Darkblood’s Known World, 8 miles per hex, Grid S1E2
Ricardo included six initial sections in his Mystara’s Map Navigator when he first published it online in October 2000, arranged in three columns and two rows. This is the sixth and final segment, the south easternmost corner.
Centred on the Selenica-Parsa trade route, it shows the final part of Aengmor; otherwise, it’s a faithful reproduction of the Gazetteer maps for these nations.
Fan-made Map by Ricardo Matheus (October 2000)
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
- GAZ1 The Grand Duchy of Karameikos (1987) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- GAZ2 The Emirates of Ylaruam (1987) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- GAZ5 The Elves of Alfheim (1988) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- GAZ6 The Dwarves of Rockhome (1988) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- GAZ11 The Republic of Darokin (1989) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- Dawn of the Emperors (1989) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- Karameikos: Kingdom of Adventure (1994) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
- Known World, 24 miles per hex
- Karameikos, 8 miles per hex
References
- Ricardo’s entry in Appendix M: Mappers of Mystara
- Ricardo’s author page at the Vaults of Pandius
Chronological Analysis
This is a fan-made map. It was published in October 2000. The updated Atlas version of this map is split between: Darokin, 8 miles per hex, Karameikos, 8 miles per hex, Rockhome, 8 miles per hex, Thyatis, 8 miles per hex, and Ylaruam, 8 miles per hex. 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 2000. (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.
Under Construction! Please check back again soon for updates.
Revisions
- Spellings — Anran is likely a typo of Anram.