Stonehenge, a Neolithic marvel on Salisbury Plain, has long fascinated archaeologists and historians. Its massive stones align with the solstices, suggesting a deep awareness of both geography and astronomy. To the builders, the landscape itself was part of a sacred map — rivers, burial mounds, and avenues connected the monument...
William Herschel & Mapping the Heavens and Earth
22/9/25
William Herschel, the Hanoverian musician turned astronomer, is celebrated for discovering Uranus in 1781. Yet his achievements went far beyond a single planet: he built some of the most powerful telescopes of his age, catalogued thousands of celestial objects, and sought to map the structure of the Milky Way. His...
Jane Austen & the Geography of Stories
15/9/25
Jane Austen’s novels may seem confined to quiet country houses, but geography plays a central role in her characters’ lives. The distances between estates, the challenges of travel, and the cultural differences between regions shaped her plots. In Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth Bennet’s journey to Derbyshire transforms her understanding of...
Tags: Globes
How Are Country Borders Decided? - PART 2
30/6/25
Political Borders: When Leaders Get Involved Some borders are born out of treaties, wars, or political negotiation. After major wars, victors have often redrawn the map to suit their interests. The breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, or the peaceful separation of Czechoslovakia into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, show...
How Are Country Borders Decided? A Look at the Lines That Shape Our World - PART 1
23/6/25
How Are Country Borders Decided? A Look at the Lines That Shape Our World At first glance, a country border might seem simple—a neat line on a map, a fence in a field, or a crossing point with a passport booth. But the truth behind how borders are decided is...