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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.
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.
British Burma, Pegu division: With additions to railways up to 1891
1891
Myanmar
Topographical map of the Pegu Division of British Burma (Myanmar), spread over four sheets. In addition to mountains, forests, rivers and wetlands, rice fields, routes (road, railway, path, telegraph), villages and pagodas are marked.
Parts of Burma, Siam and the Shan States
1886
Myanmar, Thailand
This map charts the journey of Holt S. Hallett as he searched for a suitable route for a railway to transport British goods from Burma to Thailand and China. He wrote the book ‘A Thousand Miles on an Elephant in the Shan States’ about his expedition.
Sketch map showing forest reserves (sanctioned and proposed) in the Pegu and Tenasserim Divisions of British Burma
1881
Myanmar
Map of forest reserves—sanctioned and proposed—on the west coast of British Burma (Myanmar). The map also shows rivers, including the Irrawaddy River, and the railway from Rangoon (Yangon) to Prome (Pyay).
- [remove]British Burma13
- Burma9
- Lower Burma7
- Upper Burma7
- Mandalay6
- Rangoon6
- Yangon6
- Shan States3
- Siam3
- Malay Peninsula2
- Pegu2
- Prome2
- more Detailed Location »
- [remove]Railway/Tramway13
- River12
- Canal2
- Path2
- Road2
- Telegraph/Telephone1