Burlington was a town in Yorkshire, and is now the "Old Town" section of Bridlington. You can find Bridlington, United Kingdom at the maps section of Google. Bridlington is also in Wikipedia, and the article has a reference to Burlington. There are links below.
map maker
Geography was important in the Middle Ages because they helped make maps and people who sailed across the oceans needed to where to go so they needed a map of the world.
because religion was the bases of society so they put it at the top because it had highest importance on the map
Because back in the Middle Ages they didn't have satellites. They just estimated the landscape. So that is why the were not perfect.
There are two peninsulas on the map of New England, one of them is Shawmut Peninsula, which is easily located because that is where the city of Boston was established.
There is a link to the maps section of Google below. If you type in Lincolnshire, United Kingdom, it will take you straight to a map. I tried looking up Burlington in Wikipedia, and the only medieval town named Burlington I could find was what is now called the Old Town section of Bridlington. I have left a link to this below, but the problem is that it is in Yorkshire, not Lincolnshire. It is a little north of Lincolnshire. I also put in a link for the Wikipedia article on Lincolnshire, which shows what the outline of the county of Lincolnshire.
map maker
yes
The East Midlands in England can be found on the eastern most half of the traditional midland region of England. If you are looking at a map of England it is the right half of the middle of the map.
The Pennines run from north to south in the middle of England.
rhode island
Geography was important in the Middle Ages because they helped make maps and people who sailed across the oceans needed to where to go so they needed a map of the world.
Washington sate. (Look north west on a map)
Middle earth was modeled after rural England. Tolkein was resentful that England had no home grown mythology. All the mythology of England is imported from France or Normandy. He deliberately designed Middle Earth to be England's mythology as a relief of this woeful lack. The map of Middle Earth actually bears no geographic resemblance to any known place on Earth. The book "The Simarillion" disposed of the geographic issues in the latter stories by "walling off" the entire world from any intrusion. And Middle Earth shall be walled off until the end of the Latter Ages.
I only no castle one which is talk to the jester, the rice is by the bucket and the bag is by the toilet.
They all live in London in England. That will say, "they life in the middle of the map".
London is in the southeastern part of England, in the United Kingdom (U.K.). On a map, if you go to 51.5° North, 0.1° West, you're just about in the middle of London.