Файл:Europe 1914.jpg


Weichselian ice age (c. 113,000–9700) ·Neolithic expansion (c. 7000–4500) ·Middle Neolithic (c. 4500–4000) ·Late Neolithic (c. 4000–3000) ·Copper Age – Corded Ware culture (c. 2900–2350) ·Copper Age – Bellbeaker culture (c. 2800–1800) ·Early Bronze Age – Unetice culture (c. 2300–1600) ·Late Bronze Age – Urnfield culture (c. 1300—750) ·Migrations (c. 1000–100) ·Hallstatt & La Tène cultures (c. 800–100) ·Roman Republic (510–40) ·220 ·218 ·200 ·201–100 ·58 ·49 ·39 ·30 BCE–6 CE

14 ·14–37 ·60 ·60 ·69 ·80 ·Migrations 100–500 ·117 ·117 ·125 ·Migrations 150–774 ·Economy 180 ·271 ·293–305 ·337 ·395 ·c. 395 ·400 ·400 ·450 ·457–61 ·476 ·480 ·Franks 481–814 ·Early Slavs 500–700 ·500 ·526 ·526–600 ·Christianisation to 600 ·c. 550 ·650 ·Pontic Steppe 650 ·665 ·800 ·Vikings 800–1050 ·814 ·843–70 ·850 ·900 ·912 ·998 ·1000 ·1000 ·1054 ·1092 ·First Crusade 1095–99 ·1097 ·1135 ·1142 ·1147–49 ·1190 ·1190 ·1250 ·c. 1250 ·1301-1400 ·1301-1400 ·1328 ·1345 ·Black Plague 1347–51 ·1360 ·1400 ·Trade routes c. 1400 ·1430 ·1470 ·1490 ·1492 ·1500 ·1519 ·1550 ·1560 ·Religion 1560 ·Religion 1600 ·Religion 1618 ·1618–48 ·1648 ·1683 ·1700 ·1701 ·1708 ·1714 ·1721 ·1725–30 ·1739–1740 ·1740 ·1748–66 ·1783–1792 ·1787 ·1787 ·1789 ·1799 ·1812 ·1812 ·1812 ·1812 ·1813 ·1815 ·1815 ·1815 ·1818 ·Ottoman Empire 1830–1923 ·1848–49 ·1861 ·1867 ·1871 ·1878 ·1890 ·1905 ·1911 ·1914 ·1914 ·1919 ·1919–29 ·1923 ·1929 ·1930 ·1940 ·1941–42 ·1942–45 ·Cold War 1947–91 ·1950 ·1993–2006 ·2006 to date

In 1938 the predecessors of what is today The Department of History at the United States Military Academy began developing a series of campaign atlases to aid in teaching cadets a course entitled, "History of the Military Art." Since then, the Department has produced over six atlases and more than one thousand maps, encompassing not only America’s wars but global conflicts as well.

In keeping abreast with today's technology, the Department of History is providing these maps on the internet as part of the department's outreach program. The maps were created by the United States Military Academy’s Department of History and are the digital versions from the atlases printed by the United States Defense Printing Agency. We gratefully acknowledge the accomplishments of the department's former cartographer, Mr. Edward J. Krasnoborski, along with the works of our present cartographer, Mr. Frank Martini.