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Surveying and Mapping


As Roger J. Kain and Elizabeth Baigent have argued, the use of surveying and mapmaking can first be found sporadically throughout the Mesopotamian and ancient Egyptian eras (Kain and Baigent 1).  From 2,300 BC, evidence of property building plans can be found inscribed in clay tablets in ancient Mesopotamia, but few of these artifacts of early mapping techniques have been located. Likewise, while the Egyptians possessed the technical expertise and instruments to conduct the measurement of land, selections of maps outlining landed property have only been found between 305-330 BC (Kain and Baigent 1).
 
 The Roman Empire, on the other hand, is an example of a society which had comprehensively used the surveying and mapping of land as a definitive tool of state administration and organization. In an effort to rationally administer their empire and the granting of land and the extraction of taxes and revenues the Romans organized cities and rural areas into grid systems (Kain and Baigent 1).  Roman laws of 111BC regulated the agrimensores (land surveyors), to keep formae  (maps), and tabula (registers) of land in Italy, while Roman text books from the fourth century AD laid out processes for the use of surveying techniques such as the groma,  a cross like staff for the measuring of land for map-making (Kain and Baigent 2).
 
 With the fall of the Roman Empire, the use of maps for the administration and recording of property was essentially discontinued throughout the medieval period. Instead of maps, Medieval scribes used written texts to describe, rather than show, a given property regime (Kain and Baigent 3).  It was not until the sixteenth and seventeenth century that mapping was to reappear as a commonly held tool for the administration of land and property. As Kain and Braigent have argued:

In the emergent capitalist societies of Renaissance Europe, where land became a commodity and power relations were expressed through control of the means of production, which included land, there was now a clear reason for mapping properties-namely as an aid to developing the new system of exclusive rights to land  (Kain and Baigent 3-4).

Therefore, as capitalist social relations, which took as a presupposition a definitive right to private property, replaced more communal forms of feudal property, mapping and surveying were increasingly used both by private individuals and state organizations as a tool to organize and administer land.