Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion
General Discussions
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Where in the World is That? & Great World History Map Sites


I completely agree! One can never have too many maps.
I'm going to go find that Celtic map I had posted somewhere.


that they are. thank you

http://www.locatinglondon.org/


Ha ha, I'm glad I'm not the only person that does that! My reading of London novels is quite often slowed by the amount of time I spend perusing maps...

http://www.l..."
Great site link thanks. I just found a place called "St Andrew by the Wardrobe". Fascinating. Will help with my genealogy study of my London ancestors.

Just wanted to prevent people who have never been this part of the world to get a wrong idea.
Cheers ..."
I am not sure which map you are talking about Tuba. There are scores of maps.
Do you mean the map in the top right corner titled, Political map of the Middle East in the Late 20th Century?
There is no country marked on the map as Kurdistan. The word Kurdistan only reflects a geographical and cultural region.
Not to start a political debate (because I won't be pulled into one), but the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is not a recognised State. It is only recognised by Turkey.
It doesn't make a map wrong if it does not include Northern Cyprus as a part of Turkey. It is only a wrong map to someone from Turkey. Such as yourself.
There is no vagueness with the border of Turkey and Armenia, it is just that two names, Armenia and Yerevan, are written there and the border cannot be seen because of them. Not a vagary, just an issue with the font size they are using.

http://www.ancient.eu/

Nice! This is the first time I've seen this thread and I'm ecstatic! I have ancient maps and fantasy maps (Middle Earth, Discworld) all over my office :D

http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Ital...
London around 1300. Complete with the Guildhall, Abbeys and Churches, Scotland Yard, St. Mary Overey's Priory, docks and major street names. It really helped me keep locations straight while reading.

I love that one! This thread has me in full out map-geek mode!

It's easy to find town ones, not so easy to find 'free' road ones. I've seen books you can buy with the maps I want in them, but I want to avoid buying if I can fibd one for free. If anybody knows of such a map please hand over your link. :)

then I found
http://keithbriggs.info/Roman_road_ma...
This one doesn't really have much in the way of road maps, but it does have just about every other type of mapping of Roman Britain you'd want
http://www.roman-britain.org/maps.htm
Then, probably the less fussy, but informative map of just the roads and their names
http://www.iadb.co.uk/romans/main.php...

http://www.euratlas.net/cartogra/peut...
Just click on a section and voila!

It's easy to find town ones, not so easy to find '..."
Hello, Terri,
It isn't free, but I have used a map by the National Geographic Society and National Geographic Magazine entitled "Medieval England" for my own research. It is a poster-sized map, scaled approx. 1 in. = 20 mil, and can be ordered from the magazine's website. It shows points of historical and geographic interest as well as Roman roads still in use and town names that were in use around 11th-14th c. The rough location of historic castles from the period are also marked, and lots of historical notes fill the margins. I've thoroughly enjoyed having it hang over my desk for about 4 years now.
Here is a link to the map on the NG website. They have a nice scrolling tool that might help you browse it a bit w/o having to buy it.
http://maps.nationalgeographic.com/ma...

then I found
http://keithbriggs.info/Roman_road_ma...
Thi..."
I am having trouble opening some of those on my tablet. The links work. Its only my tablet that gets glitchy.
I'm not after roads maps set during the time of Roman occupation though. What I really want is a map or maps showing where they believe the major thoroughfares were during the 11th century. I want to see how people travelled all aroubd and which roads still followed what was an original Roman Road. ie Watling, Ermine

It's easy to find town ones, not so ..."
That is EXACTLY what I am after E.A. Only free. :)
Nothing is scrolling for me, but that may be because I am on a tablet. I want to get to the Northern England area mostly. Northumbria.
If anybody sees one for free, what E.A describes is precisely what I am after.

http://www.brrp.bham.ac.uk/maps/brita...
or this one by colour code:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia...

http://www.brrp.bham.ac.uk/maps/br..."
Thanks Kimber,
Afraid those are more maps that are only Roman roads. I was after maps of the 11th century roads and town locations. To see which Roman roads (for example) were still being used..along with more modern counterparts.
Roman road maps themselves I can find, but a free map of Britain in the 11th century that shows roads (some of those roads may have once been Roman roads), I cannot find. :)

http://www.designsofwonder.com/images...
Here's a list of all the maps they have online http://www.designsofwonder.com/?conte...

It's easy to find town ..."
You have to click on the map image and a pop up window will give you another image of the map that you can zoom in/out and navigate around. Let me know if that doesn't work. Maybe I can send you pics or upload pics to my blog.


http://www.designsofwonder.com/images...
Here's a list of all the maps they have online http://www.designsofwonder.com/?conte..."
Thanks for the link! I found one on Southern England Circa 1000AD. Unfortunately it doesn't go passed York (being Southern England and all)
This one: http://www.designsofwonder.com/images...
My search continues.

Thank you for the lovely offer, E.A. :)..but I just got it to work. It wasn't working because I originally looked at it on my Tablet device. Now I am on my laptop I can do it all. Zoom, move the map around.
Shame they have no road names, but at least you can guess by the road positions which is, for example, Ermine Street.

its fascinating to watch."
Wow! You almost have to watch it several times and look at each section of the map to watch the progress. Absolutely Amazing!


Was interesting to see the Mongols lose their ground over a short period. And then Russia win and lose and win and lose ground over and over.
This is why we will never have peace around the world. We are a territorial species. Always wanting to fight with other tribes for territory.


When Dawn was querying the break up of countries in the 6th century regions of Italy, she found this terribly informative map site which answered her own question.
This is the Italy map
http://www.timemaps.com/history/italy...
This is the main HOME page for that site: Time Maps
http://www.timemaps.com/home
If you know of any informative map sites that have maps of countries during Ancient or Medieval time periods, please feel free to add your link to this thread.
This thread also serves another purpose.
If you are reading a book and see a country or place mentioned and you don't know anything about it and would like to know about it or where it is, you can ask a question in this thread. Hopefully someone from the group can help you out with some information.
Don't be shy. It does not matter what the town or country. Nobody will judge you for wanting to know something about the place or where it is. one of the good things about the genre of historical fiction, is that we all learn something about history from the books we read thanks to the authors doing the research for us. Hopefully, we the readers can also help each other out on the learning front too.