Historians have a longstanding and conflicted relationship with maps. It seems that we can't live with them and can't live without them. On one hand, maps are an indispensable tool and object of fascination. They can serve as a guide or a window for exploration and discovery. On the other hand, they are abstractions that impose boundaries that do not really exist and create a seemingly objective picture that belies tremendous biases and assumptions. For this reason, maps are also a subject of intense criticism for academic historians and geographers. Myth of Continents by Martin W. Lewis and Kären E. Wigen, for example, provides a broad and thorough critique of Western metageography.

In this way, maps can serve as historical sources that tell us much more about the past and present than common geographical information. On this page, you will find maps new and old that may be of interest for Ottoman historians. We have selected these maps on the basis of their being interesting and of high image quality, not for any innate importance or precision.

As of January 2013, the blog Afternoon Map edited by Nicholas Danforth and Chris Gratien will handle all of Ottoman History Podcast's map collection. Here is a complete list of our available maps:

Ottoman Map of Beijing (Ottoman Turkish, 1900)
Revenge: A Forboding Map of the Balkans (Ottoman Turkish, 1914)
Ottoman Map of Asia (Ottoman Turkish, c1920)
Soviet Military Schools and Installments (Ottoman Turkish, 1927)
American Scheme for Possible Soviet Attack of Turkey (English, 1950s)
Illustrated Economy of Turkey (Turkish, 1940s)

MAP OF OTTOMAN EMPIRE (Ottoman, late-19th Century) 

PIRI REIS MAP OF MEDITERRANEAN AND NEW WORLD (Ottoman, 16th Century) 

THE BOSPHORUS AND GOLDEN HORN, CONSTANTINOPLE (Ottoman, 17th Century) 

SEUTTER MAP OF OTTOMAN EMPIRE (German, 18th Century) 

MÜTEFERRİKA MAP OF PERSIA AND EASTERN ANATOLIA (Ottoman, 18th Century) 

CRIMEA (French, 1867) 




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