A precise compass to the nineteenth century world. Maps and words meet here. Chambers's Concise Gazetteer of the World, edited by David Patrick, compresses topography, statistics, history and pronunciation into clear alphabetical entries. As a world geography reference and historical gazetteer book it offers quick facts alongside measured context: population and trade figures, terrain notes and local histories that make each entry function like a miniature statistical atlas collection and a faithful topographical dictionary. Practical as it is elegant, the volume also serves as a pronunciation guide for places, helping readers say unfamiliar names with confidence while tracing the web of global place names. Whether used as a travel and study resource, a desk companion for curious readers, or a systematic reference for scholars, this Chambers gazetteer edition balances Victorian-era concision with usefulness for modern study. Valuable as a Victorian era reference, the Gazetteer offers historians a readable snapshot of place and perspective: how names were used, where trade and population clustered, and which features mattered to contemporary cartography. Researchers and historians will find its numerical detail and concise descriptions indispensable for cross-referencing older maps and for tracing the shifting language of geography. At the same time casual readers and classic-literature collectors will enjoy the authoritative tone and period charm, with entries worth browsing for pure curiosity as much as citation. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Beyond a mere directory, it remains a comprehensive atlas guide and dependable travel and study resource that helps when global place names need context and when spellings demand a pronunciation guide for places. Libraries, map rooms and private shelves will prize it as both a working statistical atlas collection and a narrative-rich historical gazetteer book, a resource that complements modern maps while preserving the language of an age.