Moderator: Cartographers
What they're saying is that Turkey does not border the Caspian sea. Azerbaijan does. And both Armenia and Georgia should really be on the map.Kaplowitz wrote:hm, that map is really complicated i just wanted to make a fairly simple map that i knew a lot of people already liked. You could help me make it more correct, but no one has given any suggestions-- they just say that its wrong.
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
The Caucasus region IS really complicated, one of the most complicated regions in the world in fact. Similar things could be said about the other side of the Caspian, you would really not do Central Asia right with this map. It deserves a lot better.Kaplowitz wrote:hm, that map is really complicated i just wanted to make a fairly simple map that i knew a lot of people already liked. You could help me make it more correct, but no one has given any suggestions-- they just say that its wrong.
Kaplowitz, I did a little studying, and it seems that the continent that is erroneously called Iraq on this map, coincides roughly with the Kingdom of Armenia during some time in antiquity (which makes it clear that the territory that is called Armenia on this map is in the wrong place). What is called Iran here, should then be called Media, Tabriz and Kermanshah should be part of it. I haven't found an exact period yet, or what was happening on the other shores of the Caspian at the time, but it is a start.jasnostj wrote:Well, the first thing I wondered about when I first saw Reverend's effort, was in what era this is supposed to be set. It makes a lot of difference. If it is supposed to be a modern map, then this thing doesn't make sense and the only way to go would be to draw a whole new map following the modern borders, as Qwert suggests. Some of the names (like Cardechu, an ancient name for Kurdistan) and the bonus continents however suggests a map that is set somewhere in antiquity (other names are modern, like Sverdlovsk, with an s, which was the Soviet name for Yekaterinburg, and some names, like Blaine, are completely fictitious!). You would have to study historical maps to see if there is any moment in history that this can be linked to.
Hello Kaplowitz,Kaplowitz wrote:--Update 1--
--Original Post--
Its a shame RK was permabanned...he never finished this best wooden lake maps.
(http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... aspian+sea)
So i decided to make it, kept it the same tho.
Here's an earlyish draft:
It was pretty popular when it was abandoned