Maps of Tartar

Azerbaijan: Tat Language and Language Communities (Public Content)


Tat Language Area


Source:   Wikimedia
Usage Notes/Copyright Status:   GNU Free Documentation License
Date Created:   January 2008

Map Description:
Map of areas where the Tat language is spoken.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

Balkan Peninsula: Ethnolinguistic Distribution, ca. 1910


Balkan Peninsula: Ethnolinguistic Distribution, ca. 1910

Source:  Magocsi, Paul Robert. 2002. Historical Atlas of Central Europe. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
Contact:  University of Washington Press
Date Digitized:  8 June 2011

Map Description:
This map shows the distribution of ethnolinguistic groups in the Balkan Peninsula around the year 1910. The colors follow larger ethnolinguistic groupings as noted in the legend, and the few regions which were not colored or labeled on the original map have been designated as "Unknown."


Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) and legend to see the unaltered map(s).

Central Asia: Turkic Languages (TITUS)



Turkic Languages

Source:   Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien (TITUS)
Data Source:   H. Glück (ed.). 1993. Metzler Lexikon Sprache, 659. Stuttgart/ Weimar: Metzler.
Usage Notes/Copyright Status:   Jost Gippert, Frankfurt a/M 1999-2003. This server provides teaching materials concerning Indo-European and Non-Indo-European languages. Those materials that can be downloaded via http can be used freely for teaching purposes, provided that they are quoted as sources and the name(s) of the editor(s) and the date of last changes are indicated. No parts of this document may be republished in any form without prior permission by the copyright holder.
Date Digitized:   19 October 2009

Map Description:
This map depicts 37 Turkic languages which have been divided roughly by geographical region into six groups throughout Central Asia, the Middle East, and Russia.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

Distribution of Ethnic Groups and Languages in Siberia in the mid-20th century


Distribution of Ethnic Groups and Languages in Siberia in the Mid-20th Century

Source:   Wurm, S.A. 1996. Distribution of ethnic groups and language areas in Siberia in the mid-20th century. In Stephan A. Wurm (ed), Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas, II.2. Berlin; New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Date Digitized:   August 2010

Map Description:
This map displays the ethnic groups and language areas present in Siberia during the mid-20th century. Rodionov (1996) notes that in the 1950s the third intensive settelement of Siberia took place, beginning with the opening of untouched, uncultivated land.

Other LLMAP resources related to this project:
In this folder there are two other digital maps by Rodionov (1996), detailing the distribution of ethnic groups and languages in Siberia at different times in history.


Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

East Central Europe: Ethnolinguistic Distribution

East Central Europe: Ethnolinguistic Distribution

Source:  Magocsi, Paul Robert. 2002. Historical Atlas of Central Europe. Seattle: University of Washington Press. 55.
Contact:  University of Washington Press
Date Digitized:
  24 May 2011

Map Description:
This map shows areas of East Central European countries populated by ethnic groups other than the main groups for those particular countries, e.g. Greeks in Albania. Regions, labeled with ethnic group names, signify concentrations of over 50%. Points, labeled with abbreviations, signify concentrations under 50%. The distribution reflects data from ca. 2000.

Corresponding ethnolinguistic group names and abbreviations are provided in the legend.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

Iran: Iranian Tongues


Iranian Tongues

Source:   Wikimedia
Data Source:   Iranian languages in 2005
Usage Notes/Copyright Status:   Public Domain
Date Downloaded:   22 May 2007

Map Description:
Map of Iranian languages.

Note:
The visual representation of the area enitled Persian (edited) has been slightly modified. Please compare with the original map.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

National Ethnic Makeup - People of Russia


National Ethnic Makeup - People of Russia

Source: 2004. Natsionalnyi atlas Rossii v Chetyrekh. Vol 3. Moscow: Federalnaia sluzhba geodezii i kartografii Rossii.
Date Digitized: June 2010

Map Description:
This map displays the contemporary distribution of ethnic groups in Russia. It includes a set of points for which there was no corresponding item in the original map's legend. This set is designated here as "Unknown Ethnic Group". The map comes from a four volume set of Russian cartographic data from geology to history.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

North Asia: Paleoasiatic and other North Asiatic languages (TITUS)



Paleoasiatic and other North Asiatic Languages

Source:   Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien (TITUS)
Data Source:   H. Glück (ed.), Metzler Lexikon Sprache, Stuttgart / Weimar: Metzler 1993, p. 659.
Usage Notes/Copyright Status:   Jost Gippert, Frankfurt a/M 1999-2003. This server provides teaching materials concerning Indo-European and Non-Indo-European languages. Those materials that can be downloaded via http can be used freely for teaching purposes, provided that they are quoted as sources and the name(s) of the editor(s) and the date of last changes are indicated. No parts of this document may be republished in any form without prior permission by the copyright holder.
Date Digitized:   April 2010

Map Description:
This map depicts the languages of North Asia. Moving roughly from north to south in the western part of the map, the Uralic languages are divided into Samoyedic, Ob-Ugric, Turkic, and Mongolian. Directly to the east and north are Tungusic languages, while Paleoasiatic languages are located to the far north and east.



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

Siberia: Languages (PROEL)


Languages and Language Families in Siberia

Source:   The PROEL map of Siberia
The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.

Date downloaded:   01/01/2010

Map Description:
This map shows the distribution of languages and language families in Siberia.
More information on the individual languages and language families can be obtained by right-clicking on the map and following the links to the Multitree database, or by going to the PROEL project site.
Please note that there are layers for languages, language subgroups and language families.




Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process.

Soviet Languages


Languages of the Soviet Union

Source: Milner-Gulland, Robin with Nikolai Dejevsky. 1989. Cultural Atlas of Russia and the Soviet Union 
Date Digitized:   February 2011

Map Description:
"Two great language families dominate the territory of the Soviet Union. The larger is the Slavonic, comprising the closely related Russian, Ukrainian and Belorussian. Native speakers of Russian extend from the Gulf of Finland to the Pacific; nevertheless they are now less than half the total population. The other family is the Turkic, most of whose recognized languages and dialects are intercomprehensible: it extends from the Azerbayjan to Yakutia. Other non-Indo-European language families include the Finnic to the north and the Caucasian group to the south."

Other LL-MAP resources related to this project:



Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).

The UNESCO Database of Endangered Languages (UNESCO)

The UNESCO Database of Endangered Languages

Map Creator:   LINGUIST List (Anthony Aristar)
Data Source:   Mosely Christopher. 2010. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger, 3rd edn. Paris, UNESCO Publishing, Online version. http://www.unesco.org/culture/languages-atlas/ (29 November 2010)
Contact:   llmaplinguistlist.org
Usage Notes/Copyright Status:   Used by Permission
Date Created:   29 November 2010

Map Description:
UNESCO’s Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger is a database intended to raise awareness about language endangerment and the need to safeguard the world’s linguistic diversity among policy-makers, speaker communities and the general public, and to be a tool to monitor the status of endangered languages and the trends in linguistic diversity at the global level.

Degrees of endangerment
The map designates the degrees of endangerment as based on UNESCO’s Language Vitality and Endangerment framework.

This establishes six degrees of vitality/endangerment based on nine factors. Of these factors, the most salient is that of intergenerational transmission.

Degree of endangerment Intergenerational Language Transmission
safe language is spoken by all generations; intergenerational transmission is uninterrupted
>> not included in the map
vulnerable most children speak the language, but it may be restricted to certain domains (e.g., home)
definitely endangered children no longer learn the language as mother tongue in the home
severely endangered language is spoken by grandparents and older generations; while the parent generation may understand it, they do not speak it to children or among themselves
critically endangered the youngest speakers are grandparents and older, and they speak the language partially and infrequently
extinct there are no speakers left
>> included in the Atlas if presumably extinct since the 1950s




Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process.