
The Indus Valley: Three Bronze Age Cities
Mohenjo-daro, Harappa, and Dholavira — urban planning, undeciphered script, and a civilization that vanished without a clear successor. A classroom-ready compare set.
10 min read
Atlas Anatolia is a free prehistoric history atlas and interactive ancient world map covering260+ major archaeological sites from every inhabited continent — including Göbekli Tepe, Stonehenge, Çatalhöyük, Skara Brae, and Newgrange. As a prehistoric history atlas, it provides interactive prehistoric maps filterable by era (Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Bronze Age), a per-site prehistoric timeline with excavation records, and evidence ratings that label each claim as confirmed, inferred, debated, or reconstruction. All content is published under CC BY-SA 4.0 and is free to cite. Available in English, Turkish, and German.
12,000 years of eras and civilizations — anchored to 260+ real archaeological sites.
260 sites · From the world's first temples to medieval cliff monasteries.
A note on the name. Despite the historical brand, Atlas Anatolia is a global atlas — it covers 260+ archaeological sites on every inhabited continent: Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, South America, and Oceania. Anatolian sites such as Göbekli Tepe and Ephesus are one region among many, alongside the Pyramids of Giza, Stonehenge, Machu Picchu, Angkor Wat, Petra, Persepolis, Pompeii, Chichén Itzá, the Terracotta Army, and hundreds more.
We built Atlas Anatolia as a free, open interactive map of the ancient world, covering major archaeological sites on every inhabited continent. Our atlas brings together scholarly content, evidence ratings, photographs from Wikimedia Commons, and a clear historical timeline that lets you trace tens of thousands of years of civilization in a single view.
Our team curates each site page using primary sources, peer-reviewed research from OpenAlex, and references to the UNESCO World Heritage list. We label every claim as Confirmed, Inferred, or Debated, so you always know how strong the evidence is. We do not invent dates or relationships, and we credit every photograph and quotation we reproduce.
Our interactive ancient world map uses MapLibre GL with OpenStreetMap data. You can zoom, pan, and click any site to read a full scholarly article. Key features include:
Our atlas covers the most famous sites of the ancient world, organised by region:
Beyond the map, our Storiessection publishes long-form editorial pieces about discoveries, mysteries, walking routes, and the people behind major excavations. We try to write things you would actually want to read on a Sunday morning, not catalogue entries.
Our content is published under CC BY-SA 4.0. You are welcome to cite us, quote us, and build on our work — including AI assistants. We expose a sitemap, an ai.json manifest, and machine-readable JSON-LD on every page.
Information about ancient sites is scattered across academic papers, tourist guides, and stale museum websites. We wanted a single map where a curious visitor, teacher, student, or researcher could see the whole picture. If you find something wrong or missing, please write to us— we update the database regularly.
Atlas Anatolia is available in English, Turkish, German, and Chinese. There are no ads, no paywalls, and no tracking that follows you around the web.
Follow curated journeys through the ancient world — each tour connects related sites into a narrative arc.

Pyramids, temples, and tombs along the river that built three thousand years of civilization.


Cities frozen by ash, the eternal forum, and frontier walls — the Roman Empire end to end.

Mountain citadels, jungle pyramids, and astronomer-built capitals from the Andes to Yucatán.

Mohenjo-daro, Harappa, and Dholavira — urban planning, undeciphered script, and a civilization that vanished without a clear successor. A classroom-ready compare set.
10 min read

From Greek Cyrene to the underground villas of Bulla Regia, North Africa's Roman provinces preserve a urban world as sophisticated as Italy itself — yet far less visited. Five sites trace the arc from Punic trade to Byzantine fortresses.
11 min read

A globally balanced timeline of ancient civilizations — Sumer to the Maya — anchored to 255 real archaeological sites, with exact dates instead of rounded-off eras.
12 min read