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Mapping Ancient Germania


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Spiegel Online International report on what, if correct, is a truly stunning advance regarding the extent of Ptolemy's knowledge of Germania. The report is based on six years of research and crucially the discovery of a parchment copy at Topkapi Palace in Istanbul which is apparently now the oldest version of Ptolemy's work ever discovered. This new discovery apparently predates the Vatican's copy from around AD 1300, which is traditionally cited as the oldest known copy of Ptolomey's original.

 

N.B. the article notes that a reproduction of this version is due to be published next year

 

A 2nd century map of Germania by the scholar Ptolemy has always stumped scholars, who were unable to relate the places depicted to known settlements. Now a team of researchers have cracked the code, revealing that half of Germany's cities are 1,000 years older than previously thought.

 

The founding of Rome has been pinpointed to the year 753. For the city of St. Petersburg, records even indicate the precise day the first foundation stone was laid.

 

 

Historians don't have access to this kind of precision when it comes to German cities like Hanover, Kiel or Bad Driburg. The early histories of nearly all the German cities east of the Rhine are obscure, and the places themselves are not mentioned in documents until the Middle Ages. So far, no one has been able to date the founding of these cities.

 

....continued

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Coincidentally, I just found the very paper this article mentions (I think), here:

 

http://www.cs.ccsu.edu/~gusev/SciVis/PtolemyWestAfricaReconstructed.pdf

 

Actually I think that, although interesting in itself, it is a totally unrelated article.

 

From what I can find on the web it appears that it is a team from Technische Universit

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"The founding of Rome has been pinpointed to the year 753." (From the original quote)

 

If anyone has really proven the above statement, then we can forget the German cities. This a much bigger story. Sadly, I suspect journalistic rhetoric.

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This map in a article is a little more clear. It is of course in german but the map is interesting:

http://www.portal-schwedt.de/stadtportrait/downloads/mozcolancorum.pdf

 

Maybe this makes some sort of sense now?

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,596720,00.html

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