So, Austria is both East and West Germany, ok... Might be a fun AHC.
And Finland is naturally trying to run away from Sweden, who ate the Åland.
At least now the Aral Sea has water in it now instead of just being a big mud-flat... I guess it siphoned off all the water from the CaspianNot only is Cyprus a wanderer, so is the coastline of the Caspian, and the Aral Sea.
That map is surely taken from here or some other alternate history site, can't get that East German borders by accident. Though a fence around Hessen would make some really ugly border...More textbook material!
Now I live in Spain!From a Youtube video, it is almost a relief that the creator of that map didn't try to draw in more countries...
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in this case, it looks like a genuine printing error rather than just being blatantly wrongBasically good map (if a bit blurry) just don't look in the upper left corner.
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Dammit, I told you not to look in the corner!
ah yes, Danish Arunachal PradeshMap of the Dutch and Danish Empires View attachment 587196
This map (Made by @Chörnyj Orel and posted in the 6th Map Thread) was in the digital textbook for my first year university Geography course. Masquerading as real history.
I caught it and sent my prof who had made the resource a note so she could inform the class and correct it, but I'm pretty sure everyone else had though this was legit.
Martin Luther was secretly a God-Hating Communist, invading Germany from the USSR. Support the Catholic Church!
The map doesn't seem wrong to me? It seems to me the arrows are just pointing at specific locations (from which the reformation spread), rather than suggesting movement from one end of the arrow to the other (direction of the reformation's spread)., At least it is meant to be educational about religion, not geography...
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They are long and curved, so it looks like invasions to me.The map doesn't seem wrong to me? It seems to me the arrows are just pointing at specific locations (from which the reformation spread), rather than suggesting movement from one end of the arrow to the other (direction of the reformation's spread).
Or the problem lies in the fact the map suggests the reformation occurred during the Cold War... Ignore me then.The map doesn't seem wrong to me? It seems to me the arrows are just pointing at specific locations (from which the reformation spread), rather than suggesting movement from one end of the arrow to the other (direction of the reformation's spread).
Bulgaria does as Bulgaria do.And no one did notice that Bulgaria was landlocking Romania...
Seems like Calvinists know as much about history as they do about theology...
Unfortunately it fails a bit on both counts