Christian’s Northeastern Davania, 24 miles per hex
Christian returned to the Mystara community fifteen years after posting his legendary Hule project. This time, he set his sights on Davania — specifically, the northeastern coast and the whole section poking north of the equator.
He applied his usual thoroughness in amazing style, bringing together all of the various sources, official and fan-made, to create a wonderful new map. Though he quickly moved on to other things, once again Christian left us with an amazing resource which all subsequent maps would reference.
Fan-made Map by Christian Constantin (February 2014)
This is an original map created by one of Mystara’s excellent fan cartographers. For more information on the cartographer, including a gallery of all their maps, see also Appendix M: Mappers of Mystara.
Sources
- Dawn of the Emperors (1989) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- Champions of Mystara (1993) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- Poor Wizard’s Almanac II (1993) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
Secondary Sources
- Chimpman’s Hinterlands, 24 miles per hex map (Vaults of Pandius)
- Mystaran Almanac AC 1019 (2003, 2006) (Vaults of Pandius)
- Thibault’s Polakatsikes and vicinity, 8 miles per hex (2005) (Vaults of Pandius)
- Geoff’s Kastelios, 8 miles per hex
- Håvard’s Milenian Empire of Davania c. 600 BC
References
- Northeast Davania Map, 24 mph discussion thread at The Piazza
- Christian’s entry in Appendix M: Mappers of Mystara
- Christian’s author page at the Vaults of Pandius
Chronological Analysis
This is a fan-made map. It was published in 2014. The updated Atlas version of this map is not yet available. See also Appendix C for annual chronological snapshots of the area. For the full context of this map in Mystara’s publication history, see the upcoming Let’s Map Mystara 2014. (Please note that it may be some time before the project reaches this point.)
The following lists are from the Let’s Map Mystara project. Additions are new features, introduced in this map; Revisions are changes to previously-introduced features; Hex Art & Fonts track design elements; and finally Textual Additions are potential features found in the related text. In most cases, the Atlas adopts these textual additions into updated and chronological maps.
Coming Soon