LEARN NC

K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

About this map

Johann Baptist Homann. Virginia Marylandia et Carolina... Nuremberg, Germany, 1714–1730.

Date created
1714–1740
Location
U. S. A.
License
Copyright unknown.
Source
Original image housed by Tryon Palace Historic Sites & Gardens, New Bern, N.C.; Dept. of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives & History

See this map in context

  • Teaching about North Carolina American Indians: This web edition is drawn from a teachers institute curriculum enrichment project on North Carolina American Indian Studies conducted by the North Carolina Humanities Council. Resources include best practices for teaching about American Indians, suggestions for curriculum integration, webliographies, and lesson plans about North Carolina American Indians. (Page 8.3)

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In the classroom

  • See our collection of articles on visual literacy for ideas on using photographs meaningfully in the classroom.
Hand-colored map drawn between 1714 and 1730, depicting the American colonies at the time.   The map includes part of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, Carolina, and part of Florida, which extends north and borders on Lake Erie.

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Johann Baptist Homann’s hand-colored engraved map Virginia Marylandia et Carolina… was first published in a 1714 atlas, and was re-published numerous times thereafter. The map depicts Homann’s interpretation of the American colonies as they existed in the early part of the 18th century. The geographical range extends south from Pennslyvania, New York, and New Jersey to South Carolina; and west to Lake Erie and the Appalachian mountains. Important cities and towns are marked in red: Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania; what is simply called “Carolina,” on the Cape Fear River in Carolina; and “Germantown/Teutsche Statt,” in Virginia. Flordia, which belonged to Spain at the time, spans the western edge of the map. A large but fictitious Appalachian lake appears in the mountains in Florida. This non-existent geographical feature was likely based on earlier maps of the region. The Atlantic Ocean is labeled the Sea of Virginia. A cartouche in the bottom right corner depicts Europeans trading with Indians.