Roman Geographers mapped geography and the ethnography much of Europe north of the Roman Empire: Northern Gremany, the southern part of Scandinavia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Belarus and part of Russia. Of course they also mapped the territories of the empire.
The map of Rome was important for the Romans because it showed the exact extension of the Empire. Since the Roman expansion was so vast, it was also helpful to travellers.
One of Christopher Columbus' skills was map-makingme of cc's skills were navigation and map making
its a place in ancient india.
Persian.
The map of what was once Ancient Mesopotamia looks like a giant flying bat. Ancient Mesopotamia took up most of what is now the Fertile Crescent Valley in the Middle East.
They used their knowlage of astronomy and mathematics to their map
Sure thing. I've added a link to the bottom of this answer that provides a decent map of what used to be the Roman EmpireThis map represents the boundaries that were present under the leadership of Hadrian in about 116 ADBear in mind that Roman boundaries and influence expanded and contracted throughout its history, and that at different times the map of the Roman Empire appeared very differently than the one shown here.
The study of map making is Cartography.
on a map
it is not in the map
when you picture a place in your mind, what kind of map are you making
go to google images and search ancient greek spartan map
Ancient Egypt..
Moon Runes are the hidden text on Thorin's ancient dwarven map.
All of Ancient Sumer is in southeast Iraq.
The map of Rome was important for the Romans because it showed the exact extension of the Empire. Since the Roman expansion was so vast, it was also helpful to travellers.
What map? You question cannot be answered the way it is asked because we don't see the map.