http://songgis.ucmercedlibrary.info/
The Digital Gazetteer of the Song Dynasty is an index to every jurisdiction in the Song (960-1276) spatial administrative hierarchy based on Hope Wright's An Alphabetical List of Geographical Names in Sung China. The DGSD offers a wealth of spatial data made available to the scholarly community.
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~chgis/
CHINA GIS: China Historical GIS is the main reference site for historical GIS mapping at the national level. The China Historical Geographic Information System, CHGIS, project was launched in January 2001 to establish a database of populated places and historical administrative units for the period of Chinese history between 222 BCE and 1911 CE. CHGIS provides a base GIS platform for researchers to use in spatial analysis, temporal statistical modeling, and representation of selected historical units as digital maps.
http://www.iseis.cuhk.edu.hk/songjiang/
CHINA GIS: This project deals with the region of Ming Songjiangfu and Ming Jiading county in the Lower Yangzi delta, roughly equivalent to the modern Shanghai Municipality, in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries . This region was the major cotton textile production area of late imperial China. It is a Chinese Language database. English version only for Introduction.
http://www.villeschinoises.com/
MODERN CHINESE CITIES: This is a blog by a French specialist of Chinese cities about urban transfor;ation in China. The blog is in French only. Blog d'information consacré à la Chine urbaine et à ses innovations.
http://mumford.albany.edu/chinanet/index.asp
MODERN CHINESE CITIES: Urban China Research Network was founded in 1999 by John R. Logan and is currently led by sociologist Zai Liang and geographer Christopher J. Smith (Co-Directors), sociologist Steven F. Messner, historian Jennifer Rudolph, and geographer Youqin Huang with institutional support provided by University at Albany's Mumford Center and the Center for Social and Demographic Analysis (CSDA). Network members are already at work on research projects ranging from urban morphology to the dynamics of rural-urban migration to issues concerning housing, crime and changing family structure within China.
http://www.supergeotek.com/Library_2_201011.aspx
Taiwan Historical Demography GIS is a Web-GIS-based system for querying historical demographic data of Taiwan. This Web-GIS applies SuperWebGIS as the map server platform to publish maps and historical demographic data of Taiwan area provided by Research Center for Humanities and Social Sciences over the Internet.
http://hypercities.com/
Built on the idea that every past is a place, HyperCities is a digital research and educational platform for exploring, learning about, and interacting with the layered histories of city and global spaces. Developed though collaboration between UCLA and USC, the fundamental idea behind HyperCities is that all stories take place somewhere and sometime; they become meaningful when they interact and intersect with other stories. Using Google Maps and Google Earth, HyperCities essentially allows users to go back in time to create and explore the historical layers of city spaces in an interactive, hypermedia environment.
http://cwis.usc.edu/dept/LAS/history/historylab/LAPUHK/index.html
LOS ANGELES: This web site--composed of images (still, panoramic, moving, and sequential), maps, short essays (epistemological, bibliographic, methodological, and conceptual)--is written as a totality; the verbal text and other media are meant to be encountered as a whole. It is "panoramic" in both a figurative and literal sense.It attempts a broad "survey" of a vast metropolis, attempts also to provide deep knowledge about particular places, but frankly confronts all such attempts as exemplary of the intractable epistemological problems urban historians must encounter.
http://journals.cambridge.org/fulltext_content/supplementary/urban_icons_companion/index.htm
URBAN ICONS: This multi-media companion to the “Urban Icons” Special Issue of Urban Historyis designed as an “Atlas.” The notion of the “Atlas” was, in part, inspired by Giuliana Bruno’s book, Atlas of Emotion, which she describes as a “cultural history of the spatiovisual arts.” The project in which you currently find yourself is intended to re-present the geo-temporal emphasis of the project. Knowledge of urban icons is as much a story about how images and objects move across space as they do across time. You will move across the space of this multi-media companion; navigating our city; which serves as the skin of our atlas. The genre of “atlas” emerged in the early modern period to describe any compendium of “global” knowledge: the manner of organization varies almost infinitely. An atlas always mixes typographic and pictorial or cartographic text—that is the sole defining requirement.
http://nolli.uoregon.edu/
ROME: The Nolli Web Site presents the 1748 Nolli map of Rome as a dynamic, interactive, hands-on tool. The public now has access to cataloged information about the map in both written and graphical form. The map not only provides rich information, but it has the ability to be updated with new data over time to embrace expanding knowledge.
http://geosites.evans.txstate.edu/~holocaust-geography/index.html
HOLOCAUST: The focus of this project is to explore the Holocaust from a geographic perspective. In collaboration with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, this team has examined World War II Nazi convoy movements from France during the years of occupation (1942 - 1944). Using GIS (Geographic Information Systems), interactive models were created to help visualize these complex spatial and temporal activities.
http://www.virtualjamestown.org/maps.html
JAMESTOWN: Jamestown Envisioning includes interpretive essays, recreated landscapes, patterns of exploration and settlement, visualizations of spatial and temporal history, rectified maps and charts, and the use of new technologies to analyze archival resources.