Attached: 9pjd3hws4zm02.png (6460x3480, 1.93M)
Oldest city in every country by date founded
Ayden Thomas
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Jaxon Baker
Are sudacas even trying?
Henry James
horrible colour scheme
James Young
I don't get it, is this employing all of India had cities?
Brayden Carter
lisbon is the 2nd oldest city in europe, after athens
why is poortugal colored the same as spain?
Charles Wilson
What US city was founded before 1500?
Matthew James
Retard
Logan Cook
Isaiah Carter
No it's just counting the oldest for each country so it's filling out the entire country for having that one old city
Brayden Morgan
Tons of these maps are fakes made by randos
Hunter Taylor
Tucson and Oraibi, AZ. They weren't cities until much later though, they were just villages that continuously survived to the present and in Tucson's case, became a large city.
Luis Myers
Das rite
Luke Ortiz
It's not before 1500 but St. Augustin was build near the start of the 1500s IIRC
Jonathan Long
Sky City New Mexico
William Cruz
i think mine has been inhabited for ~8000 years
Jordan Lee
Lmao at South America
Jose Jackson
I'm sorry mate but it's true
Brody Rogers
We got no history at all and that's no secret.
Owen Sanchez
It's okay. The only thing that really matters is the present anyway.
-Marcus Aurelius (paraphrased)
Gavin Smith
this map is wrong, but the true map may never be known due to sparse archeological records ("continuous inhabitation"?). therefore, I'm going to ignore OP's picture and instead post my own, an 1800s photo of Aleppo, which was once a beautiful city.
Ayden Clark
Cusco as a city dates back to at least 1400, and before that, it was a village known as Acamama for about a century.
In the New World, the oldest examples of monumental architecture are found in South America.
en.wikipedia.org
However, with the exception of the coastal area, Andean cultures were typically "anti-urban", living in villages and small towns, with cities being much rarer than let's say Mesoamerica, but one of the major exceptions was the Inca Empire, which founded a lot of what could be called cities, although to be more specific they were, for the most part, large administrative sites where people from local communities came to serve the state for a period of time
Most were fairly new administrative sites, so in many cases there was little attachment to them, and after the war and pandemic hit, some were abandoned so as not to be occupied again, others, however, continued to be occupied but in many cases were moved (several times in some cases) over the centuries for a variety of reasons (for example, the current location of Quito in Ecuador, which is probably the reason why Ecuador is colored the same color as Peru on that map)