Godunov map
{{short description|1667 ethnographic map of Siberia}}
The Godunov map was an ethnographic map of Siberia commissioned by Alexis of Russia on 15 November 1667.{{cite book |title=Imago mundi |year= 1958|publisher=International Society for the History of Cartography |quote=On the 15th of November 1667 the Tsar Alexey Mikhailovitch gave order to the Governor of Tobolsk, Petr Godunov, and his comrades to make a map with the ... | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2zZCAAAAIAAJ&q=%22Petr+Godunov%22&pg=PA100 }} The original is no longer extant, but two copies were made: one by Claes Johansson Prytz and the other by Fritz Cronman.{{cite journal |title=Isis |volume=4 |year=1922 |publisher=History of Science Society, Académie internationale d'histoire des sciences |quote=A copy made by the Swedish envoy to Russia, Fritz Cronman (or Kroneman) in 1669, is reproduced. ... | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Dp6ibHxQKmsC&q=%22Fritz+Cronman%22 }}{{cite book |author=Laura Hostetler |title=Qing colonial enterprise: ethnography and cartography in early modern China |date= 15 May 2001|quote=... The other was made by Fritz Cronman. | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=msli1mMua-8C&q=%22Fritz+Cronman%22&pg=PA72 |isbn= 9780226354200}} It is named after Petr Ivanovich Godunov the governor (voivode) of Tobolsk.The equivalent of a governor{{cite book |author=Nicholas B. Breyfogle, Abby M. Schrader, and Willard Sunderland |title=Peopling the Russian periphery: borderland colonization in Eurasian history |year=2007 |quote=The first surviving map of all of Siberia, the so-called Godunov map of 1667 (named after a Siberian governor, not the tsar), divides the territory with ... | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uJwH3ofF8BgC&q=%22Godunov+map%22&pg=PA29 |isbn=978-0-415-41880-5 }}