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Hammond Historical Atlas of the World
by Hammond Incorporated
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Wadsworth Publishing Company (1997-12)
ISBN: 0534556655
EAN: 9780534556655
Dewy Decimal #: 909
Paperback
SKU: 08110071
Condition: Very Good As issued
Comments: Oversize Trade Paperback. Very Good condition with no markings. No highlights, underlines or notes in text. No creases to spine or cover. Minor wear to cover. Tight binding and clean crisp text. Very Nice copy.
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
This newly revised edition takes a comprehensive look at the most significant periods and major events in civilization's history. Through the 118 full-color maps (arranged chronologically) and the 8-page time chart with a graphic history of mankind, readers can better understand the events and cultural forces that shaped world history. It also includes detailed graphs of infant mortality rates, population, world food supplies, and gross national product to expand their knowledge. This latest edition was expanded to include 16 additional pages with an emphasis on Asian and African history.
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Customer Reviews
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Hammond Historical World Atlas
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-10-22
Just as described and a very reasonable price. Better than going to the campus bookstore!
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An Historical Tool
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-03-02
1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful
The Hammond Historical World Atlas gives me a handy tool to look up the boundaries of a country in various centuries. In essence, this book is a geographical tool for historical inquiries.
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GREAT resource!
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-03-27
6 out of 6 customers found this reveiw helpful
The Hammond Historical World Atlas is quite a bargain! It was just revised in 2007. I purchased one as a household reference/homework help, one for a friend who is a serious history buff (he can't put it down!), and one for my son's 4th-6th grade class. Everyone is very impressed with it. One of the big pluses of this atlas over other ones is that it includes a historical timeline of civilization around the world. You can trace what countries formed from others and the relative power of each at a given point in time. The atlas covers the spread of languages, religions, and trade at different periods as well as the historical maps. You can't go wrong with this atlas.
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i like it
Rating (4)
Date: 2005-11-19
7 out of 8 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is great for browsing (if you like maps of different periods in history that is). It won't stand on it's own as a history textbook, but I don't imagine it was intended to. I like the fact that it is lightweight and portable...not so big and fat that it's hard to find the page you're looking for, or a place to store it. I think it would be a great supplement for people who are learning history, as well as for those who read a lot of things from or about various periods in history. I keep it on the coffee table and enjoy looking through it often. I'm giving it only 4 stars because I'd like to see a few more details and features on the maps. Still, this really is a great bargain of an atlas.
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An Atlas that's an Atlas
Rating (4)
Date: 2003-05-08
26 out of 29 customers found this reveiw helpful
Thank goodness I can still buy an atlas that is really an atlas. I read a lot of history, and having reached that stage in life where most of the books I enjoy are not profusely illustrated, I have been searching for a good historical atlas. I've bought several now, covering different periods and regions, but most have been a dissapointment (the lone exception being the Penguin Atlas of Medieval History). Instead of an atlas, i.e., a collection of maps, what I got was an illustrated history book. Unfortunately, to make room for the text, graphs, etc., they left out most of the maps. The maps that were included often ignored political boundaries, or tried to encapsulate 100 years of change on a single, low-detail map with a few arrows and dots drawn on. While I understand that history is much more than political and national boundaries, those are the aspects of history that change most rapidly, thus requiring more maps to follow. I remember the old Hammond Historical Atlas from my childhood, as the perfect companion for most books of post-Renaissance European history (and not bad for earlier periods, though usually weak outside Europe). I just hope it hasn't changed too much.
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