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Taking time to live well
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Geography | Map Secrets

Iona Bower June 27, 2024

If you think you can trust a map, think again… Many contain twists and tricks that mean you could be navigating your way to something entirely unexpected.

1. Swisstopo Doodles

For decades, mapmakers for the Swiss Federal Office of Topography (Swisstopo) have been secretly hiding illustrations in official maps: a marmot crouched among the contour lines of the Swiss Alps, a fish nestling in the fringes of a marshy nature reserve for example. Once discovered, these humorous additions are removed, which is rather a shame, we think.

2. Maps as propaganda

Maps are political and cultural documents, distorted representations riddled with errors, propaganda and mischief. Some depict Greenland as larger than Africa, others include entirely made-up streets.

3. World War II Escape Maps

 MI9 British Military Intelligence Officer, Clayton Hutton (known as Clutty) invented silk escape and evasion maps during the Second World War. Based on pre-war Continental touring maps, these were printed on parachute silk (and later rayon) as it was durable, easy to conceal inside the lining of a uniform and didn’t make crinkly noises when sneaking around. 

4. Real Life Treasure Maps

 In 2023, the National Archives of the Netherlands released a trove of documents declassified after a 75-year confidentiality period. Among them was a hand-drawn treasure map, sketched by four retreating German soldiers who’d buried stolen gold coins and jewels beneath the roots of a poplar tree. To this day, the long-lost Nazi hoard, believed to be worth millions, has never been found.

5. Filling in the blanks

Sometimes what’s not on a map that proves to be just as compelling. Terra Australis (Antarctica) tempted explorers even before it was a big blank space on James Cook’s 1795 map of the southern continents labelled ‘terra incognita’ (Latin for unknown land). Centuries before anyone ever beheld the frozen continent, ancient astronomers and geographers were convinced it existed, with maps from Greco-Roman and Medieval times fuelling a geographical myth that persisted for centuries. 

6. Telling tales

 Medieval mappa mundi – ancient European maps of the world – blended knowledge with myth, spirituality and cautionary tales. Hereford Cathedral exhibits the largest surviving example. Measuring 5’2” by 4’4”, the map portrays the Garden of Eden at the top and Jerusalem in the centre, while the edges brim with wondrous people and beasts, inspired by early explorers’ tales.

7. Paper Towns

A long-standing problem for cartographers is how to prevent others from plagiarising years of research; the solution is to set a trap. Known as ‘paper towns’ or ‘trap streets’, the London A–Z is said to contain dozens. For a while, Haggerston in Hackney had a non-existent ski-slope next to the city farm.

Our map secrets are taken from our ‘Know A Thing Or Two pages on maps in our June issue by
Jo Tinsley. Read more from page 83.

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In Think Tags issue 145, maps, geography
Comment
Photography: manuscriptmaps.com

Photography: manuscriptmaps.com

Fascinating things | paper towns

Iona Bower November 16, 2019

Or why maps are not always to be trusted

You think you know where you are with a map, don’t you? Hopefully in a very literal as well as a figurative sense. We’re going to mess with your mind here… <whispers> Not everything you see on maps is real!

We recently heard about ‘paper towns’, which are, as you might expect, towns, streets or areas that can be seen on a map but do not exist in reality. 

Also known as ‘fake towns’, ‘phantom settlements’ and ‘bunnies’ (no, we aren’t sure why either), paper towns are made up by map makers in order to catch out copycat cartographers (try saying that while you’re drawing a map). The idea being if you add a fake town to your map and then you look at a map drawn at a later date by someone else and it includes the town you made up, you’ll be able to prove they copied your work. Sneaky!

There is, we are told, a Moat Lane marked on the Tele Atlas Directory of London (the basis for Google) which is entirely made up. And it’s not the first time Google has unwittingly copied a fake entry from a map onto its own map of an area. 

Back in 2008, there was a flurry of interest in a town called Argleton in West Lancashire. A trawl of the internet turned up all kinds of businesses, land for sale and more, but there was a hitch… Argleton did not exist. If you went to the spot where it was marked on Google, there was nothing to see but a rather uninspiring field. When it was brought to Google’s attention they issued an apology for the ‘error’ and the town disappeared from its maps in 2010. But somewhere, someone was having the last laugh at his or her little joke (and the knowledge that Google had chosen their maps to use). 

Suggestions were made that Arlgeton was an anagram of ‘not large’ or even ‘not real’ with a ‘G’ added for ‘Google’. Who knows if that’s true, or just a delicious coincidence, but we’ll be studying our Ordnance Surveys more carefully in future for suspicious-sounding towns that ring no bells.

If you also love a map, don’t miss our November issue in which we meet cartographer Kevin Sheehan who creates traditional, hand drawn maps like the one pictured here. Each is a work of art in its own right. 

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More from our November issue…

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In Think Tags issue 89, November, maps, geography, fictional
Comment
map-garland.jpeg

Make: An Ordnance Survey garland

lsykes May 15, 2019


Create a nostalgic reminder of a fun weekend

Poring over a map is a sure-fire way to ramp up the anticipation for a long weekend away (and with two in May, there are plenty of opportunities). There’s the road trip to navigate, the B&B to locate, the nearest stretch of beach to find, and day trips to plan. And, even better, when you get back home, that same map will remind you of where you have been: retrace your steps up contours to that spectacular viewpoint or along the dotted lines of a coastal footpath to the beach cafe.

One way to remember a journey is simply to frame a map of the area travelled. Bring it alive with pins marking memorable places visited or by adding snapshots of special meals or locations. Alternatively, scour local charity shops' book sections where there is often a bucket or basket of old maps waiting to be snapped up and recycled, and turn them into this simple but pretty paper garland to hang in your hall, above your bed or whatever spot in your home could do with an injection of bank holiday nostalgia once May is over.

What you’ll need

One or two vintage maps (depending on preferred length of garland)

A craft cutter (we used a 2-inch heart cutter but you could use a similar-size circular cutter)

Glue stick

Sewing machine and thread

A felt ball or bead (to weight the garland at the bottom)

How to make your garland

1. If your map is one-sided, cut it in half and glue the 'wrong' sides together with the glue stick. Make sure that both sides of the map are the right way up. Allow to dry for a couple of minutes.

2. Using your craft cutter, cut out the hearts. You may find it easier to cut the map into strips first.

3. Leave a good length of thread at the top, and sew your hearts together with the sewing machine. To make your garland 3-D, sew the hearts in pairs. A contrasting red thread will bring out the detail in the map. (When lining up the next heart, have the foot and the needle of your machine down so that you can use the needle as a guide to get the heart in the right place each time.)

4. Keep going until the garland is your desired length. Leave a good length of thread at the end and hand-stitch a little felt ball to add weight and help it hang straight. Tie a loop or knot at the top of the garland so that you have something to hang the garland form.

5. Open the hearts to create a 3-D effect. Hang or drape your garland.

Created by Charlie Deighton and first published here in June 2014.

See more of her work at her Etsy shop, or follow her on instagram.

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

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In Making Tags making, maps, papercraft, remember the moment
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Shop Love: Herb Lester Associates – amazing travel maps

thesimplethings November 19, 2012

Whether you're traveling to London, Paris, New York, Madrid, Amsterdam, Berlin or beyond, take along Herb Lester Associates' simply gorgeous travel maps, each of which features the real must-see sights, places to eat, shop and stay!

Read More
In Escaping Tags design, Herb Lester Associates, holidays, maps, Shop Love
1 Comment

DIY travel map: plot your memories and plan some more...

thesimplethings November 10, 2012

Personalising a beautifully-printed map with brightly coloured pins will not only rekindle your memories of joyful travels and adventures, it'll also inspire you to dream up some more...

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In Escaping Tags craft, holidays, interior design, maps
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

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See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2025
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The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

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