Interactive historical world map

Historical borders, countries, and empires over time

Compare 66 dated world maps from prehistory to 2023. Search a place, switch between map and globe, then click any point to trace who ruled it across the available snapshots.

Open the map
Snapshots
66
Range
123,000 BC2,023 CE
Historical frames
53
Annual modern frames
13

Interactive historical borders map

Primary view
1,880 CE
Now viewing
1,880 CE
123,000 BC2,023 CE

Browse every available world map

Historical maps by year

Each year page names the mapped regions, reports source precision, links adjacent snapshots, and opens the explorer at that exact frame. Missing years stay missing; these links never pretend the dataset is annual before 2011.

Prehistoric reconstructions

Broad, interpretive frames before written state records become widely available.

Ancient world

Political regions from early states through late antiquity.

Medieval world

Available snapshots from 600 through 1400.

Early modern world

Frames from 1492 through the end of the eighteenth century.

Modern world

Nineteenth- and twentieth-century borders through 2010.

Annual recent frames

CShapes snapshots for every year from 2011 through 2023.

Read the map honestly

A border line is a sourced interpretation

Recent frames can represent documented sovereign boundaries. Older frames may combine states, cultural regions, spheres of authority, and approximate frontiers that overlap.

What this explorer can answer

  • Which mapped entity covers a coordinate in an available year.
  • How two available snapshots differ side by side.
  • How a point’s ruler or region label changes across snapshots.
  • Whether source data marks a border as approximate or more firmly determined.

What it cannot prove by itself

It cannot settle a disputed sovereignty claim, turn fuzzy authority into a surveyed frontier, or replace primary historical research. The upstream Historical Basemaps project explicitly describes its work as in progress and recommends comparison with other sources before academic use.

Coverage, without the “every year” myth

The explorer contains 53 Historical Basemaps snapshots through 2010, then 13 annual CShapes frames from 2011 through 2023. Moving between frames shows changes in the available evidence; it does not invent missing years.

Provenance

Every layer names its source and role

Source documentation checked Jul 10, 2026. Map data pack built Apr 12, 2026.

Historical Basemaps borders

Time-aligned source

Historical boundary snapshots for countries and cultural regions, used through 2010.

Coverage: 53 available snapshots from prehistory through 2010

CShapes 2.1 borders

Time-aligned source

Modern sovereign-border dataset used to extend yearly coverage from 2011 through 2023.

Coverage: Independent states and dependent territories, 1886–2023; used here for 2011–2023

Historical Basemaps places

Supporting context

Draft historical places layer used for search and contextual markers across the map.

Coverage: Settlement records with inhabited-since and inhabited-until fields where available

OpenHistoricalMap context

Supporting context

Optional contextual basemap. It is not locked to the selected year, so treat it as supporting context only.

Coverage: Community-built historical map context; not synchronized to the selected snapshot

Community review

Corrections stay private until reviewed

Submit the exact map state with your note. I review the evidence, decide whether to publish it, record the resolution, and keep contact emails private.

No approved public corrections yet.

The queue is open. First useful correction gets the same source check and review as every later one.

Questions this map should answer before you trust it

Does this map contain every historical year?

No. It contains 53 milestone snapshots through 2010 and annual CShapes frames from 2011 through 2023. The timeline moves between available evidence instead of fabricating missing years.

Are ancient borders exact?

Usually not. Authority could overlap, fade across frontier zones, or follow geography that has since changed. The source includes a border-precision field, and the explorer shows that status when available.

What does point history mean?

The explorer keeps one coordinate fixed and checks which mapped polygon covers it in each snapshot. That survives place-name changes better than following one modern country label backward.

How are corrections handled?

Submissions enter a private queue with the relevant map state. Nothing is published automatically. Approved notes appear only when the contributor granted permission, and the public response records whether the issue was accepted, applied, or declined.