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- "A Land with No Borders: A New Interpretation of the Babylonian “Map of the World”." Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History 4.1-2 (2017): 19-37.
- The tablet was in fact perhaps the oldest known world map, offering one of the few opportunities to glimpse the world view of Babylonian Civilisation[1].
- Map of the world, late babylonian, c. The babylonian mappa mundi or world map (british museum 92687), a diagrammatic labeled depiction of the world...
- Babylonian, about 700-500 BCE Probably from Sippar, southern Iraq A unique ancient map of the Mesopotamian world This tablet contains both a cuneiform...
- Babylonian Map of the World. ... The geographical content of The Babylonian Map of the World (mappa mundi) was first determined by F.E. Peiser.
- More commonly known as the Babylonian Map of the World, the Imago Mundi is considered the oldest surviving world map.
- Edit: it's from the 6th century BC according to this wiki page. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_Map_of_the_World.
- This cuneiform map of the Babylonian world is an archeological treasure on a par with the Rosetta Stone and the code of Hammurabi.
- The Babylonian map of the world. October 3rd, 2014 David Schulberg. ... With Babylon in the center, the tablet contains a map of the Mesopotamian world.
- Have you ever heard about the Babylonian Map of the World? It's a pretty cool piece of history that was found in Sippar and now has a home in the British Museum.