Skip to main content
Princeton University

Mapping Globalization

Menu

Skip to content
  • Data and Analysis
    • NetMap Studies of World Trade
    • Network Analysis
  • Maps
  • Narratives
    • Empires
      • Alexander the Great
      • Byzantine Empire
      • Invasion of the Goths
    • Migration
      • Asia
      • Eurasia
      • Europe
      • The Genetics of Prehistoric Migration
      • Indoeuropeans
      • Out of Africa

Menu

Skip to content
  • Contact

Tag: Middle East

The Manchu Empire and the European Powers, 1644-1912 A.D.
The Jewish World in 1200
The Islamic Conquests to 750
The Hellenistic World and the Growth of Macedonia, 323 BCE, 359 to 336 BCE
The Growth of Roman Power in Asia Minor
The Germanic Settlements, 395-476
The Expansion of the Achaemenid Empire, 550 BCE to 525 BCE
The crisis of the 3rd century
The Christian World c. 700-1050
The Caliphate and After – Important Routes from 10th to 15th Century
The Break-up of the Soviet Union since 1991
The Art and Architecture of the holy Land and its Influence on the West
Roman Empire about 395
Patterns of Global Terrorism 1992
Palestinian Refugees Living in the Middle East, 1999
Nomad Confederacies 800 BC – AD 100
Neo-Babylonian Chaldean Empire at the Time of Nebuchadnezzar about 570 BC
Muslim Routes
Map of Agriculture and Population in Asia (without USSR), 1959
Macedonian empire 336 323
Islamic Region – Major Trade Routes
International Trade in the 4th and 3rd Millennia BC
Human Impact in West Asia, 2001
Growth of Assyrian Empire showing deportations
Exhibiting The Empire Of Kublai Khan, 1294
Eurasian Trade Routes in the 14th Century
Empires and Trade in the 2nd Millennium BC
Empire of Alexander the Great
Christianity in Asia, 600 to 1500
China India Trading Routes
Assyrian Empire 750-625BC
Assyrian Empire 824BC and 671BC
Asia under the Mongols, 1290 A.D.
Assyrian and Babylonian Empires
Akkadian Empire

Post navigation

  • Previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next

Mapping Globalization Project

The Mapping Globalization Project is a partnership of Princeton University and the University of Washington.

Proudly powered by WordPress