Roman Roadmap
Posted on Monday 3 October 2005 to unknown
Designed
with convenience for the traveller in mind, the Tabula Peutingeriana is an
early road map which charts in astonishing detail the highways and
byways of the imperial Roman world.
I had stumbled over this map quite a few times while surfing the net
before I was able to work out what it was I was looking at. It's
obviously some kind of map but it has a very odd format. As expected, it has marked on it various mountains, rivers towns
and cities as well as the network of roads that
interconnect them all but it
differs markedly from conventional maps in that it uses no system of
projection. It's creator was not interested in preserving scale, only connections.
The map severely compressed in the North-South axis which
is only 34 centimetres
across (13.25 inches) while it's East-West axis sprawls over a massive
6.75
meters (22 feet). Evidently this format was designed for a papyrus
scroll and it meant that the map, when rolled up, could be conveniently
transported in a carrying case. The map is full of an extraordinary
amount of
detail which covers everywhere in the known world from the distant and
exotic islands of
Britain and Ireland all the way to the even more distant and exotic
island of Sri Lanka (denoted here by the Greek name Tamprobane).
The map terminates in the Far East with the inscription: Hic Alexander responsum accepit usqi quo Alexander "Here
Alexander was given the oracular reply: 'How far, Alexander?'"
indicating the place where Alexander the Great was forced to break off
his
project of conquest and discovery. His soldiers insisted that he turn
back at the Indus river rather than pressing on into the unknown
territories of India.
The map is extremely old and judging from the main place names it
is thought to have been compiled in the fourth century AD but it
evidently also draws upon infomation from even older maps which date back at least to the
reign of Caesar Augustus.
What
had confused me most about this map was that I only ever saw isolated
segments of it, never realising that these segments in fact joined up to make a
recognisable, though extremely elongated, image of the Eurasian continent. In order
to provide you, the reader, with a good overview of this map, I have put together a composite
image showing the full length
of the scroll. The segmentation is preserved in the form of 14
clickable regions
which take you to zoomed in versions of the map in full detail (Please
note: each of the zoomed in segments is rotated 90 degrees
from the way I have presented it here, running left-to-right rather
than
top-to-down.)
These images come from Tabula Peutingeriana site at Bibliotecha Augustana
which are the best scans I've seen of the map and for a really good
written description of the map, as usual, one cannot do better than this
one over at the excellent and quite indispensable Henry Davis Ancient Maps site.
UPDATE: I've optimised the graphics on this page to better cope with the increased traffic coming from MonkeyFilter and other sites. It should also make the page quite a bit quicker to download as well.