What Would the World’s Religious Map Look Like Without Islam?
In 610 CE, a new faith emerged in Arabia and permanently altered the religious map of three continents.
Read MoreHistorical maps showing territorial changes of countries and historical events of the past.
In 610 CE, a new faith emerged in Arabia and permanently altered the religious map of three continents.
Read MoreThe Grand Duchy of Lithuania once covered most of modern Belarus, large parts of Ukraine, and pushed deep into Russia. Polotsk spent 570 years under Lithuanian governance. Minsk 462. And Odessa, of all places, more than Klaipėda, Lithuania’s own current Baltic port.
Read MoreWelsh, Irish, and Scottish Gaelic occupy a narrow strip of the Atlantic coast today. Most people think of them as small, peripheral languages that have always been there at the edge of Europe, hanging on by a thread. But two thousand years ago Celtic was one of the most geographically widespread language groups in the world, running from Portugal to the Black Sea and beyond.
Read MoreMost people associate the colonial age in the Americas with England, France, or Spain. But Scotland had its own ambitious plans stretched across five locations from the Galápagos Islands to the jungles of Panama.
Read MoreGreece was Roman for 1,550 years. Britain barely hit 50. Some regions absorbed centuries of Roman culture while others got a brief military occupation and nothing more.
Read MorePeople who left Taiwan before 3000 BC eventually reached New Zealand by 1200 AD—a 4,000-year migration across scattered Pacific islands. This map traces the routes and dates of each leg of the journey, from the Philippines (2500 BC) through the Cook Islands (800 BC) to the final settlements in Hawaii, Easter Island, and New Zealand.
Read MoreSome maps try to do the impossible. The World GeoHistogram squeezes 9,000 years of civilization onto a single poster—compare Ancient Rome with the Mongol Empire, see when Alexander conquered Persia, figure out which civilizations actually existed at the same time. It’s ambitious, messy, and genuinely useful for understanding historical connections.
Read MoreJust weeks after victory in Europe, Winston Churchill commissioned a secret military plan so audacious it earned the codename “Unthinkable.” The proposal called for Western forces to launch a surprise attack against their Soviet allies on July 1, 1945. What drove Churchill to contemplate such a drastic action, and why was the plan ultimately shelved?
Read MoreIn the early 5th century, different beliefs shared the Arabian Peninsula. Jewish and Christian families lived in busy caravan towns, while many desert tribes still honored local gods or searched for a single creator.
Zoroastrian customs from Persia reached Arabia’s northeast, blending with local traditions. A few generations later, Islam appeared and began to reshape life across the peninsula.
Most people know California and Texas used to be Mexico. But did you know half of Colorado was too? Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah were completely Mexican. Even bits of Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma. This map shows all 447 counties that became American in the 1840s and 1850s.
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