M . Tomasik created the " Pictorial Map of European Russia, " which was published in Warsaw in 1896 and 1903, provoked an image of Utopia in Russia.
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When printing came around, pictorial maps evolved into some of the earliest forms of advertising as cities competed amongst themselves to attract larger shares of the known world s commerce.
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It is a pictorial map rather than a technical map : Shady Grove, for example, is shown next to a man lying under a tree; Masonville is shown next to a Masonic symbol.
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While regular maps focus on the accurate rendition of distances, pictorial maps enhance landmarks and often incorporate a complex interplay of different scales into one image in order to give the viewer a more familiar sense of recognition.