In De Nola, physician and humanist Leone presented a historical,
chorographical, and topological treatise celebrating his city of Nola in the Kingdom of Naples.
(22) John Norden, Speculi Britanniae Pars: An Historical and
Chorographical Description of the County of Essex, 1594, ed.
(3) Claude Joseph Sautier, A
Chorographical Map of the Province of New-York in North America [sheet map] (London, 1779) (see maps.bpl.org/id/rbl7039).
His other
chorographical work includes "Dervish in Progress", "'Azab", "Icons", "Ember", "Energy", "Bolero Bergamo" and "Neo Dervish".
William Camden, creator of Britannia (1610), a
chorographical description of the counties of Britain, suffered at the hands of a friend-turned-critic, who "cruelly impeached" Camden's accuracy (17), convicting him of "many gross mistakings" (19).
To aid the viewer's understanding of the process, each will be given a programme containing information on the pieces and locations, an explanation of the
chorographical inspiration and -- most importantly -- a map.
Her study has two aims: first, to analyze historiographi-cal conventions, approaches and methodologies in
chorographical writing to see how they change over time, and second to use Aleida Assmann's concept of"political memory" to study the development of different historiographical traditions in the Protestant North and the Catholic South so as to contribute to the current interest in "cultures of memory" and "memory studies."
98-101, 128 and note; William Camden, Britannia: or, a
chorographical description of theflourishing kingdoms of England, Scotland, Ireland, and the islands adjacent, from the earliest antiquity, translated from the edition published by the author in 1607, enlarged by the latest discoveries, by Richard Gough (2nd edition, London, 1806), II, p.
To challenge hegemonic concerns, dance and
chorographical vision must be ever evolving.
But why does Dante, the reader might ask, introduce
chorographical similes in the structural and cartographical sense only beginning with the circles of violence?
Directing films satisfies what Boyd describes as 'the painterly side of my nature, reflected in the compositional and
chorographical elements of film-making.' (32) The Trench is, by Boyd's own admission, the culmination of an ambition and a manifestation of an obsession with World War One.