Many Wikipedia articles on places include a "location map", a map to show where the place is. It would be even better if every such article included such a map.
Location maps exist in a very wide variety of styles. More consistency might be desirable. The purpose of this user subpage is to collect, and comment on, some location maps.
I welcome comments on thetalk page of this user page.
Each of the subsections below includes a location map, with a title that links to the article where I found the original. Some of them are infoboxes, from which I have deleted fields that do not affect the map. As I have caused this page to contain more than one infobox for what the infobox template thinks is the subject of this "article", this has caused some red error warnings: please ignore these.

I like this location map.
TheOxford article starts "Oxford .. is a city in central southern England." I can envisage two reasonable reactions to this:
This location map does all that can be expected by either. The latter reader will probably recognise and know the location of a map of England; the former won't care.
The map shows the urban district of Oxford rather than the city itself, which I consider reasonable.
(This is a cut-down infobox. It shows the name of the place as "maproom/maps" rather than as "Tavistock, Devon" because of the way infobox template works.)
This is also good. Again, it assumes that an interested reader viewer will recognise and know the location of a map of England, and an uninterested one won't care.

The article onAcadia starts "Acadia .. was a colony of New France in northeastern North America that included parts of eastern Quebec, the Maritime provinces, and modern-day Maine to the Kennebec River." The map does not include any of Maine. But Wikipedia editors have to use material that exists. This map seems to me reasonable for its purpose.
I have included it here because what it really shows is theMaritime Provinces, but it is very different from the following location map for the Maritime Provinces.
Note that in the inset, showing the position of Acadia in Canada, Canada has been oriented tilted clockwise relative to the way it is usually shown, so that the Maritime Provinces themselves are "the right way up".

This map locates the maritime Provinces using a map of the whole of Canada.
Note the different orientation of the Maritime Provinces in this map and the one above. Both maps have north at the top; in the map above the Maritime Provinces are therefore "the right way up", but in this map, it is the whole of Canada (or more specifically, Manitoba) that is "the right way up", with the maritime Provinces being tilted anticlockwise.
Iwamizawa | |
|---|---|
City | |
Location of Iwamizawa in | |
| Coordinates:43°12′N141°47′E / 43.200°N 141.783°E /43.200; 141.783 | |
| Country | Japan |
| Time zone | UTC+09:00 (JST) |
(Please ignore the red error message below the location map. It is the result of my putting several infoboxes with location maps on the same page.)
The two maps to the right locate the city of Iwazima withinSorachi Subprefecture, and within Japan. The latter is good, but the former relies on familiarity withSorachi Subprefecture, which I suspect few readers of English Wikipedia will have. Moreover, its map of Sorachi Subprefecture is different from the one in theSorachi Subprefecture article, shown to the left.


This map does a good job of showing where Germany is within Europe. But it shows the European Union (rather than Europe) in a ginger colour, which is misleading.
Also, it has an inset showing where Europe is in the world. I feel that this is unnecessary. The article says in its first sentence "Germany .. is .. in western-central Europe." Readers who care about where Germany is, are very likely to be able to find Europe on a map of the world.

This map locates these two 19th-century duchies correctly within Thuringia. But it assumes that readers will recognise the map of 19th-century Thuringia (which is different from the modern GermanLand), and be able to locate it within Germany. I think this is unrealistic.

This map locates theBritish Indian Ocean Territory within the Indian Ocean – not well, in my opinion, but acceptably. I have included it here because of its inset, which locates the main map (including Europe, most of Africa, and a large part of Asia) on a map of the world. I feel that this is unnecessary and unhelpful.
Sochi | |
|---|---|
| Coordinates:43°35′07″N39°43′13″E / 43.58528°N 39.72028°E /43.58528; 39.72028 | |
| Country | Russia |
| Federal subject | Krasnodar Krai |
These two maps do a good job. One locates the city of Sochi withinKrasnodar Krai, the other locates Krasnodar Krai within Russia. It would be better if the map that locates Krasnodar Krai included the whole of the Black Sea (on whose coast Sochi lies) and less of Eastern Siberia; but Wikipedia editors can only use the material available to them.

The map to the right locates the recently topicalHappisburgh footprints on a 400-yard stretch of the Norfolk coast, and on a map of the British Isles. Something intermediate in scale would help a lot.

Indeed, at the time of writing, it has already been replaced by a much better map, to the left. My thanks, and congratulations, toPhilg88 for creating such a good location map!
Lakshadweep | |
|---|---|
| Coordinates:10°34′N72°38′E / 10.57°N 72.63°E /10.57; 72.63 |
A remarkable location map: it omits the location. I assume that something has gone wrong in the infobox (not just here, but in theLakshadweep article), but I don't know how to fix it.
The map in the article has now been corrected.

This map locates a geological structure. It is centred on the western part of Washington State, though that may not be obvious. I eventually spotted the shape of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. I think it should do more to let the general reader know what part of the world it shows.
{{Geobox|Region}}I wonder how many readers of English-language Wikipedia are familiar with the shape ofFukushima Prefecture? Note that the map caption does not even give a link to the article about the prefecture. I have now added one to the article itself.

This is not a location map. But ituses a location map, as an inset, in a way which is in my opinion exactly right. Its location map shows enough of the surrounding area that almost any interested reader will be able to identify it, while being large enough in scale that it locates the city with as much precision as is likely to be useful.
Jeju | |
|---|---|
Location in South Korea |
This location map has three faults, two of them serious.
I have now replaced this map, in the en:Jeju City article, by a better one.

This map locatesBhagalpur( the small pink disk) withinBhagalpur district (the black area), and Bhagalpur district withinBihar state (the pink area), India. It does these things well.
However, if you are not familiar with Bihar, you may get the impression that it is on the north coast of India. This would be odd, as India does not have much north coast. In fact, the blue area (ok, it's only slightly blue, r=231 g=232 b=233) is not sea – the large blue area is part of Nepal, and the small blue areas are parts of Bangladesh. But it would be better to have used a colour other than blue.

This map locates the city ofHikone withinShiga prefecture in Japan.
Shiga city is towards the northern end of the 20-km long red area – this is not clear from the map. And there is no explanation of the light ginger areas in the map.
I recognise the shape ofLake Biwa, the white area in the centre of the map; and I assume that Japanese users will. But I suspect that few English-speaking users will recognise it.
So this location map has two flaws: most users won't understand what the map shows, and the map itself does not show the place that it is there to locate.


To the right is a good location map for Peru.
To the left is an alternative version which was substituted for the one on the right, and thankfully removed again a few days later. Maybe the version on the left will be preferred by anyone who doesn't recognise the shape of South America, but is able to work out where it is in the world by looking at the strange lop-ended stadium shape and the concave quadrilateral within it.<sarcasm>

I include this map because it is the only one I have found with three levels of submap.
| Ballindaloch Castle | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
| Coordinates | 57°24′42″N3°22′09″W / 57.4118°N 3.3693°W /57.4118; -3.3693 |
The location does not appear on the main map. The inset appears to show Ballindalloch Castle as near Berwick, instead of in Aberdeenshire. Easy to see how it happens, hard to know what to do about it(use a different map).
TheBallindalloch Castle article no longer uses this location map. It uses a much better one, put there byUsedtobecool.
<mapframe>: The JSON content is not valid GeoJSON+simplestyle. The list below shows all attempts to interpret it according tothe JSON Schema. Not all are errors.
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This is the least informative location map I've ever seen.

This (geological) fault is on the island of Java. The inset in its lower left shows the north-western part of Indonesia − Java is off the bottom of this inset, making the inset useless.