Ancient Greek cartographers, from Anaximander to Ptolemy, turned myth and measurement into world maps, shaping latitude and ...
It turns out that not all roads lead to Rome, after all – at least, not in a literal sense. A new map of the empire's ancient ...
Researchers created Itiner-e, a "Google Maps for Roman Roads," charting the network that linked the expansive ancient empire.
A new digital map, Itiner-e, reveals 300,000 km of Roman roads across the ancient empire, offering a high-tech look at the ...
"All roads lead to Rome!" Roads were the lifeline of the Roman Empire, stretching from Britannia to North Africa-- people settled along those roads; armies, travelers, goods, knowledge and power ...
Researchers created an interactive map which lets users see how the ancient network crisscrossed the Empire, from Africa and ...
The Roman Empire had an impressive road network. A new dataset now visualizes the road map, adding over 100,000 kilometers of previously unknown routes.
The Ancient Greek mapmakers were among the earliest thinkers to conceive of the world as a coherent whole, turning centuries of myth, seafaring knowledge, and emerging science into actual ...
An international team led by researchers from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona and Aarhus University, Denmark, has published the most detailed ...