixteenth century,Footnote 49 exposing Europeans to the new visual language of Ptolemaic cartography in maps and atlases varying from expensive decorative works to cheaper small-format products.Footnote 50

FIGURE 4. World map from Claudius Ptolemy's Cosmographia, 1482

Source: Courtesy of the British Library. Copyright British Library Board (IC. 9304).

During the late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth centuries, governmental cartography began to follow ongoing private mapping efforts, reflecting rulers' growing interest in cartography.Footnote 51 In the sixteenth century, rulers simply collected existing privately published maps, following recommendations from political authors such as Niccolò Machiavelli.Footnote 52 Around 1600, rulers became more active cartographic consumers, primarily by paying cartographers to collate existing maps. Many government mapping projects, however, did not immediately embrace the latest practices. Even in the late sixteenth century, publicly displayed mural map cycles were often collections of images of cities, similar to medieval bird's-eye views, rather than Ptolemaic grid-based maps.Footnote 53

The unsatisfactory character of maps based on existing works—suffering from poor sources and a lack of precision—later led to governments' commissioning their own maps. But governments began to sponsor surveys of their realms only in the late seventeenth century, aiming to produce up-to-date, accurate, and possibly secret maps.Footnote 54 These projects trailed, by a century or more, the production of grid-based maps by commercial printers. The relatively late governmental adoption of geometric mapmaking reveals the nonpolitical motivations behind the initial shift in representational techniques—techniques that nonetheless had political effects.

Cartography and the Restructuring of Political Authority

Contrary to the medieval differentiation of places, the coordinate grid of latitude and longitude provides an abstract foundation for modern mapping, yielding a geometric understanding of space and political territory.Footnote 55 Although mapmakers represented a world filled with homogenous, linearly bounded territories by the early seventeenth century, political ideas changed to reflect this new and distinct understanding of political authority and organization only in the eighteenth century. Political practices then implemented linear territoriality in the late eighteenth century and after.

While politics in the late Middle Ages involved the coexistence of territorial and nonterritorial political authorities, the modern international system is uniquely structured by the exclusive use of territoriality to define political organization. The massive increase in the production and use of Ptolemaic maps in Europe helped delegitimate nonterritorial authorities. As people came to envision the world increasingly in terms of these maps, ideas about political authority that were not depicted in them—or that could not be depicted in them—lost their normative basis and were negated and eliminated as acceptable foundations for political authority. This ideational change shaped the impact of incentives favoring centralization and bureaucratization, including military and organizational competition, leading to the uniformly territorial—and boundary-defined—form of modern sovereign statehood.

Mapping according to Ptolemy's graticule uses a uniform spatial scale that geometrically correlates the earth's surface with the map. This means that “each point on the map is, in theory at least, accorded identical importance, thus reducing the power of the center.”Footnote 56 Unlike medieval cartography, Ptolemaic mapping can be centered anywhere and, thus, is effectively centered nowhere. The world is no longer portrayed as a collection of differentiated places but instead as a homogenous surface on which points are located in geometric terms. This had political implications: authority claims shifted from particular centers or differentiated places to homogenously understood spaces. The medieval notion of authority as strong at centers of control and weak in peripheries was replaced by an emphasis on clear and distinct boundaries between political spaces. Practically, this involved transforming ambiguous, zonal, enclave-ridden frontiers into linear boundaries.

While it may not be impossible to map complex territorialities or nonterritorial authorities, early modern cartographers simply did not do so. Their response to the complexity of early modern authority structures was shaped by their mapping techniques—based on Ptolemy's graticule and the resulting geometric representation of space—which drove them to simplify overlapping authorities and to depict all political structures as territorial.

The connection between mapping space as homogenous and geometric and claiming political authority as such is complicated. On the one hand, a cartographer who understands space as geometrically homogenous may operationalize that view in maps by filling in delimited areas with solid colors. But the connection between depictions in maps and the homogeneity of space could also work in the other direction if readers who consistently make use of maps with color-filled areas neatly separated by linear boundaries are influenced by this depiction, constituting and reinforcing a view of the world as a collection of homogenous and linearly defined entities.Footnote 57 This mutual dynamic is evident in the way maps are created and read today: the globe filled with color-coded and linearly bounded political entities both results from our predominant understanding of the world (as filled with territorial states) and reinforces that understanding.Footnote 58

Early modern cartographers drew maps filled with uniform, linearly bounded territories before similar political ideas or practices appeared. These representational changes reshaped the constitutive foundations of political actors' identities—what authority is claimed over—leading to changes in actors' interests and therefore behaviors. Maps, created for nonpolitical motives, preceded political ideas and practices in terms of territorialization. Changes in mapmaking were not the consequence of political transformations.

Beginning with mass printing in the sixteenth century, linear boundaries were increasingly drawn on maps, with color added by hand after printing. By the middle of the seventeenth century, nearly all atlas maps had boundary lines.Footnote 59 While this might be interpreted as a case of maps representing progressively linear and territorial boundaries between centralizing states, the boundaries depicted on these increasingly detailed maps did not reflect the actual political practices on the ground, or even the theoretical ways in which contemporary rulers claimed political authority.

For example, the frontiers of states such as France or Spain were rarely linear on the ground and involved extensive overlaps, enclaves, and nonterritorial complexities across broad frontier zones, through at least the late eighteenth century.Footnote 60 Yet maps depicted a continent filled with discrete boundaries between territories, including units that had no unified political structures whatsoever, such as Italy and Germany (see Figure 5). This does not mean that no actors conceived of their rule in a territorial fashion, or even that no boundaries were operationalized linearly. It does illustrate, however, that the distinctly modern notion of political authority as defined exclusively in terms of territory—and territory defined exclusively by linear divisions—did not take hold until the late eighteenth century and after. However, the discrete boundaries between homogenous territories in maps anticipated the linear form that authority would take in later centuries if not the exact divisions and units.

FIGURE 5. Map of Europe, Willem Blaeu, published circa 1644–55

Note: This map is from the Latin edition of Joan Blaeu's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.

Source: Courtesy of Hemispheres Antique Maps (betzmaps.com).

During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, territory was described in peace treaties as lists of places, not as linearly divided spaces. In 1648, for example, the Treaty of Münster (Westphalia) used no cartographic language and made no mention of maps for reference or for the demarcation of boundaries.Footnote 61 Instead, after naming a place such as a town, the treaty listed an exhaustive collection of subjurisdictions, economic resources, and other associated rights or privileges—territorial and nonterritorial—all of which had to be explicitly named to be included.Footnote 62 This complex, text-based allocation of political authorities persisted even while maps were filled with linear boundaries and color-filled spaces, suggesting that mapmakers were not mapping either existing political arrangements or the ideas held by rulers concerning the nature of their authority.

In the eighteenth century, the transition began to the distinct form of territoriality that characterizes modern states and the state system: territory defined exclusively by linear boundaries and held equally over all space within those lines. This transformation occurred first in ideas and only later in practices. Writing in the mid-1700s, Emerich de Vattel and Christian Wolff were “among the first theorists of international law to identify territorial boundaries as the point at which sovereignty found expression.”Footnote 63 Only in this period did the idea of political authority as defined exclusively by territories with linear boundaries begin to take hold as a structuring concept for political organization and interaction. International discussions and negotiations were increasingly framed in cartographic terms and they increasingly used cartographic tools; complex medieval authority structures were simply no longer part of the political conversation.

This trend toward territorialization culminated in the post-Napoleonic negotiations and treaties of 1814–15: these texts contain extensive descriptions of boundaries, drawn as lines, discussed in terms of maps (when they existed) or surveying and map creation (when they did not), and delimiting territories to be held “in full sovereignty and property” within those lines.Footnote 64 This drive toward exclusivity allowed for no overlap or ambiguity. Linear divisions were accompanied by passages actively removing nonterritorial authorities:

His Majesty the King of Prussia and His Majesty the King of Saxony … renounce, each on his own part, and reciprocally in favor of one another, all feudal rights or pretensions which they might exercise or might have exercised beyond the frontiers fixed by the present Treaty.Footnote 65

The linear boundaries so carefully drawn in the treaty text—and to be inscribed on maps—were used to eliminate nonterritorial authorities. Although particular boundaries had been negotiated as linear divisions before, only with this settlement was the exclusively geometric understanding of territory applied to the European state system as a whole.

Following this shift in ideas, political actors began to put into practice the notion that authority is defined exclusively by homogenous territoriality and linear boundaries. Thus by the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, political rule was territorialized by the impact of mapping: boundaries were made linear, internal rule was made homogenous, and nonterritorial authorities were eliminated. The shift to the modern states system, therefore, involved more than the disappearance of many European political units;Footnote 66 surviving polities also underwent fundamental changes in political structure.

The uniformly territorial basis for political organization extended into European overseas expansion as well: although the hierarchical organization of colonial empires diverged from the anarchical relations among European states, colonial possessions were nonetheless defined in similarly territorial terms, as homogenous spatial entities separated by linear boundaries.Footnote 67 In fact, Europeans made political claims based on cartographic territoriality earlier in the Americas than within Europe. Beginning with the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas between Spain and Portugal and continuing in subsequent centuries, European powers claimed colonial territories as homogenous spaces with linear divisions.Footnote 68 The unquestionable divergence between hierarchy within empires and anarchy among sovereign states does not contradict the effect of mapping; instead, this difference is a variation within the framework of exclusive territoriality constituted by the characteristics of early modern cartography. Therefore, in spite of the fact that imperial political structures differed qualitatively from sovereign states, the authoritative foundation of both these contemporary forms of organization resulted from the ideational impact of early modern mapping.

Cartographic Statehood as an Unintended Outcome

States in the seventeenth century, though more centralized and territorial than medieval polities, were not exclusively defined by linear boundaries. At the Congress of Vienna, on the other hand, all actors were defined in terms of exclusive territorial authority, and complex heteronomies were replaced by an anarchical system managed by the great powers. In this period, the modern nature of sovereign statehood becomes clear: authority is solely territorial, exclusive, and centralized. Thus, after 1815 the only recognized international political actors in Europe were territorial states, with theoretically exclusive and complete authority within their boundaries.Footnote 69 Sovereign territorial statehood was finally consolidated when this new international system was constructed out of the ruins of Napoleonic Europe.

The relative timing of these changes indicates that the map-based understanding of political authority as exclusively territorial was not epiphenomenal but rather preceded and shaped the transformation of political rule on the ground. In the nineteenth century, political practices finally caught up to depictions in maps. This historical sequence raises the question of why sixteenth- and seventeenth-century mapmakers would depict bounded territorial units that did not exist at the time. The inconsistency and anachronistic nature of many boundaries on maps suggest that cartographers might not have meant to show political units.Footnote 70 Yet there is evidence to the contrary: for example, one seventeenth-century atlas states that maps help readers “to know about the political State.”Footnote 71 It was the medium of commercially printed Ptolemaic mapping and mapmakers' related worldview that drove this depiction of the world as a collection of homogenous, linearly bounded territories.

The geometric foundation of modern cartography implicitly encourages the use of lines and homogenous areas to differentiate spaces.Footnote 72 While finding an accurate way to depict medieval forms of authority (over a series of places or persons, potentially overlapping and shared) was a challenging task, drawing a linear boundary was relatively simple. Coloring in those delineated spaces provided an easy way to differentiate areas visually. This cartographic imperative toward simplification and territorialization of complex authorities also structured other drivers of political change. For example, Claude de Chastillon was sent in 1608 by the French crown to survey a complex frontierFootnote 73 when increasing military costs were driving all European rulers to attempt to tax more efficiently.Footnote 74 Improving taxation required improving rulers' knowledge of their realms; thanks to the previous century's explosion in map production and use, cartography provided one of the most readily available means to gather and manage this information.Footnote 75

Although Chastillon reported back to the crown with both a written description and maps, his criteria for delineating the frontier included predominantly nonterritorial notions, such as feudal allegiance, taxes owed, and judicial decision making. Comparing text with map reveals the inherent need for cartographic simplification:

The château of Passavant, [Chastillon] says, belongs to Lorraine, though the town and wood are French. Baffled by the problem of distinguishing between these areas, our cartographer has drawn a little enclave, with a château in the south of it. At Martinvelle, three-quarters of a league from Passavant, all the hearths owe tax to the king of France; this village, according to Chastillon, was partially French and partially lorrain. On our map it is shown as lying in Lorraine.Footnote 76

The complex authorities on this frontier had to be simplified to draw a readable map, converting nonterritorial links to an image of territorial authority, defined by linear boundaries. The tendency of Ptolemaic cartography toward simplification and territorialization of political relations is illustrated in conversions such as these, performed whenever a map depicted complex authority structures as linearly territorial. The newly developed mapping techniques and ideas thus redefined how rulers centralized and improved their extractive efforts, driving the eventual consolidation of cartographically defined territorial statehood.

The implicit tendency of grid-based mapping to depict a world filled with linearly bounded spaces was also supported by commercial motivations. Color-filled maps directly served the interests of mapmakers, since adding color after printing was an easy way to add value to maps. In early modern Europe, aesthetic appeal was one of the primary considerations among map consumers, particularly rich elites.Footnote 77 Even in the eighteenth century, the accurate cartography of Enlightenment projects, such as the Cassini survey of France, was still overshadowed by the continuing emphasis on maps as beautiful objects, and a large part of their appeal was in the coloring.Footnote 78

Mapmakers did not consciously aim to promote the understanding of political space as exclusively geometric; their depictions were instead shaped by the principles of grid-based cartography. By competing with each other for the attention of wealthy patrons and relying on geometric mapping practices, mapmakers habitually used linear boundaries and color-filled spaces and unintentionally encouraged a particular conception of territorial authority. The maps they created were easily read as depicting a world of homogenously territorial states.

In short, cartography's effect on ideas of political authority was in part a by-product of market demands for maps in the early modern period. This effect was unintended—no agency was directing this process and no constituency was clamoring for change. Although there ended up being actors who benefited from the shift to exclusive territoriality and linear boundaries—namely, those centralizing rulers capable of harnessing cartography and territoriality to their purposes—this change was not a case of actors intentionally promoting a new way of seeing the world.Footnote 79 Rather, due to the use of maps throughout society, a shift occurred in ideas about which forms of political authority were appropriate and which were not. Although mapmakers almost certainly did not set out to change the minds of their customers, their maps implicitly represented the mapmaker's worldview and advocated it with map readers.Footnote 80

This transformation in ideas about political organization is not just about actors using a new tool to pursue their goals, such as security or aggrandizement. Instead cartography made certain goals imaginable and appealing. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the increasingly territorial and linear state identity yielded a new set of interests, based around notions of territorial exclusivity, continuity, and security.Footnote 81 As actors came to think of authority in exclusively territorial terms, they also found that pursuing goals based on those conceptions could be politically useful. Thus, rulers driven toward centralization by other factors were able to use territorial exclusivity both to construct the “mutual recognition game” of territorial states that excludes nonstate unitsFootnote 82 and also to subjugate peripheral areas by making boundaries linear and exhaustive. For example, the French-Spanish boundary in the Pyrenees was finally delineated in the late 1700s, more than a century after the first treaty, but this occurred over the protests of local elites. The centralizing states on either side were able to use the legitimacy of linear boundaries—and the claim to complete authority within those lines—to impose direct control over what had been relatively autonomous communities.Footnote 83 In short, the identities and interests of actors were constituted by a collection of ideas and practices, which then could be used by those actors strategically.

The Territorialization of France

France offers a particularly useful case for illustrating both the transformation from medieval forms of authority to modern territorial statehood and also the role of mapping in this process. The presence of “France” in the medieval or early modern period often leads modern observers to assume that this polity was identical—in basic character if not exact extent—to the post-Revolutionary state. In fact, the character of this realm was so altered it was virtually unrecognizable: fifteenth-century France was constituted by a decentralized mix of personal relations of rule and a place-focused form of territoriality, while nineteenth-century France was linearly bounded, homogenously territorial, and centralized. A brief timeline of the relevant political practices and cartographic representations, from the late Middle Ages through the post-Napoleonic restoration, illustrates the complexity of this transformation. Nonpolitically motivated changes in mapmaking offered first the motivation for the territorialization of France and subsequently the tools for implementing changes in political practices.

Even at the end of the Middle Ages, France remained a “mosaic state, made up of many pieces” and held together only loosely by central authority.Footnote 84 The legacy of feudalism meant that much of the king's authority was based on personal ties, or bonds conceptualized as personal ties, between ruler and ruled.Footnote 85 This diverse mix of authority structures is evident in late-medieval interactions, such as the 1435 Congress of Arras. This diplomatic meeting, ostensibly between France, England, and Burgundy, in fact involved a large number of other actors, including independent representatives from Paris and other towns. The negotiations explicitly involved issues of feudal allegiances and authority over a list of towns rather than spatially extensive territories.Footnote 86 The place-focused territorial authority fit with contemporary representations and descriptions of the kingdom. For example, a map of France from a 1460 manuscript depicts the realm as a collection of towns, only generally located geographicallyFootnote 87 (Figure 6). Medieval French rulers used written inventories to catalogue and manage their realm, yielding “voluminous archives” detailing every jurisdictional right and privilege, territorial and nonterritorial.Footnote 88

FIGURE 6. Manuscript map of France, circa 1460

Note: This map, which appears in a manuscript of French history, depicts “all of the realm of France” (Serchuk 2006, 143).

Source: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS Fr 4991 £ 5v. (photograph, all rights reserved: Bibliotèque nationale de France).

Beginning in the late fifteenth century, however, the new grid-based printed cartography created a fundamentally new depiction of France. These privately produced maps showed a linearly defined and homogenous color-filled territorial entity. For example, atlas maps of France from the late sixteenth century depict a unified, territorially defined area, not the amalgamation of disparate authorities that actually existed (Figure 7). French rulers and political advisors were not ignorant of this new mapmaking, but commercial mapmakers were the first to depict France in the new manner. Rulers therefore collected existing, privately produced maps rather than commissioning official cartographic projects.Footnote 89 Late sixteenth-century internal conflict, moreover, disrupted government mapmaking. For example, in the late 1500s, Catherine de' Medici asked Nicolas de Nicolay, a royal geographer, for a “detailed description of the kingdom,” but no map of the whole kingdom was produced. Likewise, regional mapmaking was not centralized or standardized, yielding no unified collection of official cartography.Footnote 90

FIGURE 7. Atlas map of France, Gerhard Mercator, Atlas Cosmographicae, 1595

Source: Courtesy of the Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection, Library of Congress.

The privately produced maps depicting France as a uniformly territorial entity outpaced political developments during the sixteenth and seventeenth century. For example, in the 1559 Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis, French-Spanish territorial claims were settled in the form of a list of towns: “The King of Spain shall restore to the King of France S. Quentin, Le Catelet and Ham, with their dependencies.”Footnote 91 Once again, this demonstrates the persistence of the medieval view of territorial political authority into the sixteenth century.

In the 1600s, French frontiers remained zonal, overlapping, and unclear, with surveying efforts revealing complexities but not leading to linearization in practice (as illustrated by the example of Chastillon). Although the rationalization, or “squaring off,” of French frontiers during the reign of Louis XIV (r. 1643–1715), and particularly under his military engineer Vauban, sounds linear, it actually involved securing a series of fortifications in zonal military frontiers. To modern observers who have internalized the rationality of linear boundaries, the very idea of rationalizing frontiers implies linearity. To a military planner of the seventeenth century such as Vauban, however, both the ends and means of rationalization were place-focused (the defense of French cities through increased fortifications in a zonal frontier) rather than imagined in terms of linearly defined spatial expanses.Footnote 92 Political authority within France, moreover, remained decentralized and diverse, as rule remained defined by a variety of feudal, territorial, and jurisdictional titles and claims.Footnote 93 Treaty-making during the seventeenth century also focused on nonlinear territorial divisions and rights. Even the 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees, which officially introduced the principle of dividing France from Spain along the “natural frontier” of the Pyrenees mountains, operationalized that division using place-focused territoriality: each ruler was assigned control over a series of towns in the frontier region.Footnote 94

In the 1620s and 1630s, as part an effort to centralize monarchical authority, Richelieu commissioned maps of all of France. Much of this official mapmaking was carried out by Nicolas Sanson, who constructed maps by collecting information from existing sources, rather than from first-hand surveying.Footnote 95 Due to the unsatisfactory character of this “armchair” cartography, in the late 1660s Colbert commissioned a survey-based series of maps of France from Jean-Dominique Cassini, giving rise to a multigenerational mapping project.Footnote 96 This was intended to correct for the inaccuracies and inconsistencies of previous maps by conducting triangulation-based surveys of the entire realm. Although the first complete set of maps was not published until 1744, the project was quickly emulated by other European governments.

This government-sponsored cartography emerged only because privately produced maps had been widely circulated for more than a century. These commercial maps, based on the geometric grid of latitude and longitude, had from the late sixteenth century depicted a world filled with linearly separated territorial entities. It was only later that government actors dedicated resources to conduct surveys and create official, mathematically surveyed maps. Nonpolitical mapping altered ideas about how to make political authority claims, and subsequently those same representational technologies were used for the pursuit of restructured goals of territorial security or expansion.

As cartography became further entrenched as a tool of government, the implementation of the distinctly modern form of territorial authority gradually followed suit. In the second half of the eighteenth century, the rationalization of French frontiers took on its modern form of delimiting, demarcating, and administering linear boundaries. This practical application of linear territoriality followed a growing consensus in the early eighteenth century among political decision makers and advisors that linear boundaries were more rational: “[A] new consciousness of territory … [became] the concern of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which in the second part of the eighteenth century developed a coherent policy of ‘establishing and fixing the limits of the kingdom,’ ” involving the explicit use of maps.Footnote 97 Subsequently, French efforts in the 1770s and 1780s included more than a dozen treaties with neighbors, delineating discrete boundaries.Footnote 98 These treaties were explicitly operationalized in terms of territorial exclusivity: properties that straddled the lines had to be divided since territorial settlements no longer simply followed preexisting jurisdictional divisions.Footnote 99 With these agreements, the foreign ministry implemented the cartographic depiction of France as a contiguous, homogenous, and discretely bounded territory.

After 1789, the Revolutionary period saw the further imposition of homogenous territorial authority in France, in particular in the internal reorganization of political administration. The old regime was plagued with internal tariffs, divisions, and administrative confusion.Footnote 100 Ideas had been proposed in the late 1700s for more “rational” internal divisions of France, culminating in the 1790 administrative reform aimed toward creating départements of equal geographic area.Footnote 101 This reorganization reflected the notion that territorial sovereignty was homogenous within linear boundaries. In 1814 and 1815, the restoration of the monarchy and rollback of France's territorial expansions did not undo the changes to the character of authority that had been implemented during the preceding decades. As with the rest of post-Napoleonic European states, France was explicitly defined as a territorial entity circumscribed by demarcated linear boundaries.

Cartography and Territoriality Outside of Europe

The state system consolidated in nineteenth-century Europe had a unique form of political authority. Modern statehood is defined exclusively in territorial terms, with units separated exclusively by linear boundaries—no other historical system has been equivalently homogenous and territorial. Ptolemaic cartography is similarly distinct: non-Western cartographic traditions lacked the key combination of coordinate-grid-based mapping and the print-driven production of maps. Thus, in spite of the existence throughout history of both mapping and complex political structures, the unique features of early modern European cartography had an equally unique effect, shaping the distinct characteristics of the modern state system.

Political authority in other settings differed from the modern Western form of territorial exclusivity, in spite of the presence of some political structures reminiscent of modern international relations. Instead, political organization and interaction were built on diverse types of territoriality and nonterritorial authorities, such as the center-focused Roman or Chinese imperial rule or Ottoman control over frontiers as a zonal collection of places.Footnote 102 Similarly, territory in precolonial Africa was organized in a center-out fashion, “conceived of as a series of concentric circles radiating out from the core.”Footnote 103 Modern rule defined exclusively by linearly bounded territorial states is the exception—explained in part by the equally exceptional character of modern mapping—rather than a recurring pattern briefly interrupted by medieval complexity.Footnote 104

Non-Western mapping technologies lacked the key features of geometric accuracy, coordinate location, and commercial printing. For example, while ancient Roman mapping used a grid system to divide conquered territory, this grid was not linked to a global coordinate system and thus territory was not homogenized and claimable without direct knowledge.Footnote 105 Traditional Chinese cartography also made occasional use of grids for measuring distances on maps, but these were rare, ad hoc, and not part of a global coordinate system.Footnote 106 Mapping in the Islamic world also diverged from early modern European practices. Even the Ottoman empire—contemporary with and closely linked to early modern Europe—saw little use of maps, with land registers, itineraries, and political claims being almost exclusively in textual form.Footnote 107 Thus the key distinguishing characteristics of modern mapping—the coordinate-grid structure and massive distribution through printing—uniquely originated in early modern European cartography.

The ideational power of European cartography is further demonstrated by examining the effect it has when introduced into cultures with very different maps and spatial understandings. In the second half of the nineteenth century, for example, Western mapping was introduced wholesale to Siam (Thailand) when a series of reforming monarchs brought in European mapping techniques and mapmakers.Footnote 108 Before the mid-nineteenth century, Siamese mapmaking reflected—and supported—conceptions of political space that lacked the homogenized character of the Ptolemaic grid. Then, over the resistance of Siamese elites, King Rama IV (r. 1851–68) created Western-style geographic educational and governmental institutions as part of his modernization project. This internal reform process was paralleled by external pressure from encroaching colonial powers who wished to establish clear linear boundaries with still-independent Siam. Frontiers were not the focus of indigenous political authority in the region, however, because power was understood as radiating outward from a center of control into loosely defined frontiers. This clashed with European colonial actors' mental toolkit, structured by modern mapping and exclusively territorial ideas of authority. After the introduction of Western mapping technologies internally, however, indigenous notions of authority were displaced. Siamese elites were then able to use the new ideas both to negotiate more effectively with the British and French and to assert a new form of centralized control over border regions, which had previously been autonomous. In a matter of decades, territorial authority was transformed from loose control over differentiated places, defined from the center outward, to an understanding of territory—based on modern mapping—as homogenous, cartographic, and delineated by clearly defined boundaries.

The case of Siam, though diverging from the European example, nonetheless illustrates the power of mapping to reshape ideas and practices of political authority. Western mapping was introduced from the top, leading to a geometric understanding of political authority based on linear boundaries and homogenous territoriality. Mapping was once again fundamental to the shift to modern statehood.

Conclusion

Although the use of new cartographic technologies was necessary to the construction and consolidation of the modern state system, this was by no means sufficient: cartography interacted with a number of contingent trends and processes that included not only technological innovations such as printing but also other social, economic, and political developments. Mapping gave sovereign statehood its territorially exclusive character, thereby structuring the effects of other causal factors. For example, military pressures driving state centralization and bureaucratization in early modern EuropeFootnote 109 could have yielded a number of political forms providing increased extraction and mobilization. It was the hegemony of modern mapping and the resulting understanding of the world as a geometrically divisible surface that channeled this drive toward centralization in the particular direction of creating territorially exclusive, linearly bounded states. Territorial security or expansion, for example, changed from being focused on controlling particular towns to claiming control over linearly defined spaces, thanks to the redefinition of territory itself. This interplay between the ideational effects of cartographic technology and other social and political processes of the period yielded the unique character of modern statehood.

This exclusively territorial basis for political organization was consolidated in the nineteenth century. The post-Napoleonic period saw the elimination of many nonstate forms of organized violence, such as privateering, piracy, and mercenarism.Footnote 110 European colonial empires, though hierarchically organized, continued to be defined territorially, using cartographic tools and linear boundaries (as, for example, at imperial summits such as the 1884–85 Berlin Conference).Footnote 111 In the second half of the twentieth century, however, nonstate and nonterritorial actors have increasingly gained economic or political power. This includes the rise of multinational corporations, international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and nonstate violent groups such as terrorist networks. Yet these forms of organization have existed against the normative backdrop of sovereign territorial statehood. Although these other actors have become common, they have always been defined and understood as exceptions to the norm of territorially exclusive statehood. Similarly, the effective failure of state power or authority is understood as just that, as a “failed state,” and not in terms of a new or different positively defined authority structure.

Nonetheless, interactions between representational technologies, spatial ideas, and political practices and outcomes are possibly occurring today. Since mapping played a key role in constituting the foundation of modern sovereign statehood (and in particular its territorially exclusive character), contemporary changes in cartographic technologies could undermine or transform that foundation. Today's new digital cartographies present at least the possibility of depicting more complex nonstate forms of political authority. This offers a new focus for the study of globalization,Footnote 112 the information technology (IT) revolution,Footnote 113 and possible contemporary changes in political territoriality.Footnote 114 While the IT revolution may have direct effects on political representations, ideas, and practices, focusing on digital cartography highlights one particular development within the larger category of interactions between technologies and political structures

Cartographic technologies are being transformed by computerization and networking. The increasingly widespread use of Web-based mapping tools, virtual globes (such as Google Earth), geographic information systems (GIS), and even personal mapping and navigation technologies using the global positioning system (GPS) are changing the ways in which maps are created, distributed, and used.Footnote 115 Particularly reminiscent of the early modern period is the way in which these technologies are again outside the exclusive control of political actors—overturning the dominant position of official government cartography during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This means that, once again, nonpolitical motivations may lead to new depictions, potentially changing how actors negotiate over space, make political claims, or conceive of political authority or community.

In the short term, new tools may be put to use in interactions and negotiations, enabling new bargains over difficult divisions. The complexity of mapping and displaying information about spaces other than land surfaces—such as oceanic or underground resources—has made the resolution and enforcement of agreements difficult. Yet with technologies for accurately measuring and displaying detailed information increasingly affordable and available, divisions may be more easily effected. These techniques include both three-dimensional mapping and maps that move to represent the passage of time.

If nonlinear divisions can be mapped, some previously indivisible spaces or resources may become divisible in new ways.Footnote 116 So far, however, new tools have been used mostly for traditional goals of delineating discrete boundaries. At Dayton in 1995, for instance, GIS and other digital mappings were used with only limited results: the technologies were still low-resolution and negotiators resisted eliminating their paper maps.Footnote 117 Although the technological possibility of visualizing more complex or layered political authorities exists, there is no guarantee that actors will adopt such ideas.

Moreover, the technological trend toward increasing accuracy and reduced cost in location-finding and mapping may actually destabilize existing settlements and make some agreements more difficult. For example, the ability of almost anyone with a hand-held GPS device to determine exact locations may reveal inconsistencies in existing boundaries and thus remove political “wriggle room” for negotiation. During the early modern period, many divisions were negotiated in spite of uncertainty regarding the actual divisions on the ground—an accepted ambiguity that made these resolutions easier, as it allowed complex local solutions to emerge. Today, as the technological ability to find one's position with pin-point accuracy and to reference it to detailed maps is increasingly available, the recourse to ambiguous but workable divisions is becoming less available, possibly further entrenching territorial disputes.Footnote 118

While predigital mapmaking was based on standardization and the abstraction of human space onto the Ptolemaic grid, computerized map production and distribution might open up those constraints and undermine the homogenization of space. This could restructure territoriality and give advocates of new authority types the representational tools required to overcome the image of the political world as a color-coded, boundary-filled map. With the digital revolution, maps are no longer predetermined objects, created only in large institutional settings and with only one set of characteristics. Now cartography is more “open-source,” and maps are created and altered by users themselves.Footnote 119 These flexible digital maps have the potential to display more complex representations of space, and political authority or community within it.Footnote 120 Therefore, with the wider availability of more participatory forms of mapmaking, existing ideas of authority and political organization could be undermined, or replaced. This is possible with both highly technical GIS applications as well as with popular Web-based maps: both Google Maps and Google Earth, for example, allow users to create and distribute additional information layers not included in the initial base maps.Footnote 121

Yet the participatory and emancipatory potential of these technologies can easily be overstated. Although users can add content and change how content is viewed, these tools do not appear out of thin air but are created by technical experts with their own ideas and norms, and perhaps political agendas. Even the relatively open Google Earth has default settings, as does any software. Thus, both the maps' original characteristics and the outer bounds of what can be changed on them are determined by trained experts inside institutions, not by end-users.

The most fundamental structure of these online mapping tools is their basis in the coordinate grid. GIS, GPS applications, and online digital mappings all start with the geometric understanding of space, defined by coordinate location. Even replacing abstract map images with satellite photography merely moves one step closer to the Enlightenment ideal of a map reflecting reality as a perfect mirror. Therefore, while the tendency of printed maps toward linear division and homogenous color-coding may be undermined, the underlying understanding of space remains the same.

Nevertheless, the expansion of cartographic possibilities today is a potential source of change in political ideas and practices, just as the new Ptolemaic techniques and their widespread adoption transformed political authority in early modern Europe. In fact, a key similarity exists: the absence of centralized control over cartography by political interests. Just as in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, today most of the new forms of mapping are being pursued by nongovernmental actors, even if governments are working in parallel.Footnote 122 This is different from most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, when maps were predominantly created by, or for, states. Today nonpolitical mapmakers are at the forefront, and thus we might see a new transformative process driven by representations in these widely distributed, and increasingly democratized, mapping technologies.

The modern state system was founded on a collection of representations and narratives about the world, a major component of which was supplied (and continues to be supplied) by maps. The question remains, then, whether new technologies and practices will strengthen, transform, or replace those foundations. Focusing our attention on the intersection between technological changes, ideas of legitimate authority, and political practices offers the best means of approaching this fundamental issue.

Footnotes

1 See, in particular, Wendt Reference Wendt1999.

4 See Kratochwil Reference Kratochwil1986; Hall and Kratochwil Reference Hall and Kratochwil1993; and Hall Reference Hall1999.

5 This notion follows on Wendt's (Reference Wendt1999, chap. 3) proposal of an ideational theory that simultaneously acknowledges the importance of material facts.

7 For example, the structuration theory of Giddens Reference Giddens1984. See also Wendt Reference Wendt1987; Doty Reference Doty1997; and Wight Reference Wight1999.

9 See Archer Reference Archer1995; and Carlsnaes Reference Carlsnaes1992.

10 For a variety of theorizations of international systems, see Bull Reference Bull1977; Wight Reference Wight1977; Waltz Reference Waltz1979; Ruggie Reference Ruggie1993; Spruyt Reference Spruyt1998; Reus-Smit Reference Reus-Smit1999; Wendt Reference Wendt1999; and Buzan and Little Reference Buzan and Little2000.

13 See Tilly Reference Tilly1992; and Spruyt Reference Spruyt1994.

14 See Rosenberg Reference Rosenberg1994; and Teschke Reference Teschke1998.

15 See Anderson Reference Anderson1974; and Wallerstein Reference Wallerstein1974.

17 See Philpott Reference Philpott2001; and Gorski Reference Gorski2003.

21 Ruggie Reference Ruggie1993, 157.

22 Footnote Ibid, 159.

23 This builds on other studies that have drawn a connection between cartography and state formation: see Biggs Reference Biggs1999; Neocleous Reference Neocleous2003; Steinberg Reference Steinberg2005; and Strandsbjerg Reference Strandsbjerg2008.

24 European colonial empires diverged from the model of sovereign states but—as will be discussed below—were built on a similar foundation of exclusively territorial authority defined by linear boundaries.

25 Contrary to Krasner's argument that territorial rule can be explained solely as a practical, logic-of-consequences choice by rulers from a repertoire of acceptable principles. See Krasner Reference Krasner, Goldstein and Keohane1993.

26 The basis of sovereignty and international structure in political authority is noted by, among others, Lake Reference Lake2003 and Reference Lake2009; Milner Reference Milner1991; and Thomson Reference Thomson1994.

27 Thomson Reference Thomson1994, 14–15.

28 The variety within territorial and nonterritorial forms of authority is illustrated below, with regards to early modern Europe. For the concepts in general, see Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989; Ruggie Reference Ruggie1993; Kratochwil Reference Kratochwil1986; and Sack Reference Sack1986.

29 March and Olsen Reference March and Olsen1998.

31 See Wight Reference Wight1977; and Skinner Reference Skinner1978.

32 Philpott Reference Philpott2001 (among many others).

33 Buzan and Little Reference Buzan and Little2000.

35 Harley Reference Harley and Laxton2001, chaps. 2–3.

37 Pickles Reference Pickles2004, 77. See also Mukerji Reference Mukerji2006; and Brotton Reference Brotton1997.

41 For a similar approach, see Thomson Reference Thomson1994, 5.

42 Krasner Reference Krasner2001, 34.

44 On mappae mundi and medieval regional mapping, see Cosgrove Reference Cosgrove2001; Edson Reference Edson1997; and Harley and Woodward Reference Harley and Woodward1987, chaps. 17–20.

47 See Grafton Reference Grafton1992; Woodward Reference Woodward2007, chap. 2; and Revel Reference Revel1991.

49 Woodward Reference Woodward2007, 11; see also Karrow Reference Karrow and Woodward2007. On the “communication revolution” due to printing, see Eisenstein Reference Eisenstein1979.

51 See Buisseret Reference Buisseret1992; and Woodward Reference Woodward2007, chaps. 26–62.

53 See, on Italian map cycles, Schulz Reference Schulz and Woodward1987; on Spanish King Philip II's similar mapping project, see Mundy Reference Mundy1996.

56 Harley and Woodward Reference Harley and Woodward1987, 505.

57 This process reflects theories of learning that incorporate changes in fundamental ideas and practices, not just the assimilation of new informational knowledge. For example, Adler Reference Adler2005, chap. 1.

58 See Taylor Reference Taylor1995; and Brenner Reference Brenner1999.

59 Akerman Reference Akerman1995, 141; see also Ehrensvärd Reference Ehrensvärd and Woodward1987; and Koeman Reference Koeman1970.

61 While the foundational status of Westphalia has been questioned by recent studies (including, most effectively, by Osiander Reference Osiander2001), it remains a popular narrative both inside and outside of international relations. For illustrative listings of the prevalence of the “Westphalian myth,” see Krasner Reference Krasner, Goldstein and Keohane1993, 239; and Osiander Reference Osiander2001, 260–61.

62 Treaty text in Israel Reference Israel1967.

63 Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989, 93.

64 For example, Vienna treaty of 1815, Article II; in Israel Reference Israel1967, 520.

65 Vienna treaty of 1815, Article XIX; Footnote ibid., 527.

66 Noted by Tilly Reference Tilly1992; Spruyt Reference Spruyt1994 and others.

68 Due to the fact that Europeans did not recognize any pre-existing non-European authorities as legitimate, the most effective means of making claims from afar was to use the newly available tools of cartography and the concomitant geometric form of territorial authority. This is evident in Spanish-Portuguese treaties, in England's North American colonial charters, and in nineteenth-century imperialism in Africa. For a full exploration of the nature of colonial territoriality and the relationship between colonial ideas and practices and those applied within Europe, see Branch Reference Branch2009.

69 See Osiander Reference Osiander1994; and Schroeder Reference Schroeder1994.

71 Quoted in Pelletier Reference Pelletier1998, 45.

76 Buisseret Reference Buisseret1984, 78. While Chastillon's maps are lost, contemporary maps of this frontier were likely based on Chastillon's surveying and illustrate the same process.

79 Unlike the types of normative change in international relations often examined in terms of norm entrepreneurs or cascades. See, for example, Finnemore and Sikkink Reference Finnemore and Sikkink1998.

83 Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989, 101.

84 Strayer Reference Strayer1970, 53.

88 Revel Reference Revel1991, 135–37.

91 Russell Reference Russell1986, 243.

92 On Louis XIV, see Black Reference Black1997; Febvre Reference Febvre, Folca and Burke1973; and Lynn Reference Lynn1999. On Vauban, see Hebbert and Rothrock Reference Hebbert and Rothrock1990; and Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989.

97 See Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989, 93; and Konvitz Reference Konvitz1987.

98 Black Reference Black1999, 125.

99 Sahlins Reference Sahlins1989, 95; and Konvitz Reference Konvitz1987.

100 Evans Reference Evans1992, 482–83.

102 See Kratochwil Reference Kratochwil1986; and Zhang Reference Zhang2001.

103 Herbst Reference Herbst2000, 45.

107 See Harley and Woodward Reference Harley and Woodward1992, chaps. 1–14; and Brummett Reference Brummett, Aksan and Goffman2007.

108 The following relies on Thongchai Winichakul 1994.

109 Noted in particular by Tilly Reference Tilly1992; and Downing Reference Downing1992.

112 Globalization is addressed in a huge body of work, reviewed most prominently by Held et al. Reference Held, McGrew, Goldblatt and Perraton1999.

113 Castells Reference Castells1996 has probably been the most influential study on the IT revolution's political effects.

114 Such as in the question of tendencies toward deterritorialization or reterritorialization. See, for example, Brenner Reference Brenner1999.

115 Discussions of these issues from geography include Miller Reference Miller2006; and Crampton Reference Crampton2009.

116 See Goddard Reference Goddard2006; and Hassner Reference Hassner2003.

118 Hassner 2006/Reference Hassner2007.

119 Crampton and Krygier Reference Crampton and Krygier2006, 15.

120 Including notions such as “world-city networks” or the “space of flows.” See Taylor Reference Taylor2005; and Castells Reference Castells1996.

122 See Crampton and Krygier Reference Crampton and Krygier2006; Goodchild Reference Goodchild2007.

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Figure 0

FIGURE 1. Hereford Cathedral Mappa Mundi, circa 1290 A.D.Note: As with many mappae mundi, this map depicts Europe, Asia, and Africa, with east at the top and Jerusalem in the center.Source: Reproduced with the permission of the Dean and Chapter of Hereford Cathedral and the Mappa Mundi Trustees.

Figure 1

FIGURE 2. Medieval itinerary map, Matthew Paris, 1255 A.D.Note: These are two pages from an itinerary of the route from London to Jerusalem. On the left is southern England and northern France, on the right is northern Italy.Source: Courtesy of the British Library. Copyright British Library Board (Royal MS 14 C.vii)

Figure 2

FIGURE 3. Portolan chart, Albino de Canepa, 1489 (detail)Source: Courtesy of the James Ford Bell Library, University of Minnesota.

Figure 3

FIGURE 4. World map from Claudius Ptolemy's Cosmographia, 1482Source: Courtesy of the British Library. Copyright British Library Board (IC. 9304).

Figure 4

FIGURE 5. Map of Europe, Willem Blaeu, published circa 1644–55Note: This map is from the Latin edition of Joan Blaeu's Theatrum Orbis Terrarum.Source: Courtesy of Hemispheres Antique Maps (betzmaps.com).

Figure 5

FIGURE 6. Manuscript map of France, circa 1460Note: This map, which appears in a manuscript of French history, depicts “all of the realm of France” (Serchuk 2006, 143).Source: Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS Fr 4991 £ 5v. (photograph, all rights reserved: Bibliotèque nationale de France).

Figure 6

FIGURE 7. Atlas map of France, Gerhard Mercator, Atlas Cosmographicae, 1595Source: Courtesy of the Lessing J. Rosenwald Collection, Library of Congress.