Showing posts with label history maps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history maps. Show all posts

Monday, September 08, 2025

The Ancient Ley Lines of Britain Map

The idea of ley lines was first proposed in the 1920s by the amateur archaeologist Alfred Watkins. In his book, 'The Old Straight Track', Watkins suggested that many ancient sites in Britain - such as standing stones, barrows, and old churches - could be joined by drawing straight lines across the landscape. He believed these alignments were not accidental but reflected a deliberate system of connecting key points across space, which might once have served as navigational or trade routes.

A distinctive part of Watkins’ theory was his belief in dodmen, or ancient surveyors, who supposedly laid out these lines across the countryside with surveying rods. He imagined that these early engineers intentionally aligned sites to create a coherent network of straight tracks. One crucial aspect of Watkins' theory is often misunderstood: he did not believe people physically walked in perfectly straight lines. Instead, he argued that the straight "ley" was a conceptual line of sight between prominent landmarks. While travelers still had to navigate around natural obstacles like hills and rivers, they would use the visible monuments as a series of beacons to guide them toward their ultimate destination.

I have no doubt that throughout history people have used prominent ancient landmarks as navigational aids. Even today, with GPS and mobile maps, we still navigate primarily by sight. Prominent topographic features such as rivers, valleys, and mountains have always been used to help navigate the landscape, and ancient monuments like hillforts and megaliths have undoubtedly served as waymarks for travelers.

However, while I think it’s very likely people have used landmarks as practical aids for finding their way, the idea of a prehistoric surveying class (dodmen) systematically imposing straight alignments seems improbable. 

In recent decades ley lines have taken on a different life altogether. Rather than being viewed mainly as old trade routes or alignments, they have become part of a spiritual and mystical interpretation of the landscape. Many people today see ley lines as channels of earth energy, linking sacred sites into a web of unseen power. This belief that ley lines are natural channels of energy ignores one fundamental fact. You can find straight lines connecting ancient monuments everywhere and anywhere you look.

To illustrate this point, I created an interactive map that allows you to plot straight lines between ancient sites. The way it works is simple: you can click anywhere on the map, draw a line across the landscape, and almost inevitably that line will intersect with a castle or standing stone(s). This isn’t because the sites were all deliberately aligned in prehistory, or were built on a channel of natural Earth energy, but rather because Britain is so densely dotted with ancient and historic features that some degree of alignment is bound to occur purely by chance.

When you click on the Ley Line Locator map, the code looks for the two nearest sites - either castles, ancient stones, or both - that line up most closely in a straight line with your chosen point. It does this by calculating the angles formed between your click and pairs of nearby sites, searching for the combination that produces the angle closest to 180 degrees (a perfectly straight alignment). Once the best match is found, the map automatically draws a line through your location and the two sites, and highlights them so you can see the alignment. This means that no matter where you click, even with only a few hundred locations, the map will almost always be able to produce a “ley line”.

Friday, August 22, 2025

Using AI to Search Maps

The magnificent David Rumsey Map Collection now has an AI Search Assistant that can help you find maps, learn more about individual maps, and even query specific elements within maps.

The David Rumsey Map Collection is one of the largest online collections of maps, and its new AI Search Assistant is a fantastic resource. It not only helps you search and discover maps in the collection but also lets you dive deeper into individual maps and the cartographers who created them.

1. Find Maps in the Collection

From the David Rumsey Map Collection home page, you can now use the AI Search Assistant to find maps based on themes, locations, or any other criteria you can imagine. The Assistant will return a list of maps in the collection that match your search.

Examples of queries you might use are:

Ask what projection is used in a map!

2. Ask Questions About an Individual Map

When viewing a specific map, click the blue chat icon in the bottom-right corner to open the AI Search Assistant. You can then ask technical or contextual questions about the map you’re looking at. 

For example:

What is this building?

3. Ask Questions about Map Details

When viewing a map you can zoom in on details to ask questions about a specific section of the map. 

Friday, August 15, 2025

Spies in the Sky - Satellites of the Cold War

US Satellite image of Havana, Cuba 1966

Space From Space's Historic Declassified Satellite Image Gallery allows you to step into the vantage point of Cold War intelligence analysts, exploring the world as it was seen from orbit decades ago.

Since the 1960's U.S. spy satellites have quietly orbited hundreds of miles above the Earth, capturing images that would never be seen by the public - until their declassification. Operated by the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) in partnership with the CIA and U.S. Air Force, these missions were part of an unprecedented intelligence effort during the Cold War. The goal was simple but urgent: to monitor military installations, track missile development, and keep a close watch on global hotspots.

The Historic Declassified Satellite Images Gallery showcases more than 500 interactive satellite photographs captured between 1960 to 1984, giving modern audiences a rare glimpse at the geopolitical tensions of the era. The imagery comes from four major reconnaissance programs: CORONA, ARGON, GAMBIT, and HEXAGON (nicknamed “Big Bird”), each designed for specific intelligence-gathering tasks.

Click on any image in the gallery and you’ll open an interactive map viewer. Here you can zoom in, pan across, and explore the selected image in remarkable detail - just as intelligence analysts might have done during the Cold War. The gallery of declassified images can be filtered by Satellite Variant (the four reconnaissance programs), Date Range and Location

Space From Space’s gallery is a time machine in pixels and film grain. Whether you’re a historian, a student of geopolitics, or simply curious about the hidden chapters of the 20th century, these images offer an extraordinary window into a world once seen only from space, and only by a select few.

Saturday, August 09, 2025

Ghost Signs: Phantoms of the Past

Ghost signs are the fading painted advertisements that you often see on old brick walls and buildings. They're a window into a city's history, hinting at businesses that have long since disappeared. You can find these signs on the sides of buildings, above doorways, and in alleys - silent reminders of a past that still peeks through into our modern lives.

The HK Ghost Signs map is an historical archive of Hong Kong's ghost signs. The map itself has a striking visual style, with a black-and-white base map hinting at a vintage aesthetic - punctuated by bright pink markers highlighting the city's surviving ghost signs. Clicking on a marker on the map reveals a photograph and often some background information about the selected ghost sign’s origins.

Many of the mapped signs on HK Ghost Signs once belonged to shops and businesses that closed decades ago - their painted names and slogans surviving only as faint traces on stucco and brick. Collectively, these points form an alternative tour of the city, one that winds not along the main tourist routes, but through backstreets and forgotten facades. The map even includes 'star' and 'check-in' options for each mapped ghost sign, that make it very easy to create an itinery of signs you might want to visit and also the means to tick-off the signs once visited.

At the other end of the stylistic spectrum is the San Francisco Ghost Sign Mapping Project, which uses a straightforward Google My Map to plot nearly a thousand ghost signs across the Californian city. 

While its visual presentation is less polished than HK Ghost Signs, the project makes up for it with functionality. A handy menu lets you filter the map to show only certain types of signs, such as Building/Business signs or Ad/Brand signs. This makes it easy to focus on just one particular slice of the city’s painted history at a time.

Unrelated to ghost signs (but lovely nonetheless) - M+, Hong Kong’s museum for visual culture, has an interactive map of Neon Signs that are also dotted around the Chinese city. Bookmark both Hong Kong maps, and you may be able to find faded ghost signs sharing the same walls with neon - providing a striking clash of past and present in the same city space.

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Time Travel Maps

If I were President of the World every major city would be required to create a 3D city map documenting the city for every year of its history. Unfortunately I am not yet the global overlord so my dreams of virtual time-travel go largely unfulfilled.

But in Zurich, I can get close.

Zurich Time Travel is an impressive 3D interactive map that reconstructs the city’s architectural evolution from 1850 to the present. Built using open city data and historical maps it lets you scroll through time, and observe how the city's medieval alleys have given way to grand boulevards and modern skyscrapers.

Using the map's timeline you can witness the growth of Zurich, from a compact, walled city hugging the Limmat River to the modern sprawling metropolis it is today.

You can explore even further back in time on the Zurich 4D interactive map. This map includes digital 3D models of the city in 3000 BC, in the year 200, in 1500 and in 1800 - providing a fascinating insight into how the city of Zurich has developed over time.

If you closely explore the ancient 3000 BC model of Zurich you might be able to spot a few Neolithic stilt houses nestled among the trees. The 3D model of the city in 1800 shows a city which is still largely confined within its medieval city walls. Skip forward to view the 3D model of the modern city and it is now hard to even discern the location of the historic city walls amongst the modern sprawl of Zurich. 

In the USA, the Welikia Project lets you travel back in time to explore New York’s natural landscape before the arrival of Dutch settlers. This interactive map reconstructs Manhattan Island as it existed pre-1600, revealing its original ecosystems - rolling hills, dense forests, sprawling wetlands, salt marshes, and a network of streams and ponds.

To create this digital time capsule, researchers combined early historical maps, soil surveys, and tree-ring analysis with firsthand accounts from colonial-era records. These sources helped piece together an accurate portrait of the island’s lost wilderness - long before skyscrapers and paved streets transformed the city forever.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

The Map of Nazi Camps & Ghettos

The USHMM Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos is an interactive map documenting camps, ghettos, and Nazi-run sites of persecution across Europe and North Africa. This powerful digital tool brings to life one of the most staggering realities of the Holocaust: the sheer number and geographic reach of sites where millions were imprisoned, enslaved, and murdered between 1933 and 1945.

Created by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) as part of its Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, the map is more than a visual aid - it's an evolving historical archive. Each marker on the map represents a documented location: a forced-labor camp, concentration camp, Jewish ghetto, prisoner-of-war camp, brothel, transit site, or killing center. Collectively, they reveal a complex and extensive infrastructure of Nazi persecution, far beyond the most infamous locations like Auschwitz or Dachau. 

The map plots more than 44,000 sites of incarceration, oppression, and forced labor. Each entry is backed by meticulous archival research and, where available, includes: operational dates, controlling authorities, victim demographics, purpose and conditions, survivor testimonies or photographs, and references to related encyclopedia entries.

The density of locations throughout Europe underscores how visible and widespread the Nazi terror was.

Saturday, July 12, 2025

A Time Machine for Maps

World History Atlas is an impressively detailed, time-traveling cartographic project that lets users explore the ever-shifting borders of human civilization. Covering thousands of years of global history, this interactive map platform provides a deep spatial context to the rise and fall of empires, nations, and cultures.

Think of it as a Google Maps for world history - except instead of zooming into street view, you're diving through millennia. 

The core of the World History Atlas is its sweeping collection of political maps, spanning from prehistoric hunter-gatherer bands to the modern nation-state system. The site is organized chronologically, allowing you to select a time period (e.g., 3000 BC, 500 AD, 1500 AD) and instantly see who ruled what, where - and for how long. Each map offers a color-coded look at the political boundaries of the time, with tooltips and links that provide more information on historical states, tribes, and empires.

The World History Atlas echoes a number of other historical map projects that are dedicated to mapping the shifting political borders of countries through time - like Chronas, the OpenHistoricalMap, or TimeMap.

Thursday, July 03, 2025

Mapping the Revolutionary War

Esri’s Battles of the American Revolutionary War is an interactive StoryMap that visualizes the major battles of the Revolution. This digital tool offers a compelling, user-friendly experience that brings the war’s geography and timeline to life. 

At the heart of the Battles of the American Revolutionary War is its interactive map interface and timeline. Using these features you can view the Revolution battles by location and by date. Whether you're tracking the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord or analyzing the decisive victory at Yorktown, the map provides a clear visual sense of how the war evolved spatially and strategically.

Clicking on any battle's marker on the map reveals a concise summary with essential details - such as the date, participants, and results - alongside a short historical background.

You can view some of the actual original maps from the Revolutionary War on the American Revolution Institute’s Ten Great Revolutionary War Maps. This curated selection of historical maps of the Revolution highlights maps created by American, British, French, and Hessian cartographers - ranging from hastily drawn field plans to meticulously engraved topographical charts. 

One of the most notable examples in this collection is Sebastian Bauman’s map of the Siege of Yorktown, which stands out as the first major battle map designed and published by an American engineer. Others, like William Faden’s depiction of the New Jersey campaign, and Charles Blaskowitz’s survey of Narragansett Bay, show how European-trained professionals contributed to strategic military planning.

Tuesday, July 01, 2025

The Whole of Human History Mapped

The Wikidata History Map is an interactive tool that visualizes historical events from Wikidata on a dynamic world map. By leveraging the vast database of Wikidata the map allows users to explore events ranging from ancient battles and natural disasters to political summits and cultural milestones - providing a unique way to see how history unfolds across time and space. 

Each historical event is represented on the map by an icon corresponding to its type (e.g., battles, earthquakes, treaties), making it easy to identify different categories of historical occurrences at a glance. 

How to Use the Map

Users can navigate the map by entering a specific date or date range (e.g., "1996," "1996 1," or "1996 1 26" for year, month, or day). A duration control adjusts the time span, while a limit control sets how many events appear on-screen. The interface includes buttons to jump to the previous or next time period, making it simple to browse through history chronologically. Hovering over an event marker displays a brief summary, while clicking on it opens a persistent popup with links to the corresponding Wikidata page - where you can also click through to read more about the event on Wikipedia.

Key Features

The map supports a wide variety of event types, each with a distinct icon—such as ⚔️ for battles, 🌋 for volcanic eruptions, and 🎭 for cultural events. Users can filter events by adjusting the date range and zooming into specific regions. The tool also remembers your last view settings, so returning users can pick up where they left off. Additionally, a help menu explains date formatting and navigation controls, making the tool accessible even to first-time users.

The Wikidata History Map joins a long list of interactive mapping projects that are dedicated to mapping the history of the world. Some of these include:

  • Chronas is an interactive that map visualizes Wikipedia entries by date and by location and also shows country borders for different dates in history.
  • TimeMap.org is an interactive, web‑based “Google Maps of History” created by MapTiler (the team behind OldMapsOnline and MapTiler.com). It allows you to see historical boundaries, country names, rulers, conflicts, and notable figures overlaid on a modern, zoomable map.
  • OpenHistoricalMap - a community-driven, open online map project that lets users explore the world through time. This one doesn't map historical events as such - but reveals how cities and countries themselves change through time.

Monday, June 30, 2025

A Time Traveller's Guide to the Zoo

London Zoo is the world’s oldest scientific zoo. In 2028, it will celebrate its 200th anniversary - a milestone in a long and storied history that visitors can now explore through the Zoo’s Time Traveller’s Guide to London Zoo, a collection of vintage maps that even includes the original 1826 "Design for the Garden."

The Time Traveller’s Guide to London Zoo offers a fascinating journey through nearly two centuries of zoological innovation, conservation breakthroughs, and iconic architecture - all presented through a beautifully curated collection of vintage maps dating back to 1826, the year the Zoo first opened its gates.

Using the map timeline, you can explore in detail the zoo’s historical layouts over the last 200 years. This series of maps reveals how the Zoo has evolved in response to new understandings of animal care and public engagement, while offering glimpses of its most iconic structures and beloved animal residents.

These structures include the much-loved Lubetkin Penguin Pool (now Grade I listed), the world’s first public aquarium (London Zoo even coined the word aquarium), and the Snowdon Aviary (now transformed into Monkey Valley). Some of the Zoo’s most famous residents - including Jumbo the elephant and Guy the Gorilla - also feature on the maps, along with notable human figures such as the naturalist Charles Darwin (who was a fellow and council member of London Zoo).

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Map Any Event in History (or Fiction)

The Battle of Hastings mapped by th Map Simulation Platform

The Map Simulation Platform is a hugely ambitious project that uses AI to simulate text prompts in 3D on an interactive map. It employs natural language processing to interpret a prompt and render it on a geographical canvas. It's similar to a text-to-image AI tool, except here the output is a dynamic, map-based scenario rather than an AI generated image.

Using the tool, you can simulate historical events such as the Battle of Hastings, the Battle of Goose Green, or virtually any other historical event you'd like to see replayed on a map. It's also possible to simulate hypothetical scenarios, such as an earthquake in New York or a global nuclear war.

The Map Simulation Platform clearly has enormous potential as a tool for chronologically simulating important historical events. At present, it does a commendable job of extracting locations from historical narratives, geolocating them accurately, and plotting them on the map. However, from the examples I’ve explored so far, the playback options can feel a little chaotic, making it difficult to follow the sequence of events in a clear, chronological order.

One improvement that would greatly enhance the experience is the ability to view the timeline of a simulated historical event in distinct stages. If users could move forward and backward through the timeline using simple navigation buttons - and see an information window explaining and contextualizing each stage - it would make the platform a truly powerful historical tool. Allowing users to edit and expand on these events would also be essential for users who want to share their simulations. This would enable corrections of any AI “hallucinations” or factual inaccuracies, as well as the addition of missing but important events.

The platform does already offer the ability to download simulation data as a GeoJSON file. This means that users proficient with popular mapping platforms can export simulation data and build their own guided maps for historical events - adding customized context or supplementing any missing information.

Monday, May 19, 2025

The Atlas of Drowned Towns

I wasn’t able to find Atlantis on the Atlas of Drowned Towns. That’s probably because it only maps ‘communities that were displaced or disappeared to make way for ... reservoirs ... (and) large dams’ since 1860.

The map does, however, show the location of St. Thomas, Nevada, which was submerged under 60 feet of water in the 1930s during the construction of the Hoover Dam.  It also reveals the locations of hundreds of other towns, villages, homesteads, and Tribal homelands lost to dam construction across the United States and around the world.

The Atlas of Drowned Towns is a digital public history project that asks a deceptively simple question: What was there before the water came? In answering it, the project uncovers the deeply human costs of twentieth-century river development. As massive dams reshaped landscapes for hydroelectric power, irrigation, and flood control, entire communities were erased from maps - and often, from memory.

The project started with a focus on the Pacific Northwest, but it is expanding to include drowned towns across North America and beyond. Its interactive map and growing archive allow users to explore these sites through photographs, historical documents, personal stories, and even aerial imagery that shows what was lost.

If you or someone you know has a connection to a drowned place, the project wants to hear from you. The Share Your Story feature allows users to contribute memories, photos, artifacts, and insights, helping to fill gaps in the historical record and ensure these submerged stories are not forgotten.

Via: weeklyOSM

Thursday, May 15, 2025

A Panorama of Victorian London

The city of London has inspired many beautiful panoramic maps over the centuries, each lovingly crafted by talented artists. Interestingly, these panoramas almost always share a common perspective - north from the south side of the River Thames. This same viewpoint is used in Frederick James Smyth’s 1844 Panorama of London.

Exeter University’s Digital Humanities Lab has created an interactive guided tour of Smyth’s Panorama of London. Using Knight Lab’s StoryMap.js platform, the project offers a rich, navigable journey through 19th-century London as captured in one of the era’s most visually striking urban illustrations.

Originally commissioned by the Illustrated London News and first published in 1845, Smyth’s panorama is a remarkable feat of Victorian printmaking. Stretching over eight feet in length, it presents a detailed bird’s-eye view of the city from a south-of-the-Thames vantage point.

Exeter University’s story-map guides viewers through some of 1844 London’s most prominent landmarks. These include long-lost sites such as Millbank Penitentiary (where convicts were held before deportation to Australia) and the Hungerford Suspension Bridge. It also features familiar icons that remain central to the city today, including St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Houses of Parliament, and Buckingham Palace, to name just a few.

More vintage panoramas of London:

1543 - The Wyngaerde Panorama
1616 - Claes Jansz Visscher's Panorama (1848 copy)
1829 - View of London from the Adelphi

Saturday, April 26, 2025

19th Century Street View of Chicago

Imagine stepping straight into the heart of history - and finding yourself surrounded by the wonders of 1893. The Chicago 00 Project makes it possible, weaving authentic vintage photographs of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago into a breathtaking, time-traveling Street View adventure!

For example, click on the White City Court of Honor map marker, and you are transported into the historical Street View scene above. Before you stretches the Grand Basin, upon which a gondolier in traditional dress floats gracefully by. Across the water, you can see the soaring golden dome of the Administration Building. To one side, the intricate colonnades of the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building extend in stately rhythm, while on the other, the elegant Agricultural Building showcases its own classical grandeur.

Elsewhere on the map, you can find a bird’s-eye panoramic Street View of the entire Exposition grounds. Zoom in on the Midway Plaisance, and you can step into a whole series of vintage Street View scenes captured along the exposition’s central thoroughfare - including some breathtaking imagery taken from the towering Ferris Wheel.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Before New York

an animated 3D model of New Amsterdam showing two windmills, panning ans zooming to the wooded city walls

This is New Amsterdam in 1660, when Peter Stuyvesant was serving as the director-general of the colony of New Netherland. New Amsterdam, located on the southern tip of Manhattan Island, was the capital of New Netherland.

One of my favorite interactive maps of all time is the Beyond Manhatta. This project visualizes Manhattan Island and its native wildlife, as it would have looked in 1609. The Beyond Manhatta map allows you to explore New York's original natural landscape of hills, valleys, forests, wetlands, salt marshes, beaches, springs, ponds and streams. 

Thanks to the New Amsterdam History Center, we can now travel forward half a century to explore Manhattan after it had become a Dutch colony, administered and governed by the Dutch West India Company.

The New Amsterdam 1660 3D model (shown above) was created by the New Amsterdam History Center for its Mapping Early New York collection, which features maps and documents of New Amsterdam and New Netherland. This model allows you to explore the settlement’s houses, farms, taverns, and workshops, as well as its surrounding walls. It was developed based on the Castello Plan, a map of the settlement created in 1660 by Jacques Cortelyou.

You can view the original Castello Plan itself on the Mapping Early New York interactive map.

Saturday, January 18, 2025

GeoGuessr for History Buffs

Can you guess the date and location of the historical event taking place in these two AI generated videos? If you can then you might just become the Time Portal champion of the world.

Time Portal is a fun and innovative online game that challenges you to pinpoint the time and place of significant historical moments. If you’re a fan of history and love games like GeoGuessr, this one’s for you.

At its core, Time Portal is a guessing game that drops you into a series of random historical events. But instead of just reading about them or looking at static images, you’re immersed in dynamic, AI-generated video footage of the event itself.

Your mission? To figure out when and where you are in history.

The AI-generated videos used in the game are created using a sophisticated pipeline of Flux, Kling, and mmaudio. These tools combine to produce visually and aurally rich recreations of historical moments. While the AI-generated footage often captures the essence of the events, it occasionally takes creative liberties - incorporating elements of folklore or popular myths into the historical narrative.

Every day, a new Daily Challenge awaits you on Time Portal. You’ll be tasked with identifying the time and place of five different historical events, each represented by a unique video.

In each round, your score is based on how close your guesses are to the actual location and year of the event. For those who love a challenge, you can also replay any of the previous daily challenges to refine your skills or compete for higher scores.

Also See

A Nightmare on View Street - Can you identify the locations being attacked by monsters in these AI-generated videos?

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Travel Times in the Roman & British Empires

Map showing a route from Derbyshire to Hertfordshire

In Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, the heroine Elizabeth Bennet marries Fitzwilliam Darcy. This marriage separates Elizabeth from the rest of her family, both in terms of class and physical distance. As the new mistress of Pemberley, Darcy's grand estate in Derbyshire, Elizabeth must move over 130 miles away from her childhood home of Longbourn, in rural Hertfordshire.

While 130 miles might not seem like a huge distance to modern readers, in the 18th century, the journey would have taken at least two whole days of uncomfortable travel by post chaise or private carriage. At least, that is according to the new Travel in Times interactive map. In reality, the journey would probably have taken three days, when you account for stops at inns along the way for meals and to rest the horses.

One of my all-time favorite digital maps is OmnesViae, a Roman route planner that shows you how long it would take to travel between any two locations during the reign of the Roman Empire. OmnesViae: Itinerarium Romanum is a route planner that lets you navigate the Roman Empire using the roads and shipping lanes that were actually available to the ancient Romans.

The map is based on information from the ancient Roman map, the Tabula Peutingeriana, and allows you to plan a route that includes all the main roads and cities of the Roman Empire. You could use the map, for example, to plan a route between Rome and the gladiatorial amphitheater in Lecce. Depending on your strength and fighting skills, you might not need directions for the return trip.

Now, thanks to the University of Cambridge, you can also find out how long it would take to travel around the UK during the height of the British Empire. Travel in Times is another historic online journey planner. This map shows you how long it would take to travel between any two locations in England and Wales at three specific dates in history: circa 1680, circa 1830, and in 1911.

The Travel in Times journey planner offers a fascinating glimpse into the history of travel and transportation in England and Wales. By focusing on key historical moments in 1680, 1830, and 1911, the map allows users to explore how advancements in infrastructure - such as turnpike roads, stagecoaches, and the railway system - revolutionized the speed, cost, and comfort of travel. This historical perspective highlights the dramatic improvements that took place over a period of 230 years, transforming the way people moved across the England & Wales.

Via: Quantum of Sollazzo

Saturday, November 23, 2024

I'm Sending You Back to the Future!

1782 Map of London

I've spent today on a time-traveling adventure through 18th-century London. Standing in the bustling, tourist-filled Trafalgar Square, I opened up Allmaps Here and was instantly transported back to King’s Mews - an elaborate courtyard that stood here long before the Battle of Trafalgar was fought and etched its name onto London's streets. Suddenly the city came alive with elegant Georgian charm, and for a moment, it truly felt like stepping back in time.

Allmaps Here is an innovative platform that overlays your real-time location on historical maps, allowing you to explore vintage cartography while walking around in the modern world. This engaging feature provides a unique way to experience geographical history interactively.

With Allmaps Here, time-travel almost becomes reality. The platform overlays your real-time location onto your choice of historical map, turning any stroll into a journey through time. This unique blend of technology and history transforms how we interact with vintage cartography, making history feel tangible and alive.

Right now, standing in central London, I am able to choose from over 20 vintage maps ranging in date from 1665 to the end of the 19th Century. My challenge now is to see if I can navigate London's modern streets using a map from 1782.

Allmaps Here is just one in a range of incredible tools provided by Bert Spaan's Allmaps. Tools designed to help you curate, georeference and explore collections of digitized maps using the IIIF standards. 

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Mapping Mythical Islands & Imaginary Lands

Hy-Brasil is a mythical island, which was once believed to be located west of Ireland. According to legend, the island was typically shrouded in mist and only visible once every seven years. It appeared on several maps from the 14th to 16th centuries, often depicted as a circular island divided by a central river or strait.

Hy-Brasil is also shown in the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland on Map Myths, an interactive atlas exploring historical cartographic errors, myths, and misconceptions, such as phantom islands, mythical cities, and imaginary features. The site examines the origins of these legends, why they were included on maps, and how exploration eventually corrected these inaccuracies.

Map Myths is a captivating exploration of mythical and legendary locations, combining history, geography, and storytelling to uncover the origins of cartographic anomalies. The map provides detailed historical context and plausible explanations for these errors, revealing how myths like phantom islands and mythical cities were often products of misreported sightings and folklore. 

Map Myths earns lots of bonus points for being one of the first interactive maps I've seen which offers Arctic and Antarctic map projections. You can actually choose from five different projections (including Mercator, Mollweide and Robinson) but the Arctic and Antarctic projections are particularly useful for visualizing the locations of mythical lands in the extreme north or south. This includes Rupes Nigra, a legendary magnetic rock at the North Pole (believed to explain why compasses point north).

You can follow Map Myths on Bluesky, for regular updates on historcial cartographical anomolies. Maps Mania is also on Bluesky at @mapsmania.bsky.social

Friday, November 08, 2024

The Indigenous Treaty Map

Map of Canada with land treaty borders

The Yellowhead Institute has released The Treaty Map, a comprehensive historical overview of land treaties "negotiated" between Indigenous Nations and the Canadian federal government (and previously, with colonial governments and the British Crown). The Institute aims to use the map to foster a deeper understanding of Indigenous land rights and the ongoing disputes surrounding these treaties.

The interactive Treaty Map includes an historical timeline control which can be used to filter the treaties by date (1725 – 2012). The treaties can also be filtered by type (or historical period):

  1. Pre-Confederation Treaties (1763-1867): Early agreements primarily focused on trade, peace, and military alliances between Indigenous Nations and European settlers, including the Peace and Friendship Treaties and the Royal Proclamation of 1763.

  2. Confederation-Era Treaties (1867-1921): Also known as the Numbered Treaties, these were agreements negotiated as Canada expanded westward, aimed at acquiring Indigenous lands in exchange for promises of land reserves, education, and other support.

  3. Modern Treaties (1975-Present): Often referred to as Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements, these address land rights in areas where historical treaties were not signed, including notable examples like the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement and the Nunavut Agreement.
Clicking on a treaty boundary on the map reveals a summary offering Indigenous perspectives on the treaty’s context, key negotiators, terms (often with differing interpretations), and subsequent events. These entries are informed by extensive research, with input from advisory committees of Indigenous treaty experts.
Native-Land map of North American indigenous territories
If you are interested in Indigenous nations and their lands then you might also want to refer to the Native-Land interactive map. This map visualizes information on Indigenous territories, languages, and treaties across the world.

The map is designed to increase awareness and education about Indigenous histories, territories, and the diversity of Indigenous cultures, encouraging users to consider the ongoing significance of land acknowledgment and Indigenous land rights.