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Orthodox Monasteries and Rivers in 1817
12026-02-19T15:45:20-05:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb491Maps can tell us surprisingly intimate things. They also have a knack for drawing attention to outliers. This map does both. It visualizes the distribution of over 500 Orthodox monasteries across the Russian Empire in 1817. Many are concentrated near imperial centers in the European part of the empire, but others could hardly be more remote, sitting on the peripheries and sometimes even on islands. The map wants us to notice that most secluded monasteries were situated along major rivers or other bodies of water. It wants us to remember that monasteries were not only sites of prayer and pilgrimage but also important hubs of agriculture, industry, and trade. Click through to the interactive to add data layers: relic sites, provincial towns and boundaries, post roads, and lakes. We leave it to you to imagine the life that took place within the walls.plain2026-02-19T15:45:20-05:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb4
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12026-02-19T12:59:49-05:00Paul Vadanf46fd2a7a6d2ab1ecca0ec13c84118eaf61facfaMap of the Week GalleryAnastasiia Pereverten44structured_gallery2026-04-23T17:21:08-04:00Anastasiia Pereverten1dee3aa5075817eb04077dbae88a1030d7d4ebb4