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Hamata
11-14-2012, 05:31
i have made this map strictley from memory the little blobs represent small city states

this is also for a game i plan to make based on ancient warfare

enjoy

https://img844.imageshack.us/img844/4503/factionsmapv1.png

rickinator9
11-14-2012, 11:47
What time? 272 BC?

Mithridates VI Eupator
11-14-2012, 13:57
It may be due to the size of the map, but note that Thebes is actually located in boiotia, just north of attika and athens. Currently, it looks like Thebes i located in Aitolia.

Also, why do the Arverni control most of spain?

Hamata
11-14-2012, 15:16
it is just a rough draft and not all of it maybe accurate and the reason why the averni controle most of spain is that i used them to repressent the cletic influence in spain

fallen851
11-14-2012, 17:00
Maybe you should put your work in the general RTW forum rather than the EB forum... it doesn't relate to EB.

Flavius Merobaudes
11-14-2012, 18:43
Strange map, wrong faction names and placing,... Maybe it's just me, but this doesn't make any sense at all. Seems as if you took a map and added some color to it. :thumbsdown:

Brennus
11-14-2012, 19:57
What is the blue on both sides of the English channel supposed to represent? You seem to have lumped the south eastern Britons in with the Cisrhennian Germans.

Although you have remembered the Bellovaci were clients of the Aedui so well done.

Brennus
11-14-2012, 19:59
i used them to repressent the cletic influence in spain

I love your approach to things Pharaoh rameses, sometimes lacking in accuracy but never in enthusiasm.

Hamata
11-14-2012, 23:01
I love your approach to things Pharaoh rameses, sometimes lacking in accuracy but never in enthusiasm. to ancewer your previous question the blue represente the belgae/british tribes

Brave Brave Sir Robin
11-15-2012, 00:00
I love your approach to things Pharaoh rameses, sometimes lacking in accuracy but never in enthusiasm.
:2thumbsup:

Blxz
11-15-2012, 06:48
Oh the spelling makes me weep. Still, for a very vague outline it might be useful for some sort of wargame or whatever you plan on making. Good luck.

Brave Brave Sir Robin
11-15-2012, 13:07
I never knew there was a great wall of Scythia!

Hope the wargame works out for you Pharaoh, though I would recommend touching it up of course.

Brennus
11-15-2012, 22:41
In case you were interested Pharaoh rameses, the area you have marked as British and Belgic is archaeologically unsound (as is quite a lot of the map if I am brutally honest).

Within the British area you have highlighted you cover the (at least in the 1st century BC/AD) territories of the Atrebates, Regni, Cantiaci, Catuvellauni, Trinovantes and Iceni. Of these the Atrebates and likely the Regni were Belgic, at least in the origin of their noble classes. The Cantiaci may also have been Belgic, but the jury is out on that. The Catuvellauni and Trinovantes were British tribes who practiced what is known as the Aylesford-Swarling culture, a cremation rite similar to that employed in contemporary northern Gaul by the Belgic tribes BUT not Belgic as it is post-Cesarean and lacks weapons. The Iceni were culturally separate; they were rather into their torques at this time. All of these tribes minted their own distinct gold coinage which was based upon an original type introduced from Gaul (itself based on Macedonian gold staters issued by Phillip II) in c.150BC. Politically the Trinovantes appear to have been conquered or subjugated by the Catuvellauni whilst, at least on the evidence from coinage, the Iceni were linked in some way to the Catuvellauni. The Atrebates were opposed to the Catuvellauni and the Regni were a pagus of the Atrebates who split from them in the 1st century AD.

On the continent the area you have coloured is known as the Cisrehennian German lands (Germans this side of the Rhine). These tribes are the Nervii and Eburones. Their material culture and settlement pattern was not La Tene, but more closely related to the Jastorf culture of Germany. To the south, in the lands you have coloured Aedui, you have two regions; Suessiones-Remi and "Belgium". The first of these was, as the name suggests, the land of the Suessiones and Remi tribes, two pagi joined into a single civitate by 58BC if not earlier. "Belgium" is the land of the true Belgae, as evidenced by the presence of Fécamp style fortifications, a particular type of sanctuary, distinct burial practices and some critical reading of De Bello Gallico. The true Belgians were the Atrebates, Bellovaci, Ambiani, Velocases and Cantii.

jirisys
11-21-2012, 23:59
I will always love brennus' overly long insights.

~Jirisys ()