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Posts Tagged ‘cartography’

Global trade is very much in the news these days. While many of the current moves from the US seem designed to take the country back to a time when every country stood on its own, those times have, arguably, been much exaggerated. There are many historical examples of interconnectivity, from the Egyptians to the Greeks to the Romans to the Silk Road and many more, but I recently saw a very cool map that brought this idea home.

A Brilliantly Detailed Map Of Medieval Trade Routes & Networks

Even before the modern era, the Afro-Eurasian world was deeply interconnected through trade.

I found this map to be a fascinating look into a network of world trade during an era many might assume was very insular. The only thing I wish it included is travel times. How long, for example, would it have taken for cardamom to get from India to Venice to Oslo and into a loaf of braided bread?

Here’s the map from Martin Jan Månsson, part of his website, The Age of Trade

Medieval trade route networks

Zoom in and be impressed! 

(Bonus for your amusement: a comic on tariffs from xkcd 🙂

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I like maps. If you do too, and you are the sort of person who creates worlds that need maps (looking at you, authors!), this might be the tool for you. 

Inkarnate – Create Fantasy Maps Online

Turn your ideas into incredible fantasy maps with Inkarnate’s easy-to-use online map-making platform.

Ideal for Game Masters, Fantasy Authors and Map Enthusiasts.

No affiliation, it’s just a site I found when looking for a good mapmaking tool for casual cartographers. The free plan includes several hundred art assets and as many as ten maps for personal use. Need more because your imagination just can’t be stopped? For $25 a year you get thousands of assets, high-resolution exports, a commercial license, and can make up to 2,000 maps. Which seems like a lot, even to me.

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Photo by Gu00fcl Iu015fu0131k on Pexels.com

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Gerardus Mercator was born today in 1512. Yes, that Mercator, as in maps, as in one of cartographic history’s groundbreaking creations, the Mercator Atlas. The Mercator projection* displayed latitude and longitude as a grid, which (while causing all sorts of difficulties with pole-proximate object scales that persist to this day**) allowed sailors to plot their courses in straight lines. Sounds like a simple thing? Try calculating where you are, and where you need to go, while tossing up and down on the deck of a ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, using hand-held scientific instruments and a flattened, rum-stained ellipse with sea monsters at the edges, then see how you feel;)

In honor of Mercator’s 503rd birthday, I want to point my fellow writers to an article on the right ways (and wrong ways) to build a cartographic history for your fantasy land:
10 Rules For Making Better Fantasy Maps

I particularly like suggestion for urban fantasists; when it comes to understanding city form, it’s hard to go wrong with Kevin Lynch at your side.

Map: a useful distortion of reality.

* For more on Mercator’s process and the social context in which he produced his maps, see this excerpt from Mark Monmonier’s Rhumb Lines and Map Wars, via the University of Chicago Press.

** Check out this interactive puzzle map for a fun demonstration of size distortions.

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Because my father is touching down in the UK today, here’s a delightful look at the growth of London over the past two thousand years:

Watch London Evolve From Roman Times To Today

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