Piccirillo, Michele (21 de septiembre de 1995). «A Centenary to be celebrated»(en inglés). Franciscan Archaeology Institute. Consultado el 18 de enero de 2019. «It was only Abuna Kleofas Kikilides who realised the true significance, for the history of the region, that the map had while visiting Madaba in December 1896. A Franciscan friar of ltalian-Croatian origin born in Constantinople, Fr. Girolamo Golubovich, helped Abuna Kleofas to print a booklet in Greek about the map at the Franciscan printing press of Jerusalem. Immediately afterwards, the Revue Biblique published a long and detailed historic-geographic study of the map by the Dominican fathers M.J. Lagrange and H. Vincent after visiting the site themselves. At the same time. Father J. Germer-Durand of the Assumptionist Fathers published a photographic album with his own pictures of the map. In Paris, C. Clermont-Gannau, a well known oriental scholar, announced the discovery at the Académie des Sciences et belles Lettres.»
Laor, 1986, p. XI quote. : "Cartography in the Middle Ages was generally of poor quality, with the exception of the cartography of the Holy Land, which reached a peak both in quality and quantity. For several centuries, the Holy Land was the most important and prominent subject of mapmaking. Laor, Eran (1986). Maps of the Holy Land: cartobibliography of printed maps, 1475-1900. A.R. Liss. ISBN978-0-8451-1705-7.
Wilson, Nigel Guy (2006). «Cartography». Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece. Psychology Press. p. 145. ISBN978-0-415-97334-2. «As geographical knowledge improved, various writers recorded what they believed to be the spatial relationships of territories and peoples to each other, and it is from this information that many modern historical atlases present items such as the world according to Hecataeus or Herodotus or Eratosthenes: actual ancient versions of these maps do not survive (indeed, modern versions seem to originate in the 1883 volumes of Bunbury), although there do exist Byzantine versions of Ptolemy’s maps.»
Masalha, 2019, p. 256a. : "The systematic mapping, surveying and place‐naming projects ... reached their peak with the British Ordnance Survey of Western Palestine between 1871 and 1877." Masalha, Nur (2019). Palestine: A Four Thousand Year History. Zed Books, Limited. ISBN978-1-78699-273-4.
Goren, 2002, p. 87-88. Goren, Haim (2002). «Sacred, but Not Surveyed: Nineteenth-Century Surveys of Palestine». Imago Mundi54: 87-110. doi:10.1080/03085690208592960.
kenyon.edu
digital.kenyon.edu
Baumgärtner, Ingrid. "Burchard of Mount Sion and the Holy Land," Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture 4, 1 (2013): 5-41. : "Burchard’s description, although little studied even today, is considered a key document that influenced the perception of Palestine in both text and image, in travel accounts and maps until far into the sixteenth century."
wikipedia.org
de.wikipedia.org
Fischer, 1939 and Fischer, 1940Fischer, Hans (1939). «Geschichte Der Kartographie Von Palästina» [History of the Cartography of Palestine (part 1)]. Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins62 (4): 169-189.Fischer, Hans (1940). «Geschichte Der Kartographie Von Palästina (Fortsetzung Und Schluß)» [History of the Cartography of Palestine (continuation and conclusion)]. Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins63 (1): 1-111.