Amazing Old Maps

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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    High Resolution Images: imgur.com/a/dvGtu4I
    In this video we take a look at some of the world's oldest maps.
    Business Contact: gilfamc@gmail.com
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @General.Knowledge
    @General.Knowledge  5 лет назад +468

    Which of these maps do you like the most?

    • @mikkeal
      @mikkeal 5 лет назад +32

      Erdapfel Globe interesting seeing the 'whole' world without the Americas.

    • @v.miguel.almeida
      @v.miguel.almeida 5 лет назад +14

      How could you forget the Portuguese World Maps, a secret well kept within the Casa da Índia (House of India) and guarded as to protect the crown interests, showing, perhaps, the most accurate depiction of land masses by the time. The Cantino Map, was a very large map in display at Casa da Índia for guidance on voyages and copies needed for navigation had to be permitted and issued by Casa Da Índia's itself. And we are talking of the 1500's.

    • @Hollywood2021
      @Hollywood2021 5 лет назад +4

      The French one at the end, depicting California as an island. I wonder what mountain chain that is, running through the middle of the US...?

    • @SalvadorGamingRoadTo2KSubs
      @SalvadorGamingRoadTo2KSubs 5 лет назад +2

      I want the oldest map

    • @IronItam
      @IronItam 5 лет назад +2

      Although it wasn't shown here, I find Fra Mauro map to be one of the greatest and most accurate medieval map ever created

  • @petarmitkov1056
    @petarmitkov1056 5 лет назад +1826

    Ancient map: * exists *
    Literally every peninsula: I don't feel so good

    • @fendelt838
      @fendelt838 5 лет назад +28

      Petar Mitkov Mr Continent, I don’t feel so good

    • @petarmitkov1056
      @petarmitkov1056 5 лет назад +43

      @Splatoon is the worst game of all time. I don't care. This just means I am a normal human being who doesn't live in the basement

    • @fendelt838
      @fendelt838 5 лет назад +4

      Petar Mitkov yea tell em

    • @fendelt838
      @fendelt838 5 лет назад +2

      Splatoon is the worst game of all time. Art thou no you

    • @takod323
      @takod323 5 лет назад +1

      @Splatoon is the worst game of all time. based

  • @yuri6439
    @yuri6439 5 лет назад +1114

    It's so amazing that people back then could draw such accurate maps.

    • @harleyokeefe5193
      @harleyokeefe5193 5 лет назад +143

      Ikr it's easy for us to say it's inaccurate with our satellite images but these had non of that and it's just incredible

    • @huguesdepayen1
      @huguesdepayen1 5 лет назад +99

      In 1502 Leonardo da Vinci made a map.that was a satellite view of a city that was incredibly accurate.

    • @scottleft3672
      @scottleft3672 5 лет назад +2

      You should see the mosaics.

    • @jonathanpilcher337
      @jonathanpilcher337 5 лет назад +36

      Fr, these map makers are highly dedicated geniuses of their times, throughout all the obvious flaws in their designs it’s still amazing that they got anything even near the actual shape of the portrayed regions and continents just by stitching scraps of knowledge of these areas together

    • @jaimelannister1797
      @jaimelannister1797 5 лет назад +3

      I know, they were just basing it off of the land they saw

  • @arnav6029
    @arnav6029 5 лет назад +1696

    Without maps.. we wouldn’t have Dora

    • @ScarlettSKcat
      @ScarlettSKcat 5 лет назад +53

      That would be S A D

    • @General.Knowledge
      @General.Knowledge  5 лет назад +143

      You're right, how would she explore?!

    • @saxo9266
      @saxo9266 5 лет назад +2

      Dora gae

    • @Nugcon
      @Nugcon 5 лет назад +1

      oof

    • @tospsy
      @tospsy 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah cause sniper
      1. Got rid of her
      2. Got rid of her map

  • @mypenisisunbelievablysmall2899
    @mypenisisunbelievablysmall2899 5 лет назад +849

    When you draw a map of the world, but some dude finds an another continent, what isn't marked on your globe.
    ''ah shit, here we go again''

    • @chilldown3386
      @chilldown3386 5 лет назад +5

      Painted Dead r/woooosh

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann 5 лет назад +1

      When you draw a map of the world with the help of satellites right before massive changes in climate... well here we go again little ice age 2 electric no that jokes dead mama mia 2 here we go again.
      Why do I do this to make myself suffer? That's the only reason why I watched mama mia 2 here we go again TO MAKE MYSELF SUFFER

    • @heavysaber9431
      @heavysaber9431 5 лет назад +4

      "Fuck you Columbus!"

    • @sirknight4981
      @sirknight4981 5 лет назад +3

      @@chilldown3386
      Not a woooosh, he just disagrees with the premis of the joke.

    • @radiopenis1011
      @radiopenis1011 5 лет назад +2

      My penis is unbelievably small, but bro change your name it embarrasses people. Change it as fast as u can

  • @goatmeal5241
    @goatmeal5241 5 лет назад +83

    Damn, respect to Hecateus. He got the whole known world pretty much exactly. He got the shape of the Mediterranean (especially Italy) better than anyone for like 2000+ years after him. It's not his fault that they didn't know about far-off places, and putting an ocean in a circle around the known world instead of speculating about land shape is pretty forgivable given that Greeks were convinced the universe was geometrically perfect.

    • @Vajrapani108
      @Vajrapani108 2 года назад

      >whole world pretty exactly
      India: .....

    • @aggebojkalos6518
      @aggebojkalos6518 2 года назад

      @@Vajrapani108 The rest of the world is also missing, but specifically India is what you care about...

    • @Vajrapani108
      @Vajrapani108 2 года назад

      @@aggebojkalos6518 i mean it was one of the major civilization of that time. And that's saying a lot given the timeframe, as you can count on your hands the civilizations at that time

    • @wy2041
      @wy2041 2 года назад +1

      @@Vajrapani108 nobody really cares about it

    • @Kkkokp
      @Kkkokp 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@Vajrapani108Bro, India isn't supposed to be there, what he drew was the known world at his time, not the entire one

  • @rogeriopenna9014
    @rogeriopenna9014 5 лет назад +153

    And yes, the Columbus - Indians story is true. Columbus thought the world was much smaller than other Europeans thought. Most of Europe knew the World was spherical and it's correct size had been estimated with quite good precision by ancient greeks in 350 BC.
    Columbus thought he could reach Asia by navigating west across the great ocean, which he thought was much smaller.
    He faced opposition because nobody would finance a trip across the CORRECTLY calculated size of the Atlantic+Pacific, which they thought was a single ocean. The crew would all die 1/3 of the way to Asia.
    COlumbus got LUCKY there was a continent 1/3 of the way to Asia.

    • @morgantrottier5387
      @morgantrottier5387 5 лет назад +2

      Not every European thought the earth was that small Columbus was one of the few people who believed that it was as small as he calculated

    • @American-Plague
      @American-Plague 5 лет назад +34

      @@morgantrottier5387 I believe he said exactly this in the second sentence be typed.

    • @morgantrottier5387
      @morgantrottier5387 5 лет назад +5

      I be a DOCTOR oh shit I miss read that my bad

    • @kyomademon453
      @kyomademon453 5 лет назад +5

      He used a latin mile rather than the arabic pne thats why he got confused

    • @DoomFinger511
      @DoomFinger511 5 лет назад +6

      Columbus also thought the Earth was in the shape of a pear with a nipple on top. He was an idiot.

  • @jackdaniels4975
    @jackdaniels4975 5 лет назад +274

    What I wonder is how these people governed countries without maps. Think about Rome, "We are the biggest state in the world! What does it look like? Idfk but it's pretty big!"
    EU4 feels like such a cheat now

    • @bee5120
      @bee5120 5 лет назад +32

      Defined borders weren't really defined back in those days. Take the Roman Empire as an example. Wherever they managed to capture and seize a bit of land expanse, they would build temporary guard towers and forts and have guards man them until their battalion can advance to capture more land ahead then repeat. They had a "rolling" border that advanced (or sometimes retreated) depending on the battles that they would win on the front lines.

    • @bee5120
      @bee5120 5 лет назад +15

      As a result, the regions nearer those "rolling" borders were very loosely governed compared to a well established region within the Roman Empire like the city of Rome. People in the "borderland" regions were perhaps just asked to make tax donations so guard fortifications and towers nearby could be maintained but they were less likely to be able to participate in politics such as voting unlike people in the city of Rome.

    • @lordmalal
      @lordmalal 4 года назад +4

      Most of Rome’s government was collecting taxes and telling the army where to go. The local cities governed themselves.

    • @orz.4805
      @orz.4805 2 года назад +1

      They do have maps. But they don't show it to the public. Only the rulers keep them.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Год назад

      @@bee5120 Rome was among the states with the more defined borders too. Later in medieval times it was a complete mess with many villages even paying taxes to multiple people.

  • @metamemes8316
    @metamemes8316 5 лет назад +232

    The thing with the native americans is true. In Germany we call them : Indianer, what simply means something like Indians.

    • @fadersudd3315
      @fadersudd3315 5 лет назад +12

      concept of schelz same here in sweden

    • @alba489_
      @alba489_ 5 лет назад +23

      But our word for Indians is "Inder". So we do differenciate between these groups.

    • @darthbricksempire3606
      @darthbricksempire3606 5 лет назад +8

      concept of schelz same in Denmark “Indianer” in singular, again indian, even though indian in Denmark is Inder

    • @fadersudd3315
      @fadersudd3315 5 лет назад +7

      DarthBricksEmpire same, but when referring to indians, we say indier. Edit: in sweden.

    • @MrDonut-ch8dr
      @MrDonut-ch8dr 5 лет назад +4

      Grüße aus Braunschweig!

  • @Nonamelol.
    @Nonamelol. 3 года назад +33

    I don’t care what anyone says. It’s absolutely shocking and impressive how they were able to draw these maps.

    • @Shahzeb-wm9yp
      @Shahzeb-wm9yp 21 день назад

      Bro it’s fake ur dumb and stupid as hell like ur mom that u didn’t have

  • @awildfilingcabinet6239
    @awildfilingcabinet6239 5 лет назад +53

    Every map has a really (relatively) accurate center, and the details fall off exponentially the closer to the edge you get. It’s like “yeah, I know this place like the back of my hand, what’s that, I have to add this mythical land which may or may not exist, alright. This blob goes here, that there.

  • @swimen2768
    @swimen2768 5 лет назад +584

    Flat earthers be like: WHERE IS THE ICE WALL SURROUNDING US

    • @Outis89
      @Outis89 5 лет назад +38

      Hexagonal Cloud The White Walkers destroyed it with an undead dragon

    • @marsar1775
      @marsar1775 5 лет назад +17

      Your pfp makes this comment all the better

    • @Syndixal
      @Syndixal 5 лет назад +2

      @@Outis89 and they're heading for winterfell

    • @1ksubswithnovideos420
      @1ksubswithnovideos420 5 лет назад

      But where is it

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann 5 лет назад

      @@Outis89 WINTER HAS COME

  • @friedr2766
    @friedr2766 5 лет назад +339

    The calafornian Isle may be due to baja california?

  • @pablo8286
    @pablo8286 5 лет назад +169

    Yeah, that's why they are called Indians, it's kinda weird for a channel called General Knowledge to question this

    • @mickeythemaltipoo3756
      @mickeythemaltipoo3756 5 лет назад +33

      Pablo it literally made me question everything he had to say from that moment forward

    • @Madhattersinjeans
      @Madhattersinjeans 5 лет назад +16

      @@mickeythemaltipoo3756 It's always worth questioning what you hear.
      There's usually a more detailed explanation that goes something along of the lines of
      "well yes, but actually no".
      With just about every question you might have about the known world.

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 4 года назад +1

      RJ GV
      Is he better than most?

    • @pablo8286
      @pablo8286 3 года назад +2

      @ which is why native american is used now

    • @ericktellez7632
      @ericktellez7632 3 года назад

      @@pablo8286
      Amerindian

  • @sailorjupie
    @sailorjupie 5 лет назад +208

    Where be New Zealand, oh wait it's still missed off most maps today....

    • @binozia-old-2031
      @binozia-old-2031 5 лет назад +6

      Owl Fam
      you must of misread Amies comment
      “Where be New Zealand, oh wait it’s still missed off most maps today”
      as in new zealand is cut off or not even included on most maps today
      has nothing to do with borders

    • @binozia-old-2031
      @binozia-old-2031 5 лет назад +5

      Owl Fam
      also may i add that every single square map is wrong as their is no way to emulate a sphere on a square sheet of paper

    • @CC-hx8gj
      @CC-hx8gj 5 лет назад +1

      Amie Gordon one of the maps at my school shows two new zealands

    • @eamartig
      @eamartig 5 лет назад +1

      CoolCreeper39 yeah. See those thin red lines? Those are overlaps from the other side to better emulate a sphere

    • @saltyspaceman5697
      @saltyspaceman5697 5 лет назад

      I get it.
      Mind you @ 9:38 He has indeed circle the only part of NZ mapped buy Tasman. (The world map illustrated was nearly 100 years before Cook mapped the entire coastline)

  • @murilomuniz9962
    @murilomuniz9962 5 лет назад +47

    The only thing I think is missing, are the amazing maps created by the portuguese cartographers, from the 15th to 16th centuries

    • @charlesmcgill9652
      @charlesmcgill9652 5 лет назад +2

      Mostly portolans depicting colonies on the African coastline, that were gradually more accurate as the Portuguese went further in what we today know Angola and South Africa

    • @lindapolle1665
      @lindapolle1665 5 лет назад +3

      @@charlesmcgill9652 Yes, you are correct, and at this time these maps were divided into small portions, for coping by young children, thus making for few persons who "knew the big picture.
      This was done to "preserve State security". Sound familiar?

  • @Penguin-ur5wd
    @Penguin-ur5wd 5 лет назад +44

    " A pretty good level of *accuratness* "

    • @plenum222
      @plenum222 5 лет назад

      Ha!

    • @scotth6814
      @scotth6814 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, you commented with great accuracy.

  • @Free_Krazy
    @Free_Krazy 5 лет назад +6

    I love looking at what people thought the world looked like in the past!
    As a geography freak this is a topic i have allways NEEDED more info on! Thanks a million!

  • @Gems297
    @Gems297 5 лет назад +12

    These are really impresive and creative world maps created back in the past

  • @johnbostrom9165
    @johnbostrom9165 4 года назад +5

    It was speculated by numerous sources that certain Greeks based their maps on much older maps that showed the entire world, including Antarctica in great detail. One resources is Charles Hapgood’s book, Maps of the ancient sea kings. It’s an interesting read if you like maps.

    • @ruckboger
      @ruckboger 11 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you! This is precisely why I often skip the videos and go directly to comments.

  • @finden3362
    @finden3362 5 лет назад +131

    Meanwhile i can't draw a map of Eufrasia without making a THICC Africa

    • @rotwart
      @rotwart 5 лет назад +5

      You don't need to draw maps anymore

    • @lukeson8934
      @lukeson8934 5 лет назад +5

      It's fun too

    • @satan1189
      @satan1189 5 лет назад +20

      Jane Goodnut we dont NEED to but we WANT to

    • @finden3362
      @finden3362 5 лет назад +3

      @@satan1189 yea lol

    • @papapepperoni3916
      @papapepperoni3916 5 лет назад +3

      General History Realatble

  • @thecanadianpotato6384
    @thecanadianpotato6384 3 года назад +5

    5:29 I guess he knew the brits loved tea, so he made the British isles a "Tea pot"

  • @looxluthor802
    @looxluthor802 5 лет назад +11

    For Pomponius' map, the seas/lakes in Africa are most likely the salt lake Chott el Djerid, which was named after Triton in antiquity and Lake Chad.
    And the "strange inland sea in Arabia" is the Persian Gulf (Persicum mare), situated between Arabia (Arabia Eudaemon) and Persia (Persiae /Ariane - this seems to be Balochistan). The island could be Bahrain.
    The Indus and Ganges rivers are shown, but most of the subcontinent inbetween them is missing. Indochina and China are not known either, the map basically stops at Sogdiana in Central Asia. And there are fantastical islands in the Indian Ocean. It's obvious that only sparse information was available about that region. There are even maneaters (Antropophagi) marked in Siberia/Kazakhstan.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 5 лет назад +27

    It's interesting to know that until about 150 years ago or so, people really had no accurate idea of what their respective countries looked like.

    • @conor987
      @conor987 5 лет назад +2

      hardly, by the late1700s maps were almost 90percent good

    • @lindapolle1665
      @lindapolle1665 5 лет назад +1

      The story goes, that the King of France was bitterly disappointed at the resulting size of his kingdom, when he saw the results of the first survey of France, done by triangulation.

    • @gdsmith1542
      @gdsmith1542 Год назад

      Oh we know now? According too who? Oh they told us the truth as they do today 🤔

  • @randomuseronline7352
    @randomuseronline7352 5 лет назад +39

    The new DLC of RDR2 looks amazing

  • @millertas
    @millertas 5 лет назад +8

    The Maps all show the Australian Mainland attached to the Island State of Tasmania. It was George Bass that first sailed around the island state and thus the water between Tasmania and Victoria is called Bass Strait.

  • @yoshikagekira4471
    @yoshikagekira4471 5 лет назад +25

    “Except a small part of Canada”
    Yeah screw those guys in British Columbia.

    • @Terrekain
      @Terrekain 5 лет назад +7

      Not to mention the small part of America, which is Alaska

    • @excelvalentino6972
      @excelvalentino6972 3 года назад +3

      and Alaska and yukon territory and northern territory and most of Nunavut territory

    • @scotth6814
      @scotth6814 3 года назад +1

      Half of Canada is missing. Apparently, the small half.

  • @ulflyng4072
    @ulflyng4072 5 лет назад +79

    Antartica discovered in 1773....but many of the maps from 1500 have it drawn on them.

    • @devonharris5936
      @devonharris5936 5 лет назад +61

      I learned back in middle school that centuries before Antarctica's discovery by James Cook, Europeans had developed a rumor about a mysterious southern land aptly named "Terra Australius Incognito" that would have had to exist on the bottom of the globe in order for the world to be balanced. Interestingly enough, they were right.

    • @ulflyng4072
      @ulflyng4072 5 лет назад +7

      @@devonharris5936 thx for the answer. It seems to me like a "theory of convenience" they had made up. Since many of the older maps were detailed in their depiction of Antartica - and that's A under the ice! Did the video mention this? If so, then sorry it slipped my attention.
      Piri Reis map is one such map

    • @AndrewFullerton
      @AndrewFullerton 5 лет назад +3

      @@devonharris5936 I second this answer. Initial drawings usually have it substantially larger than reality, so when European explorers started sailing around the south without finding anything the idea fell out of favour and it vanished from a lot of maps. This is also why Australia stole it's original name, since it was believed that there could be no landmass further south.

    • @willyschanke399
      @willyschanke399 5 лет назад +9

      The Piri Reis Map, Strange how the upoader of this video ignored that map!

    • @larrytruelove7112
      @larrytruelove7112 5 лет назад

      Before Antarctica was discovered, it was theorized to have a land mass there. In parts of the world known to be landless, the opposite side of the globe has land. The Arctic does not have land directly upon it, so there was expected to be a land mass at the opposite pole.

  • @JiMMyRoxks
    @JiMMyRoxks 5 лет назад +3

    You’re definitely one of my favorite RUclips channels. You’re very informative 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾

  • @djitidjiti6703
    @djitidjiti6703 5 лет назад +6

    The map you said "maybe has New Zealand" certainly does, as it has Abel Tasman's discoveries on it. He came close to circumnavigating Australia, but missed the east coast and found New Zealand instead. You can see the southern coast of Tasmania, the eastern coast of New Zealand's North Island and the western coast of Queensland's Cape York Peninsula.
    The east coast of Australia was not mapped until 1770 with James Cook, who also mapped the rest of New Zealand and several Polynesian island chains.

  • @scotth6814
    @scotth6814 3 года назад +2

    You were right about the scale looking different in different areas of early maps. That's because they were made by putting together lots of small maps from different sources, and the navigators those days had no way of measuring distance other than saying "it's 3 days sail in this direction".

  • @leemsvg
    @leemsvg 5 лет назад +2

    Wow, thanks! This is a very informative and interesting video!

  • @ms.katyusha3625
    @ms.katyusha3625 5 лет назад +50

    I own a globe from the early Cold War era. My school was going to throw it out.

    • @LorcanG
      @LorcanG 5 лет назад +6

      I never thought a school could be trashyer then mine

    • @charlesmcgill9652
      @charlesmcgill9652 5 лет назад +4

      I visited the primary school I went to and I was really sad to see all the books, posters, games thrown away. For me it was like smelly interesting stuff, especially those books and toys😪

    • @lwaves
      @lwaves 5 лет назад +7

      @@charlesmcgill9652 When I visited my primary school a few years back, having not been there for several decades, I was shocked to see they still had some of the things from my time there. Most notably, pencil sharpeners still fastened to the counters on the side, the same counters I used and a blackboard on the wall that still had a chunk of corner missing. It was like time travel in some ways.

    • @timt2753
      @timt2753 5 лет назад +1

      I got one from a thrift store and it's one of my fav globes that I have. It was from the 70s and was well-made with a brass setting.

    • @kenebrown9034
      @kenebrown9034 5 лет назад

      They should of because THE EARTH IS FLAT....!!!! ROTFL

  • @madalheidis
    @madalheidis 5 лет назад +3

    My uncle mentioned to me a map supposedly made by the Phonecians that appeared to include the Americas, but with China and the American Pacific coasts as being straight lines. Essentially, the Americas looked like a very long and oversized Kamchatka. It was surprisingly accurate, according to him, although I don't actually know if the map exists, he did draw a sketch of it, which I will share if anyone's interested.

  • @MarcioVinicius25
    @MarcioVinicius25 5 лет назад

    Love this channel everything u post are things that I’m interested to know and always wanted to know thank you so much and thank you for showing hard work on your videos

  • @AlpheNoord
    @AlpheNoord 4 года назад +3

    I love maps, I used to adore geography at school :) Thanks for uploading!

    • @bernadettegreen7134
      @bernadettegreen7134 2 года назад +1

      Geography was my favorite class in school. Still enjoy the old maps. I keep AAA busy as a member by ordering free maps when I may travel. USA baby boomer still with 'wonderlust' in my veins. ha..

  • @awesomenessanimation2519
    @awesomenessanimation2519 5 лет назад +10

    In 5:13 I thought cypress looked like a face

  • @mouldycheese6170
    @mouldycheese6170 4 года назад +4

    10:14
    Just the fact that ancient geographers and cartographers were able to get ANYTHING right 😌🙇

  • @JumboJim54
    @JumboJim54 5 лет назад

    You're videos are cool. Appreciate it dude 👍

  • @kailomonkey
    @kailomonkey 5 лет назад

    Good video. I liked the Gulf of California map at the end and the explanation. Would love to have seen a few more of these blooper maps at the end otherwise great! :)

  • @ardashub1851
    @ardashub1851 5 лет назад +78

    İ think you forgot to add Piri Reis’es map its amazing

    • @masonkane5884
      @masonkane5884 5 лет назад +4

      This was my first thought. It's more than 150 years older than Van Schagen's, which has no Antarctica at all and it shows not only a good representation of the Antarctic coastline but a surprisingly accurate mapping of it's sub-coast. I've thought to myself that the map had to have been a fake because of some of it's amazing accuracy but the consensus seems to be that it's real.

    • @trueherbsman
      @trueherbsman 5 лет назад

      Graham Hancock mentions it often.

  • @juandavidvalencia7536
    @juandavidvalencia7536 5 лет назад +4

    7:06 Actually that’s pretty true. Here in Latin America, Native Americans are popularly called as “Indios” (Indians in Spanish) And the reason for that was because Spaniards believed that they had arrived to India, so they called to their habitants as “Indios”. They had no idea they were treating with Native Americans. And the therms remains until nowadays

  • @ihave_noidea
    @ihave_noidea 3 года назад +2

    8:40 some amplifying information. We use Mercator Projection charts for naval navigation because it takes into account the Earth's curvature and thus is more useful for dead reckoning (aka driving a straight line to your port of call).

  • @g3heathen209
    @g3heathen209 5 лет назад +1

    I love old maps. I have a giant Massachusetts map from the local one room schoolhouse that predates the quabin reservoir, showing the towns that were drowned to make it.

  • @AuriPigeonery
    @AuriPigeonery 5 лет назад +7

    i like how back in the day greece thought that the entire european land had only mountains cuz we had a lot rivers and they thought rivers come from only mountains xd

  • @crypticcorgi8280
    @crypticcorgi8280 5 лет назад +20

    I'm going to be that "actually guy,"
    But actually, Christopher Columbus did not think he was in India. He Knew he was in a new continent. It was in his writing journal entrees to the crown.

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez 5 лет назад

      You're right

    • @bonusduckmann9997
      @bonusduckmann9997 5 лет назад +1

      Origami Tesseract once he got there ofc he knew he wasnt in India. What is true is that his INTENT was to try reaching India through circumnavigation

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez 5 лет назад

      @@bonusduckmann9997 of course but that's not the point people like to portray him as a ignorant fool who thought he was in India when in fact he knew he was in a new place.

  • @metametodo
    @metametodo 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for leaving links for the maps

  • @thisisntsergio1352
    @thisisntsergio1352 5 лет назад

    THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I LOVE. THANK YOU.

  • @nosotros8277
    @nosotros8277 5 лет назад +3

    I enjoyed your video immensely, but I wish you included the Piri Reis map, which accurately shows Antarctica without the ice.

  • @piedrablanca1942
    @piedrablanca1942 5 лет назад +3

    9:19 the name America was first used referring to South America, and later applied to North and South America combined
    So when you call your country with a borrowed name, remember America are all lands in the western hemisphere and be grateful with South America

    • @cosmo8860
      @cosmo8860 5 лет назад

      The thing is people adopt different meanings. Meaning america in most eyes is the usa

    • @chad_bro_chill
      @chad_bro_chill 5 лет назад

      In Spanish/Portuguese, sure, America refers to both North and South America. In English, however, we call them "The Americas" (plural), with a singular America/American being exclusively for the United States. Seeing as you're speaking English, you should be using the correct English forms.

  • @firebirdco5563
    @firebirdco5563 4 года назад +1

    Probably the older maps recorded things the way they were back then. ( heads up, the world hasn't stayed the same, there are tsunami 's, floods, earthquakes, etc ).

  • @Kennymac8251
    @Kennymac8251 5 лет назад

    Very interesting/informative video. Good job. BTW I think I spotted Waldo ar 5:17.

  • @coolseanlee1974
    @coolseanlee1974 5 лет назад +10

    5:55 Well, Japan is there south of Korea!
    The west is very weird though
    More than a billion would drown if it was the real map

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 5 лет назад +2

      That is more likely the Philipines or Taiwan.

  • @TheWatchernator
    @TheWatchernator 5 лет назад +4

    That so many maps have lakes and rivers in the Sahara, tells me that very recently there must have been lakes and rivers in the Sahara. If one goes digging there, he'll find a whole lot of interesting stuff.

    • @fpp144
      @fpp144 5 лет назад

      Well actually the Sahara has grown around 30% in the past 10,000 years. This is mostly due to cut and burn tactics, where they would cut up trees, bushes, etc. Burn them, then the burned trees and bushes and what not would make fertilizer. But the reason they depict so much water is most likely due to travel. Think of it of like this....idk where u live but take where you live and think about a town nearby to where your house. If you take a car and drive on the roads how long would it take you? Do you know how the get there? What are the directions (dont answer btw, im just being hypothetical-this is for you to answer yourself) now do that again but dont travel on roads. Dont drive, etc. Its much harder to calculate distance if the traveling is inconvenient. And in those times the most convenient way of traveling quickly while staying safe was via the water. Thus they stuck to the water.

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 3 года назад

      A lot of that is probably just bad placement of actual landmarks, like the big lakes in central Algeria or Lake Chad in the Sahel. These ancient explorers knew these existed but they didn't know exactly their size and placement, and since there were lakes, they probably thought there were rivers to deliver water to said lakes and so they just drew rivers as some form of educated guesses, which ended up making the Sahara look wetter than it actually was

  • @mariajoaoferrazdeabreu150
    @mariajoaoferrazdeabreu150 5 лет назад +1

    Very interesting video! Good work!

  • @juniorballs6025
    @juniorballs6025 5 лет назад

    Great video! I know it's only partial but the Piri Reis map fragment is very interesting 🤔 Great stuff though 😁👍

  • @alaskagyal
    @alaskagyal 5 лет назад +3

    7:18 finally i was bursting for you to notice

  • @unknownmf2599
    @unknownmf2599 5 лет назад +20

    Make a video about Piri Reis! His maps had a big impact!

  • @SB5SimulationsFerroviairesEEP
    @SB5SimulationsFerroviairesEEP 2 года назад

    Big Thank You for the vidéo! Stéph.

  • @SwrveYT
    @SwrveYT 5 лет назад

    Tbh, the maps drawn are really well done. If you gave me 5 years without satellites, to draw a map and dropping me off in a random place. I wouldn’t be able to do it like they did at all!

  • @paulcollins9397
    @paulcollins9397 5 лет назад +8

    The older maps were very accurate... before the flood!

  • @Luministe1
    @Luministe1 5 лет назад +7

    Hey, nice video! :D
    But your interpretation of the Kangnido map is wrong. This map is incredibly more detailled than what you said.
    There is Japan: it's the big island in the south of Korea.
    India and indochina are merged with China.
    The big shape with the lake in the middle is meant to be Africa.
    Between Indo-China and Africa, it's the arabian peninsula.
    If you pay close attention to the left-corner, you can even see distorted shapes for current Spain, France and Italia.
    The Mediterranean sea is also represented but in a light yellow unlike the oceans.

  • @user-sn6gt6rz1z
    @user-sn6gt6rz1z 2 года назад +2

    6:24 - it is from left to right, Africa, Arabia, China, and Korea.

  • @memelordmarcus
    @memelordmarcus 4 года назад

    RUclips started recommending these history videos now.
    it's awesome

  • @than217
    @than217 5 лет назад +7

    You said Columbus was looking for India. He was actually looking for "Japan" and thought he had accidentally reached India. Common misconception.

    • @sillonar
      @sillonar 5 лет назад +1

      He was looking for a shorter route to India to trade spices. He accidentally came across the Caribbean.

    • @than217
      @than217 5 лет назад +4

      ​@@sillonar He was aiming for Cipangu (Japan) the farthest east thing mentioned by Marco Polo. So when he set sail he was SAILING TOWARD Japan initially. Not toward India if that was his secondary goal. Sailing to Japan was his goal for the voyage.
      This is what his map looked like. Japan (Cipangu) is the giant island in the middle of the map: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/MartinBehaim1492.jpg
      www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/07/27/national/history/what-if-columbus-had-reached-his-goal-japan/

    • @sillonar
      @sillonar 5 лет назад

      ​@@than217 Japan wasn't his main goal or his point of trajectory. I'll give you this, Japan was a part of his route, but so was the rest of Asia. Which includes China and India. The purpose of this was to find a Western sea route to said countries as traveling Eastward was dangerous due to Muslim controlled routes to Asia.
      www.infoplease.com/history-and-government/us-history/voyages
      www.biography.com/explorer/christopher-columbus
      www.history.com/this-day-in-history/columbus-sets-sail
      Don't just send a link to an image from a Wiki article. Nowhere does it say that the map was used by Columbus. It's not even credible anywhere.

    • @than217
      @than217 5 лет назад

      @@sillonar Very interesting that you ignored the second article I sent on that reply which was a news source... Hmmmm
      Here it is AGAIN since you ignored it the first time:
      www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/07/27/national/history/what-if-columbus-had-reached-his-goal-japan/

    • @than217
      @than217 5 лет назад +1

      @@sillonar You should really read a book about Columbus sometime. You'll learn a lot. So here's the text from the book 'Admiral of the Ocean Sea' by Samuel Eliot Morison,
      page 268:
      "Nothing to do but keep the vessels clean, observe ship routine,
      watch for birds and flying fishes, and spend the gold you are
      going to pick up in Cipangu.
      The Admiral says here,”
      Page 308:
      "After inspecting the harbor the boats returned to
      the vessels at their anchorage in Long Bay, a row of some twenty
      miles going and coming; and in the early afternoon the fleet made
      sail for Cipangu."
      Page 315:
      "Somewhere in that direction must
      be Cipangu. So Columbus concluded his Journal for October 13, “I intend to go and see if I can find the Island of Japan.” All the
      rest of his First Voyage was, in fact, a search for gold and Cipangu"
      Page 383:
      "Columbus concluded that at last he was on the road to the fabulous Cipangu of the gold-roofed palaces."
      Full book text here archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.185258/2015.185258.Admiral-Of-The-Ocean-Sea-Voll-I_djvu.txt

  • @sanderskovly7641
    @sanderskovly7641 5 лет назад +4

    Didn't they believe for a long time that ''the horn of Antarctica'' was only cut off from southern America by the Magellan strait?

  • @TheRichardF10
    @TheRichardF10 5 лет назад

    Very nice videos. I always imagine cartographers of the past seeing a modern world map. I wonder what they would say if they were alive.

  • @nebthegreat7469
    @nebthegreat7469 Год назад

    Finding old maps from centuries ago is like finding old concept art for a game

  • @pepperz2245
    @pepperz2245 5 лет назад +3

    1:12 no ones gonna talk about how he put Crete but none of the other islands? They must’ve just been too small to put on the map.

  • @markokraljevic8734
    @markokraljevic8734 5 лет назад +4

    You should make a Video about Piri Reis map...would be interesting

  • @TheKrouton
    @TheKrouton 5 лет назад +2

    6:53 Small correction. Columbus was under the impression he had landed in the eastmost part of the Indies (today known as the East Indies). Although it was found they had discovered an entirely different island chain, the region became known as the West Indies. More likely that is where the blanket term "Indian" came from.

  • @cajunalaskan1858
    @cajunalaskan1858 5 лет назад

    I just came across your Channel and I'm so excited. A friend of mine years ago who collected most all her life gave me a bunch of books and magazines and a leather binder full of maps. These snaps in this folder is black and white it's of most every state prior to population. I never realized that all of Louisiana was pretty much water Waze before they built up and settled. They're impressive but I'm not sure where to start . I've had them for at least 30 years now. Any information would help me so much to preserve, care for and research them.thank you

  • @LorcanG
    @LorcanG 5 лет назад +3

    These maps on hoi4 would be pretty fun

  • @rhn122
    @rhn122 5 лет назад +3

    I don't know why but these maps really scare me because just how different they are compare to what I used to see, feeling like I am on some kind of alternate universe.....

  • @armandduarte4193
    @armandduarte4193 5 лет назад

    Great video thank you for the insight

  • @ZeroControl
    @ZeroControl 5 лет назад

    I subscribed because you are presenting well.

  • @PanzerKingWarThunder
    @PanzerKingWarThunder 5 лет назад +5

    6:33 who also saw a creepy face on the left side

    • @wmoros4902
      @wmoros4902 4 года назад

      I was waiting for the comment

  • @J.Strantz
    @J.Strantz 5 лет назад +3

    Cho-sung dynasty is Korea. And that is damn good for 1402.

  • @jnurse24
    @jnurse24 4 года назад

    “Hop on a bird”
    I love this so much

  • @kevinkolici328
    @kevinkolici328 4 года назад

    For sure the best history and geography channel in RUclips!!

  • @daviddaranuta9325
    @daviddaranuta9325 5 лет назад +6

    "This map is not accurate"
    Would u even draw a potato in hundreads? We should understand that people worked hard and they had that mind to do a map of continents.

  • @foster9494
    @foster9494 5 лет назад +3

    This dude sounds exactly like Farengar from Skyrim

  • @lievenvanloo6011
    @lievenvanloo6011 5 лет назад +2

    You should check out this wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_world_maps
    It shows the maps shown in the video, and a lot of other really weird maps.
    One of my favorites is the Tabula Peutingeriana, which shows the road network of the Roman Empire.

  • @sybil2707
    @sybil2707 5 лет назад +1

    During the Spanish Armada's escape from the English in 1588, Spanish maps depicted the north and west coasts of Ireland to be relatively straight-edged, resulting in many of their ships running aground

  • @aris_32
    @aris_32 5 лет назад +21

    One does not simply draw all the greek islands without checking Google Maps

  • @Arnfrithr
    @Arnfrithr 5 лет назад +3

    "also there's no New Zealand" well looks like somethings never change

  • @edly1810
    @edly1810 5 лет назад

    Awesome vid... I dint know about all the map... Tq

  • @AntiQris
    @AntiQris 2 года назад

    Nice video! Loved it! Keep sharing!

  • @marcosgenoves454
    @marcosgenoves454 5 лет назад +21

    Este es, sin duda, el canal que más disfruto. Saludos desde Argentina.

    • @icop7519
      @icop7519 5 лет назад

      ¿quieres?

    • @fendelt838
      @fendelt838 5 лет назад +3

      This is, without a doubt, the most entertaining channel.
      Greetings from Argentina.
      English translation

    • @tacomuncher
      @tacomuncher 5 лет назад

      Dylan M. thanks

  • @tost420
    @tost420 5 лет назад +3

    Comment so you get into recommended.Keep up the good work

  • @teachercharlestv
    @teachercharlestv 2 года назад

    Very well done!

  • @supechube_k
    @supechube_k 4 года назад +2

    all these maps are way more accurate than anything I could ever draw T-T

  • @Clery75019
    @Clery75019 5 лет назад +5

    Why are we supposed to laugh of the fact earlier cartographers thought California was an island at a time when it was largely unexplored? I didn't get that one. Should we laugh as well that the Korean map didn't picture the Indochinese peninsula? I have no clue.

    • @dad_bot_3924
      @dad_bot_3924 5 лет назад +1

      Hahahhahhahahahhha

    • @General.Knowledge
      @General.Knowledge  5 лет назад +3

      I just find it funny because of how crazy it would be if it was true. I didn't mean it as disrespect to whoever thought it at the time.

    • @dad_bot_3924
      @dad_bot_3924 5 лет назад

      @@General.Knowledge NO

    • @dad_bot_3924
      @dad_bot_3924 5 лет назад

      @@General.Knowledge you piece of blafagope

    • @Clery75019
      @Clery75019 5 лет назад +2

      ​@@General.Knowledge I noticed many Americans tend to believe the world ends at their border, but Mexico was explored first, and Baja California is a very long peninsula. When we arrive from what was then the Spanish territories, that peninsula is indeed totally separated from the mainland. It's only far at the North, in territories which weren't fully explored then and which indeed consists in the modern US "California" that the peninsula actually joins the continent.

  • @dwarfilicious1526
    @dwarfilicious1526 5 лет назад +3

    So the oldest still existing colonial globe is the Potato Globe. Nice

  • @luizsa8300
    @luizsa8300 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the links!

  • @fernandomata2469
    @fernandomata2469 4 года назад +1

    This video would have been a more accurate reflection of cartography evolution if it would have included the Portuguese cartography of the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. In fact the Portuguese were pioneers in the age of the discoveries and were the first to link the several continents. The Portuguese were master cartographers and spies from all over Europe tried to obtain Portuguese maps at that time.

  • @Grey2
    @Grey2 5 лет назад +7

    I forgot this maps name but it was made by a Turkish cartographer around 500 years ago, somehow accurately depicting Antarctica.

  • @gianlucaloporto7905
    @gianlucaloporto7905 5 лет назад +3

    It is strange ro think about how conquest happened in those old days, how do you draw your claims on those old maps?

    • @alecity4877
      @alecity4877 5 лет назад +3

      because they used more localized and accurate maps or used points of reference instead.

    • @bruh4852
      @bruh4852 5 лет назад +1

      Rivers and mountains i guess

  • @benc640
    @benc640 5 лет назад +1

    Isn’t it fascinating that we really didn’t know what our landmasses looked like until about 200 years ago.
    I wish there was still some mystery left in the world.

    • @fpp144
      @fpp144 5 лет назад

      Not in the world but theres still the Final Frontier

  • @leonardhaddrill8842
    @leonardhaddrill8842 5 лет назад +1

    Great post.. How about a post on the Piri Reis Map purportedly showing an ice free Antarctica..