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This Jane Austen blog brings Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details related to this topic.

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Interactive Maps of Regency London and Bath

September 2, 2008 by Vic

Ah, London. If I were rich, I would visit this city every month. So I shall simply have to rely on interactive maps and panoramic views to satisfy my yearnings.  Wikimapia is an online collaborative mapping system that combines google maps with a wiki system, allowing users to add information. Click here to see an interactive image of a portion of London that shows Hyde Park, Mayfair, and Green Park. The square grids provide detailed information about the mapped area when you move your cursor over them.

Green Park, London

Static map of Green Park, The Mall, and Victoria Monument, London

The exciting part about this project is that if you have visited this part of the world (or better yet, live there) you can add your knowledge about a particular area. This interactive image depicts Green Park and Pall Mall. You can see Buckminster Palace at the lower left, the Victoria Memorial and the Mall leading from it, and St. James’s Palace in the upper right. To view greater details I keep clicking on the images until I see such details as people walking in the park and cars parked in the streets. Amazing.

Bath, England

Static map of Bath, England

Let’s not forget Jane Austen and her world. This link leads to an interactive map of an arial view of Bath, England, and this link leads to an interactive close up of Pulteney Bridge (see static map below. The details are so fine that you can see cars parked on the streets. Spectacular.

Pultney Bridge

Pultney Bridge, static map

  • Bath 360: A panoramic tour of Bath
  • London Panoramas

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Posted in Bath, jane austen, Mayfair, Regency London, Regency World | Tagged Green Park, Interactive Maps, Pall mall, Wikimapia | 1 Comment

One Response

  1. on September 2, 2008 at 22:23 Arti

    Vic: Congratulations on your one year anniversary on WordPress. The work you’ve done here is impressive! Thanks for all the in-depth research on Austen and The Regency world.
    Take this post for example, who would think of looking at London and JA’s Bath from mid air?! I’d say, both places look great no matter from the ground or from above. Just love to go back again soon for another visit…



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