Description
A “World War 2 in Pacific & Asia” wall chart (70×100 cm) is an educational map poster designed to illustrate key theaters of World War II in the Asia-Pacific region, focusing on campaigns, battles, and territorial changes between 1937 and 1945.
Key Content Elements
Geographic Coverage: Displays East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific islands—covering Japan, China, Philippines, Indonesia, Australia, New Guinea, Malaya, Burma, and the Pacific island chains.
Major Theaters & Campaigns: Highlights important campaigns such as the Japanese occupation of China, attack on Pearl Harbor, battles of Midway, Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and the Burma/India campaigns.
Allied & Axis Movements: Shows the expansion and contraction of Japanese-held territory, US and Allied counter-offensives, notable amphibious landings, and changing front lines by year.
Annotated Details: Includes strategic information: naval bases, battle sites, key dates, arrows for troop movements, and brief notes on pivotal events like the atomic bombings and liberation operations.
Visual Style: Color-coded regions for Axis-held, Allied-controlled, occupied zones, and neutral areas; suitable for quick reference in classroom settings.
Educational and Catalog Use
These large laminated posters are used in history and geography classrooms to depict the scope of the Pacific War, its impact on Asia, and the multinational coordination in Allied victory.
Suitable for competitive exams, teaching aids, and catalog documentation in educational product lines.
Sourcing and Digital Images
Available from academic map publishers (N. C. Kansil & Sons, VCP), history poster vendors, and online teachers’ resource outlets, usually in waterproof, roll-mounted formats for durability.
Royalty-free historical and infographic maps (for JPEG 800×800 px specification) can be sourced from museum archives, teaching portals, and vintage poster shops for compliant catalog use.
To create a compliant chart, use authoritative layouts, era-specific labeling, and ensure accurate campaign representation for educational clarity.