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Stanford's Map of the Empires of China & Japan with the adjacent parts of the Russian Empire, India, Burma &c.
1896
Myanmar, Vietnam
The most northern part of Southeast Asia is shown on this map of China and Japan, with Burma (Myanmar) and Tong-King (Vietnam) appearing at the bottom of the map. Mountains, rivers and settlements are marked, as well as a railway line in Burma.
Route chart to India and the East
1895
Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Vietnam
Map of Asia featuring steamship routes—including around Southeast Asia—connecting ports such as Penang, Singapore, Batavia (Jakarta), Saigon, Bangkok, Rangun (Yangon), Manila, Macassar (Makassar) etc. There is also an inset map of Singapore.
Stanford's Map of the Empires of China & Japan with the adjacent parts of the Russian Empire, India, Burma &c.
1895
Myanmar, Vietnam
The most northern part of Southeast Asia is shown on this map of China and Japan, with Burma (Myanmar) and Tong King (Vietnam) appearing at the bottom of the map. Mountains, rivers and settlements are marked, as well as a railway line in Burma.
Map of the Kingdom of Siam and its dependencies
1888
Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam
Map of the Kingdom of Siam, featuring mountains, rivers and villages, and surrounded by a yellow border (the border with Upper Burma and China in the north is undefined). The southern part of Siam is shown on an inset map of the Malay Peninsula.
Map of China, Tonquin and Cochin-China, with a chart extending from China to western Europe
1883
Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam
Two maps, one of which features mainland Southeast Asia: Anam (Tonquin and Cochin China) in red, Lower Cochin China in green, Cambodia in yellow, and Siam in white. An inset map shows maritime routes between Europe and Asia.
Übersichtskarte der Französischen Expedition in Hinterindien vom Me-khong bis zum Jang-tse-kiang
1869
Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos
This map of the border region between China, Birma (Myanmar), Siam (Thailand and Laos) and Anam (Vietnam) is marked with the routes of five expeditions of the region from 1837 to 1868. Locations of Roman Catholic missionaries are also shown.
Malay Archipelago, or East India Islands
1851
Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Vietnam
This mid-19th century map of Southeast Asia is illustrated with drawings of indigenous people from New Guinea, a ‘bee bear’ (probably a sun bear), a sailboat in front of Victoria Mount in New Guinea, and a village and palm trees in Sarawak, Borneo.
[Zuid-Chinese Zee]
1686
Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam
Early navigation map of the South China Sea. The web of lines is a rhumbline network, while the numbers indicate sea depth (bathymetry), both used to aid navigation. A route around the Gulf of Thailand is marked with text and the dates 1643 and 1644.
- Myanmar9
- Vietnam9
- Thailand8
- Cambodia6
- Laos6
- Malaysia5
- Indonesia4
- Brunei2
- East Timor2
- Philippines2
- Singapore2
- Southeast Asia2
- more Simple Location »
- Siam7
- Burma5
- Malay Peninsula5
- Annam3
- Borneo3
- British Burma3
- Cochin China3
- South China Sea3
- Sumatra3
- Anam2
- Celebes2
- Gulf of Thailand2
- more Detailed Location »
- [remove]Kampong/Village11
- Missionary Building1
- Residential Area1
- [remove]Regional Border11
- Colonial Possessions5
- National Border5
- District/Administrative Border1
- Longitude and Latitude11
- [remove]Scale11
- Contour Lines/Elevation8
- Written Note/Details2
- Compass Rose1
- Rhumbline Network1
- Bartholomew, John1
- Blaeu, Joan1
- Breithaupt, G.1
- Cupet, Captaine1
- Dhar, Devendranath1
- Friquegnon, Captaine1
- Habenicht, H.1
- Malglaive, Captaine de1
- more Map Maker »
- Edward Stanford2
- Stanford's Geographical Establishment2
- Augustin Challamel1
- C. Hellfarth1
- Devendranath Dhar1
- Edinburgh Geographical Institute1
- J. & F. Tallis1
- John Bartholomew & Co.1
- more Printer/Publisher »