Jules Verne route map
Around the World in Eighty Days map, route, chapters, and distances
This page collects the full Mapped Fiction route for Around the World in Eighty Days. The interactive map follows the journey from Reform Club to Reform Club, while the notes below make the route crawlable and easy to audit.
Chapters
1-37
Route segments
31
Mapped distance
40,932 km
Travel media
7
Route overview
The mapped route uses Carriage, Rail, Ferry, Steamer, Elephant, Pilot boat, Sledge. Distances are either explicit in the source, geodesic between known locations, or estimated from the route notes where the title gives a fictional or approximate path.
- Reform Club departure: Reform Club to Charing Cross, 1.1 km by Carriage.
- London to Dover: Charing Cross to Dover, 109 km by Rail.
- Channel crossing: Dover to Calais, 43 km by Ferry.
- Calais to Paris: Calais to Paris, 236 km by Rail.
- Paris to Turin by Mont Cenis: Paris to Turin, 676 km by Rail.
- Turin to Brindisi: Turin to Brindisi, 991 km by Rail.
- Mongolia to Suez: Brindisi to Suez, 2,075 km by Steamer.
- Suez to Aden: Suez to Aden, 2,108 km by Steamer.
View the complete route table for Around the World in Eighty Days.
Chapter maps
- Chapter 1: In Which Phileas Fogg and Passepartout Accept Each Other, the One as Master, the Other as Man
- Chapter 2: In Which Passepartout Is Convinced That He Has at Last Found His Ideal
- Chapter 3: In Which a Conversation Takes Place Which Seems Likely to Cost Phileas Fogg Dear
- Chapter 4: In Which Phileas Fogg Astounds Passepartout, His Servant
- Chapter 5: In Which a New Species of Funds, Unknown to the Moneyed Men, Appears on Change
- Chapter 6: In Which Fix, the Detective, Betrays a Very Natural Impatience
- Chapter 7: Which Once More Demonstrates the Uselessness of Passports as Aids to Detectives
- Chapter 8: In Which Passepartout Talks Rather More, Perhaps, Than Is Prudent
- Chapter 9: In Which the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean Prove Propitious to the Designs of Phileas Fogg
- Chapter 10: In Which Passepartout Is Only Too Glad to Get Off with the Loss of His Shoes
- Chapter 11: In Which Phileas Fogg Secures a Curious Means of Conveyance at a Fabulous Price
- Chapter 12: In Which Phileas Fogg and His Companions Venture Across the Indian Forests, and What Ensued
- Chapter 13: In Which Passepartout Receives a New Proof That Fortune Favors the Brave
- Chapter 14: In Which Phileas Fogg Descends the Whole Length of the Beautiful Valley of the Ganges Without Ever Thinking of Seeing It
- Chapter 15: In Which the Bag of Banknotes Disgorges Some Thousands of Pounds More
- Chapter 16: In Which Fix Does Not Seem to Understand in the Least What Is Said to Him
- Chapter 17: Showing What Happened on the Voyage from Singapore to Hong Kong
- Chapter 18: In Which Phileas Fogg, Passepartout, and Fix Go Each About His Business
- Chapter 19: In Which Passepartout Takes a Too Great Interest in His Master, and What Comes of It
- Chapter 20: In Which Fix Comes Face to Face with Phileas Fogg
- Chapter 21: In Which the Master of the Tankadere Runs Great Risk of Losing a Reward of Two Hundred Pounds
- Chapter 22: In Which Passepartout Finds Out That, Even at the Antipodes, It Is Convenient to Have Some Money in One's Pocket
- Chapter 23: In Which Passepartout's Nose Becomes Outrageously Long
- Chapter 24: During Which Mr. Fogg and Party Cross the Pacific Ocean
- Chapter 25: In Which a Slight Glimpse Is Had of San Francisco
- Chapter 26: In Which Phileas Fogg and Party Travel by the Pacific Railroad
- Chapter 27: In Which Passepartout Undergoes, at a Speed of Twenty Miles an Hour, a Course of Mormon History
- Chapter 28: In Which Passepartout Does Not Succeed in Making Anybody Listen to Reason
- Chapter 29: In Which Certain Incidents Are Narrated Which Are Only to Be Met with on American Railroads
- Chapter 30: In Which Phileas Fogg Simply Does His Duty
- Chapter 31: In Which Fix, the Detective, Considerably Furthers the Interests of Phileas Fogg
- Chapter 32: In Which Phileas Fogg Engages in a Direct Struggle with Bad Fortune
- Chapter 33: In Which Phileas Fogg Shows Himself Equal to the Occasion
- Chapter 34: In Which Phileas Fogg at Last Reaches London
- Chapter 35: In Which Phileas Fogg Does Not Have to Repeat His Orders to Passepartout Twice
- Chapter 36: In Which Phileas Fogg's Name Is Once More at a Premium on Change
- Chapter 37: In Which It Is Shown That Phileas Fogg Gained Nothing by His Tour Around the World, Unless It Were Happiness
Primary source
The map is grounded in Project Gutenberg #103. Source links on route and chapter pages point to the relevant chapters or scenes where available.