Relationship | Definition | Category |
---|---|---|
| Two features that are located in the same place. | location-based |
| A geographical relationship where one feature contains the other feature in its entirety. | location-based |
|
If a place is entirely contained by another feature, use the is entirely located in relationship. You might be unsure if the place is wholly contained in another place. This might happen for historical units, where you're uncertain about boundaries. In this case, use 'partially located in' to show this uncertainty. Example: A historical polity covers a geographical area within part of four contemporary counties. This historical polity's area doesn't completely cover any of the counties. The historical polity is partially located in each of these four counties. | location-based |
intersects with | Two features that overlap. You may not be sure about the exact relationship between two regions, but know that they overlap in geographical territory at least partially. In this case, we recommend is the partial location of, not intersects with. If you think intersects with is preferable in your case, let us know. We'll include your case as an example in this documentation. Example: A natural area, river, or mountain which spans multiple administrative units, all of which it intersects with. | location-based |
is adjacent to | Two places which share a border. If they're close to each other but don't share an edge, use is near. | location-based |
is near | Two features near to each other. Example: A tourist site may be near to another tourist site. By including this relationship, you can help viewers plan trips. | location-based |
is centered in has centered in it | A place centrally located in another place. This is independent of whether or not a place is partially located in another place. Example:
| location-based |
has as an instantiation is an instantiation of | An instantiation of a metaphysical feature. Examples:
| cultural |
has as a part is part of | A relationship where one place is part of another, but not hierarchically or administratively. Places with this relationship usually (but not always) have the same feature type. If one place is part of another hierarchically or administratively, use has entirely located within it/is entirely located in. Example:
| cultural |
administers is administered by | An administrative relationship between two places. Examples:
| cultural |
has as an administrative seat is the administrative seat of | The relationship a nation, historical polity, or political administrative unit has with its capitals or seats. | cultural |
administrative headquarters of has as an administrative headquarters | The relationship between an entity (corporation, school district, or other) and its headquarters. | cultural |
is mother of is child of | A generic, hierarchical relationship between places. | cultural |
is succeeded by succeeds | Use this relationship when a place succeeds another place. Succession implies both a fundamental difference and a fundamental continuity. Succession also implies that the one feature has supplanted the previous feature. In many cases:
The 'is succeeded by/succeeds' relationship is independant of location. This means the geographical areacoveredbythe two places can vary. Here are some possibilities :
You can use other relationships to describe the geographical location relation between the original place and the successor. Example:
| cultural |
is owner of owned by | A relationship of ownership or property Example:
| cultural |
is affiliated with | A non-hierarchal relationship between two places. In this relationship, neither place is 'subordonate' to the other. Example:
| cultural |
is in conflict with | A relationship of conflict. Example:
| cultural |
is related to | This is a generic expression of the relationship between two places. Use this when none of the other more specific relationship types apply. | cultural |