The Map That Lied Audiolibro Por Jessica Jones arte de portada

The Map That Lied

How Lines Drawn on Paper Created Wars, Nations, and Generations of Conflict

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The Map That Lied

De: Jessica Jones
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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A border on a map can look simple.

A clean line dividing one country from another.

But behind many of those lines is a story of political deals, rushed decisions, colonial ambitions, and sometimes simple mistakes.

Throughout history, borders have been drawn by diplomats, colonial officials, and surveyors who often had little knowledge of the lands they were dividing. Some never even visited the territories they partitioned. Yet their decisions reshaped entire continents.

In 1884, European powers met in Berlin and divided Africa into colonial territories with rulers and colored pencils. The borders they created ignored tribal territories, languages, and long-standing political relationships.

In the Middle East, secret wartime agreements between Britain and France carved up the collapsing Ottoman Empire. The lines drawn during those negotiations still influence conflicts across the region today.

When British India was partitioned in 1947, a hurriedly drawn border created one of the largest migrations in human history. Millions were displaced, and violence erupted across the new frontier.

Elsewhere, borders emerged from surveying errors, changing rivers, or simple misunderstandings of geography. In some cases, small mistakes on maps produced decades of diplomatic disputes.

Even in the modern era, maps continue to shape political tensions. Arctic boundaries are being renegotiated as ice melts. Online map platforms have triggered international protests when they display disputed territories.

The world we see on maps today often feels permanent and inevitable.

In reality, many borders are the result of temporary political decisions made decades — or even centuries — ago.

The Map That Lied explores the hidden stories behind those decisions.

Through case studies from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas, this book reveals how borders were created, why they often ignored the realities on the ground, and how their consequences continue to shape global politics.

Because sometimes the most powerful force in history is not an army.

It is a line drawn on a map.

Oriente Medio Política y Gobierno Relaciones Internacionales África
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