Unwarped Antiquity: The Geodynamic Reinterpretation of Germania Magna

The scientific study of the historical geography of Central Europe, particularly the so-called Germania Magna, has traditionally been governed by an interdisciplinary paradigm that primarily relies on archaeological findings, philological text analyses, and a gradualist, geological basic assumption. In recent times, the research work of Sven Mildner (https://www.germania-magna.de), which combines a multidisciplinary, computer-assisted distortion analysis of the medieval cartography of Donnus Nicolaus Germanus – based on Claudius Ptolemy – with neocatastrophist, geodynamic models, has triggered an unorthodox re-evaluation of these established constants.¹ The present research report synthesizes the far-reaching implications arising from this approach, situates them within the philosophy of science, and focuses particularly on the regional geological perspective of the Saxon-Bohemian area.

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Germania Magna Reinterpretation by Sven Mildner sven mildner germania magna ptolemy claudius ptolemy donnus nicolaus germanus computer-assisted distortion analysis geodynamics neocatastrophism bohemian crater 536 AD late antique little ice age halley's comet impact event saxon-bohemian region thuringian kingdom migration period abraham gottlob werner czech crater caledonian deformation front cartographic anomalies historical geography