A number of historical and recent cartographic sources, ranging from the 1800s until today, were used to build the EGYLandscape toponyms database. Some of them are presented in the webGIS application, so that they can be compared and/or combined to provide for an insight on the evolution of the Egyptian landscapes over the last two centuries.
The webGIS relies upon six main sources of information, either textual or cartographic, offering an exhaustive inventory of the basic administrative units and of the administrative divisions of Egypt across the centuries. They included four medieval textual sources, namely Ibn Mammātī, al-Nābulusī, Ibn Duqmāq, and Ibn al-Ǧīʿān, and two contemporary sources, which are the collection of Survey of Egypt 1:50,000 maps and Muḥammad Ramzī’s geographical dictionary. Other resources were also used on an ad hoc basis to complement the information present in the main sources, all presented below. The initials or names in brackets before each of the following entries refers to the source abbreviation as used across the webGIS.
Other resources have also been occasionally used to complement the information extracted from the six primary sources detailed above. They include:
The mapping of rural Egypt requires distinguishing between settlements as physical realities and as administrative units. While the maps we used for geolocating toponyms in the webGIS describe different types of settlements (i.e., towns, villages, hamlets or isolated inhabited places), the medieval textual sources were only interested in administrative units (with the exception of al-Nābulusī, who for each unit also describes the physical reality of the settlements it contained). Thus, the EGYLandscape webGIS assumes that a medieval administrative unit corresponds to the village of the same name and area visible on more recent maps, unless positive information indicates that the village has moved. The naming transformations of an administrative unit over the ages, as documented by Ramzī, allows linking the successive names of an administrative unit to its corresponding contemporary villages.
The webGIS attaches a set of standardized information to each place or toponym presented on the map, including a unique identification code, the names relating to each place (including variants), its administrative status, and a kind which briefly describes its physical reality, as detailed below. Beside the identification code, each of these pieces of information is linked to the source (either textual or cartographic) from which it was extracted, thus allowing the user to follow the evolution of the place over time.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC BY License, which allows users to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material of this webGIS in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to its creator.
Please give credit to any image or data used from this platform with the recommended citation:
EGYLandscape webGIS. [Year accessed]. Version [Date Accessed]. Available at: [URL to the platform].
Historical data acquisition: G. Alleaume, M. Ghiglia, N. Michel.
Geographic data production: G. Alleaume, F. Dubertret, M. Ghiglia, H. Rakrouki.
Data curation: G. Alleaume, F. Dubertret, M. Ghiglia, N. Michel.
Platform conceptualization and software development (based on open-source libraries): F. Dubertret.
Website/platform administration: V.Bayle, F.Dubertret.
Project administration: N. Michel.
We would like to express our gratitude to Eric Denis and François Moriconi-Ebrard (CEDEJ) for the valuable datasets they shared with us on Egypt’s administrative organization and censuses, which served as a basis for organizing the data collection for this webGIS. Vincent Bayle’s (MMSH) help was also critical in setting-up the server for this platform, as well as taking-on its administration for future maintenance. Last but not least, Aurélien Reys helped in drafting the first ideas which later became this webGIS platform.
Date conversions between the different calendars were done using the tool developed by Johannes Thomann, University of Zürich, available here.
The EGYLandscape project was jointly funded by the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche and the German Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. The webGIS platform is hosted on the Huma-Num, the French research infrastructure for Literature, Humanities, Social Sciences and Digital Humanities.