Scott -

I am a happy user of both AniMap and Centennia. The short answers to your
questions are: Is Centennia as detailed as Animap - no. Is it worth its
price - yes.

First, I wish AniMap went to the township level, not just county
(township being smaller political jurisdictions). In many counties of my
ancestors the township changes were as significant for record finding as
counties. You will find a similar problem in Centennia. Note that Centennia
says it is based upon actual control of land, not political boundaries.
Centennia has a free period of time download that you should check out
before buying to see if the detail suits your need.

I have found the mist value (to me) of Centennia to be able to see and
understand the "trials and tribulations" of the populace at the various
times and places of my immigrant ancestors homeland. That provides
important insights into the "why" they emigrated question. Worth the price
to me.

John

On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 6:14 PM, Scott Hall <seh0...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Anyone have an opinion on Centennia, the mapping software for Europe?
>
> I currently have AniMap and find it very useful for figuring out the
> history of county borders in the U.S.  Is Centennia as detailed?
>
> Here's my situation --
> I want to record place names in accordance with the common standard, that
> is, at the time the event occurred.  I have an entire family who came from
> Saint Wendel, which is in the Saarland of Germany.  Tracking the history of
> this region is not easy, as it has been, at various times in the last 200
> years, part of Lichtenstein, Prussia, Bavaria, the German Empire, Germany,
> an independent state, and a protectorate of the United Nations.
>
> If Centennia does nothing more than show me the change in borders of
> Germany, that's probably not enough detail for me.  I'd like to see the
> evolution of the Rheinland-Pflaz, and even, if possible Sankt Wendel Kreis,
> the district that Sankt Wendel sits in.
>
> So, particularly for users of AniMap, is Centennia worth its price?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott
>
>
>



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