Configuring your Story Map
After clicking Done, you will immediately be redirected to Map Series Builder page, where you can choose the layout of the Story Map – either Tabbed, Side Accordion or Bulleted (should you wish to see what those may look like, you can click on View a live example to view an example in a new tab). For this example, select Tabbed (if it’s not already) and click Start.
Next you will be asked to give the Tabbed Map Series Story Map a title – in the text field, enter the title “Narratives from Medieval Swansea” and click the arrow button next to the field. Next, you’ll be requested to add a tab in the Add Tab window; for the title of the tab, in the text field, enter “A map showing the journeys of some historic figures in and around Swansea” and for the content, select Map (if it’s not already) and from the drop down next to Web map, select Browse for Maps. In the Select Web Map window, select the Web Map you created (Narratives from Medieval Swansea); back in the Add Tab, tick the box next to Legend (to show what the features from your various layers look like on the map), accept the other defaults and then click Add – a preliminary Story Map will be created from the given input.
On the left side of the created Story Map, will be an area for a Description, which is a place where we can add extra content to enrich the map. For the text that is entered into this area you may change the font style (bold, italics, or remove any formatting), text colour, font size, add media from various sources, add/remove hyperlinks, add bulleted or numbered lists, or change alignment.
Let’s add an image to the description via a Link (click on the “Insert an image, video or web page” button, under Media select the Image radio button, select the option for Link) using the Image link “http://www.medievalswansea.ac.uk/static/media/uploads/thwc.jpg” and the Image caption “The twice-hanged William Cragh“; click Apply when done and the image should now appear in the description text area.
After the picture add the following text:
An anonymous annal appended to Neath Abbey's Domesday Breviate details how in 1287, on the fifth of July, the castle of Oystermouth was seized and burnt. This castle belonged to the lords of Gower, the de Briouze family, who apprehended the men responsible for the attack and death of thirteen of the lord's men. Among them were the Welsh nobleman Trahaearn ap Hywel, and William ap Rhys or 'Cragh' who were both sentenced by the Lord William de Briouze Snr to be hanged. Decades later, in 1307, nine witnesses were called before representatives of Pope Clement V. They were questioned on what they could remember of a day nearly twenty years ago, when a condemned man by the name of William Cragh was hanged twice for his crimes, before being (apparently) miraculously restored to life. Their recollections combine to form a detailed snapshot of Swansea in the late thirteenth century; relationships between lords, ladies and their subjects, religious practices, and the realities of living in a multi-lingual, multi-cultural society.
(Feel free to play around with the various options available to alter the text)
The text itself that you put in the Description can be used to highlight the message of the map; when doing so, think about the message and clearly state what you wish the person looking at the Story Map to understand from the information provided.
With all the necessary information added, click Save in the top right corner of the page and your Story Map will be saved.