Want to go from Venice to the Swiss Alps all without a passport? Discover the movie location map that lets you see the world ...
Published in Zürich in 1525, Lucas Cranach the Elder’s map came at a moment when the modern idea of nation-states was only ...
How big was the Mongol Empire? In this video, we've mapped out a timeline of the Mongol conquests, from Genghis Khan to ...
Five centuries ago, a single misprinted image in a German Bible quietly rewired how Europeans pictured the world and their ...
Ever wondered what your hometown looked like centuries ago? Thanks to a hidden feature in Google Earth, you can now step back ...
Many of the world’s best-known countries did not always carry the names we use today. Over the last century, political shifts ...
From 400-year-old globes to cosmic funeral shrouds, how the Osher Map Library in Maine shows people that maps aren't just for ...
Now five years old, Aberdeen native Aaron Goings’ “The Port of Missing: Billy Gohl, Labor, and Brutal Times in the Pacific Northwest” deserves another loud shout-out as one of the past decade’s most ...
Johns Hopkins University Press and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum have launched the world’s first searchable digital map ...
Religious maps from the 1300s showing tribal Israel inadvertently became the blueprint for how later mapmakers drew political borders.
A new Cambridge study reveals how the first Bible ever printed with a map, released in 1525 with the Holy Land accidentally reversed, ended up transforming far more than biblical illustration. The ...
No doubting the scholarly rigour of this highly visual production, which reflects maps’ many distinctive styles and ...