Do I have to take mana from my deck or hand when tapping a dual land? [duplicate]What is the difference between lands and mana?How do dual lands and their mana work?What happens when you play Cloudshift on Borderland Ranger?When a land is granted a basic land type, what effects does that have?Underworld Connections: Tapping the Land for mana and ability?How does Charmed Pendant interact with Reaper King?Why would I want to use the activated ability of “Scalding Tarn”?How much mana does Radiant Fountain provide when tapped?How does exiling cards for Delve work?Does Unbridled Growth provide two mana or one?Sunbird's invocation implied rulesUnderrealm Lich and Divination

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Do I have to take mana from my deck or hand when tapping a dual land? [duplicate]


What is the difference between lands and mana?How do dual lands and their mana work?What happens when you play Cloudshift on Borderland Ranger?When a land is granted a basic land type, what effects does that have?Underworld Connections: Tapping the Land for mana and ability?How does Charmed Pendant interact with Reaper King?Why would I want to use the activated ability of “Scalding Tarn”?How much mana does Radiant Fountain provide when tapped?How does exiling cards for Delve work?Does Unbridled Growth provide two mana or one?Sunbird's invocation implied rulesUnderrealm Lich and Divination













11
















This question already has an answer here:



  • What is the difference between lands and mana?

    3 answers



  • How do dual lands and their mana work? [duplicate]

    2 answers



I have a land card, for example Stone Quarry which reads "T: Add R or W." Do I take the mana from my library or my hand?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Joe W, Hackworth, Pureferret, Zags, JonTheMon Mar 21 at 16:56


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 3





    Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

    – doppelgreener
    Mar 19 at 23:28






  • 4





    Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

    – Zulan
    Mar 20 at 8:28






  • 3





    @Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:28















11
















This question already has an answer here:



  • What is the difference between lands and mana?

    3 answers



  • How do dual lands and their mana work? [duplicate]

    2 answers



I have a land card, for example Stone Quarry which reads "T: Add R or W." Do I take the mana from my library or my hand?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Joe W, Hackworth, Pureferret, Zags, JonTheMon Mar 21 at 16:56


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 3





    Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

    – doppelgreener
    Mar 19 at 23:28






  • 4





    Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

    – Zulan
    Mar 20 at 8:28






  • 3





    @Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:28













11












11








11









This question already has an answer here:



  • What is the difference between lands and mana?

    3 answers



  • How do dual lands and their mana work? [duplicate]

    2 answers



I have a land card, for example Stone Quarry which reads "T: Add R or W." Do I take the mana from my library or my hand?










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:



  • What is the difference between lands and mana?

    3 answers



  • How do dual lands and their mana work? [duplicate]

    2 answers



I have a land card, for example Stone Quarry which reads "T: Add R or W." Do I take the mana from my library or my hand?





This question already has an answer here:



  • What is the difference between lands and mana?

    3 answers



  • How do dual lands and their mana work? [duplicate]

    2 answers







magic-the-gathering






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 20 at 14:50









doppelgreener

16.5k861125




16.5k861125










asked Mar 19 at 21:46









user26844user26844

6115




6115




marked as duplicate by Joe W, Hackworth, Pureferret, Zags, JonTheMon Mar 21 at 16:56


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Joe W, Hackworth, Pureferret, Zags, JonTheMon Mar 21 at 16:56


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 3





    Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

    – doppelgreener
    Mar 19 at 23:28






  • 4





    Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

    – Zulan
    Mar 20 at 8:28






  • 3





    @Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:28












  • 3





    Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

    – doppelgreener
    Mar 19 at 23:28






  • 4





    Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

    – Zulan
    Mar 20 at 8:28






  • 3





    @Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:28







3




3





Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

– doppelgreener
Mar 19 at 23:28





Related: How do dual lands and their mana work?

– doppelgreener
Mar 19 at 23:28




4




4





Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

– Zulan
Mar 20 at 8:28





Also: Compare Stone Quarry with Arid Mesa to see how the other effect is worded.

– Zulan
Mar 20 at 8:28




3




3





@Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 9:28





@Zulan found Terrain Generator as an example of "from your hand"

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 9:28










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















38














You are confusing Lands with Mana, a common beginners' mistake.



Mana is a resource that you use to cast spells; it is not represented by cards; you can not physically see it. When you tap a land, such as a Mountain, you add a red mana to your mana pool, which means you now have 1 red mana to spend.



When you tap a Stone Quarry, you choose to either add a red mana to your mana pool, or to add a white mana to your mana pool. Either way you end up with 1 mana in your mana pool. You do not get any land cards from your library or your hand.



Note that tapping a Stone Quarry is very similar to tapping a Mountain. When you tap a Mountain, you are activating an ability that says ""T:Add R." This ability is just not printed on the card for basic lands; it is instead within the rulebook for all basic lands.



An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:



Arid Mesa's ability says:




Search your library for a Mountain or Plains card, put it onto the battlefield, then shuffle your library.




and Terrain Generator's ability says




You may put a basic land card from your hand onto the battlefield tapped.




Note that Arid Mesa can't even produce mana, even though it is a land. Lands commonly produce mana, but not all of them do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 5





    Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:30






  • 3





    Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

    – Malco
    Mar 20 at 14:03


















16














enter image description here



Take a look at the old mountains, they had written on them "T: Add R to your mana pool" from 6th edition on they stopped printing that on the card itself, but the rules still include that all lands with the type Mountain tap for R, that's all the land does is add red mana when tapped. Lands produce mana, they aren't actually mana themselves. This is covered in the Comprehensive Rules(emphasis mine):




305.6 The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words "basic land type," it's referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has the intrinsic ability "T: Add [mana symbol]," even if the text box doesn't actually contain that text or the object has no text box. For Plains, [mana symbol] is W; for Islands, U; for Swamps, B; for Mountains, R; and for Forests, G. See rule 107.4a. See also rule 605, "Mana Abilities."




That's also why the ability to add mana is in brackets on the more recent printings of typed duals like Sacred Foundry because being a mountain and a plains means it can tap for red or for white, it doesn't need to be explicit on the card, anything in brackets is just there as a reminder.






share|improve this answer

























  • I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:31






  • 5





    @JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:39







  • 3





    @JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:43











  • Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:55

















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









38














You are confusing Lands with Mana, a common beginners' mistake.



Mana is a resource that you use to cast spells; it is not represented by cards; you can not physically see it. When you tap a land, such as a Mountain, you add a red mana to your mana pool, which means you now have 1 red mana to spend.



When you tap a Stone Quarry, you choose to either add a red mana to your mana pool, or to add a white mana to your mana pool. Either way you end up with 1 mana in your mana pool. You do not get any land cards from your library or your hand.



Note that tapping a Stone Quarry is very similar to tapping a Mountain. When you tap a Mountain, you are activating an ability that says ""T:Add R." This ability is just not printed on the card for basic lands; it is instead within the rulebook for all basic lands.



An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:



Arid Mesa's ability says:




Search your library for a Mountain or Plains card, put it onto the battlefield, then shuffle your library.




and Terrain Generator's ability says




You may put a basic land card from your hand onto the battlefield tapped.




Note that Arid Mesa can't even produce mana, even though it is a land. Lands commonly produce mana, but not all of them do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 5





    Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:30






  • 3





    Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

    – Malco
    Mar 20 at 14:03















38














You are confusing Lands with Mana, a common beginners' mistake.



Mana is a resource that you use to cast spells; it is not represented by cards; you can not physically see it. When you tap a land, such as a Mountain, you add a red mana to your mana pool, which means you now have 1 red mana to spend.



When you tap a Stone Quarry, you choose to either add a red mana to your mana pool, or to add a white mana to your mana pool. Either way you end up with 1 mana in your mana pool. You do not get any land cards from your library or your hand.



Note that tapping a Stone Quarry is very similar to tapping a Mountain. When you tap a Mountain, you are activating an ability that says ""T:Add R." This ability is just not printed on the card for basic lands; it is instead within the rulebook for all basic lands.



An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:



Arid Mesa's ability says:




Search your library for a Mountain or Plains card, put it onto the battlefield, then shuffle your library.




and Terrain Generator's ability says




You may put a basic land card from your hand onto the battlefield tapped.




Note that Arid Mesa can't even produce mana, even though it is a land. Lands commonly produce mana, but not all of them do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 5





    Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:30






  • 3





    Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

    – Malco
    Mar 20 at 14:03













38












38








38







You are confusing Lands with Mana, a common beginners' mistake.



Mana is a resource that you use to cast spells; it is not represented by cards; you can not physically see it. When you tap a land, such as a Mountain, you add a red mana to your mana pool, which means you now have 1 red mana to spend.



When you tap a Stone Quarry, you choose to either add a red mana to your mana pool, or to add a white mana to your mana pool. Either way you end up with 1 mana in your mana pool. You do not get any land cards from your library or your hand.



Note that tapping a Stone Quarry is very similar to tapping a Mountain. When you tap a Mountain, you are activating an ability that says ""T:Add R." This ability is just not printed on the card for basic lands; it is instead within the rulebook for all basic lands.



An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:



Arid Mesa's ability says:




Search your library for a Mountain or Plains card, put it onto the battlefield, then shuffle your library.




and Terrain Generator's ability says




You may put a basic land card from your hand onto the battlefield tapped.




Note that Arid Mesa can't even produce mana, even though it is a land. Lands commonly produce mana, but not all of them do.






share|improve this answer















You are confusing Lands with Mana, a common beginners' mistake.



Mana is a resource that you use to cast spells; it is not represented by cards; you can not physically see it. When you tap a land, such as a Mountain, you add a red mana to your mana pool, which means you now have 1 red mana to spend.



When you tap a Stone Quarry, you choose to either add a red mana to your mana pool, or to add a white mana to your mana pool. Either way you end up with 1 mana in your mana pool. You do not get any land cards from your library or your hand.



Note that tapping a Stone Quarry is very similar to tapping a Mountain. When you tap a Mountain, you are activating an ability that says ""T:Add R." This ability is just not printed on the card for basic lands; it is instead within the rulebook for all basic lands.



An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:



Arid Mesa's ability says:




Search your library for a Mountain or Plains card, put it onto the battlefield, then shuffle your library.




and Terrain Generator's ability says




You may put a basic land card from your hand onto the battlefield tapped.




Note that Arid Mesa can't even produce mana, even though it is a land. Lands commonly produce mana, but not all of them do.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 20 at 14:30

























answered Mar 19 at 22:06









GendoIkariGendoIkari

45.3k396176




45.3k396176







  • 5





    Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:30






  • 3





    Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

    – Malco
    Mar 20 at 14:03












  • 5





    Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 9:30






  • 3





    Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

    – Malco
    Mar 20 at 14:03







5




5





Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 9:30





Good answer, but could use Arid Mesa and Terrain Generator as examples of wording for playing lands from library or hand.

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 9:30




3




3





Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

– Malco
Mar 20 at 14:03





Just to avoid confusion about number of land drops, you might want to change: "An effect that has you get (play) a land card from your hand or library would specifically say so:" to: "An effect that has you put a land card from your hand or library onto the battlefield would specifically say so:"

– Malco
Mar 20 at 14:03











16














enter image description here



Take a look at the old mountains, they had written on them "T: Add R to your mana pool" from 6th edition on they stopped printing that on the card itself, but the rules still include that all lands with the type Mountain tap for R, that's all the land does is add red mana when tapped. Lands produce mana, they aren't actually mana themselves. This is covered in the Comprehensive Rules(emphasis mine):




305.6 The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words "basic land type," it's referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has the intrinsic ability "T: Add [mana symbol]," even if the text box doesn't actually contain that text or the object has no text box. For Plains, [mana symbol] is W; for Islands, U; for Swamps, B; for Mountains, R; and for Forests, G. See rule 107.4a. See also rule 605, "Mana Abilities."




That's also why the ability to add mana is in brackets on the more recent printings of typed duals like Sacred Foundry because being a mountain and a plains means it can tap for red or for white, it doesn't need to be explicit on the card, anything in brackets is just there as a reminder.






share|improve this answer

























  • I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:31






  • 5





    @JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:39







  • 3





    @JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:43











  • Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:55















16














enter image description here



Take a look at the old mountains, they had written on them "T: Add R to your mana pool" from 6th edition on they stopped printing that on the card itself, but the rules still include that all lands with the type Mountain tap for R, that's all the land does is add red mana when tapped. Lands produce mana, they aren't actually mana themselves. This is covered in the Comprehensive Rules(emphasis mine):




305.6 The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words "basic land type," it's referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has the intrinsic ability "T: Add [mana symbol]," even if the text box doesn't actually contain that text or the object has no text box. For Plains, [mana symbol] is W; for Islands, U; for Swamps, B; for Mountains, R; and for Forests, G. See rule 107.4a. See also rule 605, "Mana Abilities."




That's also why the ability to add mana is in brackets on the more recent printings of typed duals like Sacred Foundry because being a mountain and a plains means it can tap for red or for white, it doesn't need to be explicit on the card, anything in brackets is just there as a reminder.






share|improve this answer

























  • I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:31






  • 5





    @JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:39







  • 3





    @JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:43











  • Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:55













16












16








16







enter image description here



Take a look at the old mountains, they had written on them "T: Add R to your mana pool" from 6th edition on they stopped printing that on the card itself, but the rules still include that all lands with the type Mountain tap for R, that's all the land does is add red mana when tapped. Lands produce mana, they aren't actually mana themselves. This is covered in the Comprehensive Rules(emphasis mine):




305.6 The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words "basic land type," it's referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has the intrinsic ability "T: Add [mana symbol]," even if the text box doesn't actually contain that text or the object has no text box. For Plains, [mana symbol] is W; for Islands, U; for Swamps, B; for Mountains, R; and for Forests, G. See rule 107.4a. See also rule 605, "Mana Abilities."




That's also why the ability to add mana is in brackets on the more recent printings of typed duals like Sacred Foundry because being a mountain and a plains means it can tap for red or for white, it doesn't need to be explicit on the card, anything in brackets is just there as a reminder.






share|improve this answer















enter image description here



Take a look at the old mountains, they had written on them "T: Add R to your mana pool" from 6th edition on they stopped printing that on the card itself, but the rules still include that all lands with the type Mountain tap for R, that's all the land does is add red mana when tapped. Lands produce mana, they aren't actually mana themselves. This is covered in the Comprehensive Rules(emphasis mine):




305.6 The basic land types are Plains, Island, Swamp, Mountain, and Forest. If an object uses the words "basic land type," it's referring to one of these subtypes. A land with a basic land type has the intrinsic ability "T: Add [mana symbol]," even if the text box doesn't actually contain that text or the object has no text box. For Plains, [mana symbol] is W; for Islands, U; for Swamps, B; for Mountains, R; and for Forests, G. See rule 107.4a. See also rule 605, "Mana Abilities."




That's also why the ability to add mana is in brackets on the more recent printings of typed duals like Sacred Foundry because being a mountain and a plains means it can tap for red or for white, it doesn't need to be explicit on the card, anything in brackets is just there as a reminder.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 20 at 14:14

























answered Mar 20 at 2:12









AndrewAndrew

5,9751839




5,9751839












  • I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:31






  • 5





    @JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:39







  • 3





    @JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:43











  • Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:55

















  • I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:31






  • 5





    @JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:39







  • 3





    @JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

    – Andrew
    Mar 20 at 14:43











  • Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

    – JollyJoker
    Mar 20 at 14:55
















I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 14:31





I didn't realize this held true for non-basic lands with basic land types. Have they ever left out the explicit text for nonbasic lands that still have a basic land type?

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 14:31




5




5





@JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

– Andrew
Mar 20 at 14:39






@JollyJoker Yes, the textboxes of the expedition shock lands didn't even have reminder text, only "As ~ enters the battlefield, you may pay 2 life. If you don't, ~ enters the battlefield tapped." Take a look at Temple Garden

– Andrew
Mar 20 at 14:39





3




3





@JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

– Andrew
Mar 20 at 14:43





@JollyJoker It's also why Urborg, Tomb of Yawgmoth works, because adding the type swamp to a nonbasic land makes it able to tap for black.

– Andrew
Mar 20 at 14:43













Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 14:55





Good point on Urborg. I just haven't noticed those shock lands

– JollyJoker
Mar 20 at 14:55



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Старые Смолеговицы Содержание История | География | Демография | Достопримечательности | Примечания | НавигацияHGЯOLHGЯOL41 206 832 01641 606 406 141Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области«Переписная оброчная книга Водской пятины 1500 года», С. 793«Карта Ингерманландии: Ивангорода, Яма, Копорья, Нотеборга», по материалам 1676 г.«Генеральная карта провинции Ингерманландии» Э. Белинга и А. Андерсина, 1704 г., составлена по материалам 1678 г.«Географический чертёж над Ижорскою землей со своими городами» Адриана Шонбека 1705 г.Новая и достоверная всей Ингерманландии ланткарта. Грав. А. Ростовцев. СПб., 1727 г.Топографическая карта Санкт-Петербургской губернии. 5-и верстка. Шуберт. 1834 г.Описание Санкт-Петербургской губернии по уездам и станамСпецкарта западной части России Ф. Ф. Шуберта. 1844 г.Алфавитный список селений по уездам и станам С.-Петербургской губернииСписки населённых мест Российской Империи, составленные и издаваемые центральным статистическим комитетом министерства внутренних дел. XXXVII. Санкт-Петербургская губерния. По состоянию на 1862 год. СПб. 1864. С. 203Материалы по статистике народного хозяйства в С.-Петербургской губернии. Вып. IX. Частновладельческое хозяйство в Ямбургском уезде. СПб, 1888, С. 146, С. 2, 7, 54Положение о гербе муниципального образования Курское сельское поселениеСправочник истории административно-территориального деления Ленинградской области.Топографическая карта Ленинградской области, квадрат О-35-23-В (Хотыницы), 1930 г.АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1933, С. 27, 198АрхивированоАдминистративно-экономический справочник по Ленинградской области. — Л., 1936, с. 219АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1966, с. 175АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1973, С. 180АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, С. 38АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб., 2007, с. 60АрхивированоКоряков Юрий База данных «Этно-языковой состав населённых пунктов России». Ленинградская область.Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, С. 41АрхивированоКультовый комплекс Старые Смолеговицы // Электронная энциклопедия ЭрмитажаПроблемы выявления, изучения и сохранения культовых комплексов с каменными крестами: по материалам работ 2016-2017 гг. в Ленинградской области