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Territorial Control map of Sudan as of April 27, 2026 according to the Sudans Post
Remarkably Correct Map of California from 1564 (drawn by E. Danti, currently in the Sala delle Carte Geografiche in Florence)
This map of California, painted by Egnazio Danti in 1564 for the Sala delle Carte Geografiche in Palazzo Vecchio, is striking for one precise reason: it represents California correctly as a peninsula, connected to the North American continent.
This is remarkable, because for more than a century - from the late sixteenth century to the mid‑eighteenth - European cartography oscillated between two opposing hypotheses: California as a peninsula, or California as an island separated from the mainland by a vast “Red Sea.”
The confusion stemmed from contradictory Spanish reports, incomplete explorations, and a geography still in the making. Yet in Medicean Florence, Danti chose the correct solution: a peninsula projecting into the Pacific, exactly as it is.
To understand how rare this accuracy was, one only needs to recall one of the most famous examples of the error: Henry Briggs’s 1625 map, which shows California entirely detached from the continent - a vast, alluring island that fueled myths, legends, and geographic speculation for decades.
Danti’s map, by contrast, is a document of extraordinary clarity: an example of how Renaissance cartography could be at once art, science, and intuition. And seen today in the golden light of the Sala delle Carte Geografiche, it reminds us that the world has always been larger than our certainties - but not necessarily larger than our eyes.
Schiavonia - Detail (Buonsignori, 1565)
This map of Schiavonia, painted by Stefano Buonsignori in 1565, comes from the extraordinary Sala delle Carte Geografiche in Palazzo Vecchio, one of the most visionary spaces of the Florentine Renaissance. Cosimo I de’ Medici wanted the entire world represented on the walls of his palace as a political, geographic, and symbolic atlas - a way of “possessing” the world through knowledge.
The Schiavonia depicted here is not just a territory: it is a frontier zone, a margin of Europe where Venice exercised influence and from which the Sclavoni - Slavic laborers employed in the Serenissima, often in harsh or semi‑servile roles - originated. The stylized mountains, the iconic cities, the sea rendered like a precious fabric: everything speaks of a relationship of power, exchange, and dependency.
Coast of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1850
A look at Prussia in 1850. What stands out is how many cities that once belonged to the Prussian world now lie in completely different countries.
Königsberg, Stettin, Danzig, Tilsit, Memel… all part of a political geography that has shifted more than once since the mid‑19th century. Seeing them aligned along the Baltic coast like this makes the region’s layered identity immediately visible.
Sometimes a map says more about history than a paragraph ever could.
The new version of Phersu Atlas is now online!
The atlas is now supported by a much richer historical dataset.
The global and regional atlases are now merged into a single environment, the map shows far more detail than before, and every element is fully interactive.
Here’s a quick overview of what’s new:
· Unified atlas (global + regional in one continuous view)
· More detail on the map: capitals, cities, battles, sieges
· Full interactivity with new, clearer infoboxes
· New styles and projections, including the Geopolitical Atlas with last‑month territorial changes
· Expanded datasets: more rulers, genealogies, subdivisions, cities, battles
· Improved statistics: cleaner monthly summaries, new timelines for wars, states, rulers
· Redesigned interface for faster, clearer navigation
The update is live — feel free to explore it and share your thoughts or feedback.