Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age

The Manual of Map Classification and Cataloguing, known colloquially as the ‘Parsons’ classification, is a geographic-based scheme for structuring a map collection using a sequence of alphanumeric classes and subdivisions. The system was published in 1946 after being devised by Captain Edward J.S. P...

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Main Author: Davis, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2024
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author Davis, M
author_facet Davis, M
author_sort Davis, M
collection OXFORD
description The Manual of Map Classification and Cataloguing, known colloquially as the ‘Parsons’ classification, is a geographic-based scheme for structuring a map collection using a sequence of alphanumeric classes and subdivisions. The system was published in 1946 after being devised by Captain Edward J.S. Parsons RE, the inaugural Curator of Maps at the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford. Although originally adopted by Parsons within the map collection of the British War Office, the system was later used to classify the Bodleian’s own map collections, where it remains the basis of the organization of over two million maps, atlases and cartographic books today. This paper explores how the role of the Parsons classification within the Bodleian Library has changed significantly since its genesis in the 1940s. It then outlines recent work undertaken at the library to consolidate and digitize the system so that it better serves a map collection whose infrastructure is now largely digital.
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spelling oxford-uuid:168af845-7fe6-4a13-8c82-f453f130c2c82024-08-07T12:00:30ZRevisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital AgeJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:168af845-7fe6-4a13-8c82-f453f130c2c8EnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2024Davis, MThe Manual of Map Classification and Cataloguing, known colloquially as the ‘Parsons’ classification, is a geographic-based scheme for structuring a map collection using a sequence of alphanumeric classes and subdivisions. The system was published in 1946 after being devised by Captain Edward J.S. Parsons RE, the inaugural Curator of Maps at the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford. Although originally adopted by Parsons within the map collection of the British War Office, the system was later used to classify the Bodleian’s own map collections, where it remains the basis of the organization of over two million maps, atlases and cartographic books today. This paper explores how the role of the Parsons classification within the Bodleian Library has changed significantly since its genesis in the 1940s. It then outlines recent work undertaken at the library to consolidate and digitize the system so that it better serves a map collection whose infrastructure is now largely digital.
spellingShingle Davis, M
Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title_full Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title_fullStr Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title_full_unstemmed Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title_short Revisiting Parsons: a wartime map classification system in the Digital Age
title_sort revisiting parsons a wartime map classification system in the digital age
work_keys_str_mv AT davism revisitingparsonsawartimemapclassificationsysteminthedigitalage