How is ths related to Unicode ? May be it's associated to CLDR for former regional classifcation of languages, but I doubt this will ever create any standardization for historic data that should remain as is without changes in their old sources for which there are no more any active maintainers, just interested people (basically historians that may comment about them the way they want or could invent their new terminology for analysts and archivists). And there's no limit, but as proofs are disapearing there will be lot of political issues with conflicting countries, and even before countres were internationally regulated (before the creation of the Society of Nations and later the United Nations) because they only existed by temporary mutual agreements or were the result of wars (and even in that case, most conquered areas were not fully controled by the theoretical rulers). Additionally, maps severaly lacked the modern precision, names were not standardized at all even in the same language, or within the same local population, depending on contexts of use or the kind of people using them (ecclesiastic institutions, states; parliaments, kings/queens/imperators or their vassals, judges, merchants, farmers...
It is alread y difficult to build maps for today's countries. There's in fact no rule in geography (every rule has its own exceptions, including when we just count today's countries standardized by ISO and people still disagreee about what is a country with the various forms of governments). 2014-10-31 16:29 GMT+01:00 Markus Scherer <[email protected]>: > On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 6:20 AM, "Jörg Knappen" <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Does someone here is aware of a standard or a de facto standard for names >> or codes of historical countries? For the requirement I have in mind, all >> countries where there was a printing press would be optimal coverage, >> anything going beyond 1974 (ISO 3166-3) will be better than nothing. >> > > I agree that that would be useful, but I am not aware of any such standard > or reliable source of data. > > This question might be more successful on the cldr-users mailing list > where people are more likely to think about region codes and display names. > (http://www.unicode.org/consortium/distlist.html) > > markus > > _______________________________________________ > Unicode mailing list > [email protected] > http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode > >
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