File talk:East-Hem 200ad.jpg

Information Needed for East-Hem 200 AD map

1. Gedrosia: was it independant at this time, or was it directly part of the Parthian Empire?

2. Persia: though it was a vassal of Parthia, it was powerful enough for me to consider it a seperate kingdom. Are its borders on this map accurate?

3. West Africa: Did Ghana or any other state exist in West Africa in 200 AD?

4. India: There are a few nations whose borders and/or names are uncertain.

5. Indonesia and Southeast Asia: The info I have is incomplete, but what I do have is pictured on the map. Uncertainties are listed with a question mark (?).

6. Africa: information for East, Central, and South Africa wasn't available when I created this map. Any information on kingdoms or tribal placements would help!

7. Zhang-Zhung: I've never found a map of lands ruled by this pre-Tibetan kingdom.

8. Mongolia: I believe there were more tribes than what is currently listed, but I don't currently have any more information available.

If you have any info on these areas, or if you see any inaccuracies, please email them to me at talessman@yis.us, or post them to this page. Thomas Lessman 16:18, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

Xianbei missing from maps

Thank you for creating interesting maps on history. I have been using your maps in my article. But I can't find the Xianbei on your maps. The Xiongnu state was routed by the Xianbei in the 1st century CE. Can you please reflect the Xianbei on your map, so that I can use it in the corresponding section of the article History of Mongolia. Gantuya eng (talk) 09:43, 17 November 2007 (UTC)
Funny you should mention my failure to include the Xianbei in my maps Gantuya eng, I just noticed it earlier this morning while working on the maps for 1 AD and 50 AD. My apologies and thank you for pointing that out! I'll check out the Xianbei article and include them on my next round of updates, probably in a week or so. Thank you. Thomas Lessman (talk) 19:09, 17 November 2007 (UTC)

The borders are wild

The borders in this map at least partly are more or less fictional. E. g. in Raetia the Danube wasn't the northern border of the Roman Empire in 200 AD - also some parts north of the Danube still belonged to the Roman Empire. The Limesfall was ca. half a century later. -- Chaddy (talk) 23:40, 12 March 2025 (UTC)