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Place of Origin: British
Queen Eleanor Memorial Cross – Antique Engraving of Waltham Cross, c.1791
Located in Langweer, NL
Queen Eleanor Memorial Cross – Antique Engraving of Waltham Cross, c.1791
This finely executed antique engraving depicts the Eleanor Cross at Waltham, one of the twelve monumental c...
Category
18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$152 Sale Price
20% Off
Inner Front of Cowdray House – Antique Engraving from the Gateway, Sussex 1796
Located in Langweer, NL
Inner Front of Cowdray House – Antique Engraving from the Gateway, Sussex 1796
This finely detailed antique engraving captures the inner front of Cowdray House in West Sussex, Engla...
Category
18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$152 Sale Price
20% Off
Antique Map of North Africa and South Africa by Black, 1854
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'Africa north part - Africa south part'. Old map of Africa showing the region of Morocco, Algeria and South Africa. This map orginates from 'General Atlas Of The W...
Category
19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Rood Loft St George’s Chapel Windsor – Antique Architectural Engraving, 1789
Located in Langweer, NL
Plan & Elevation of Rood Loft – Antique Engraving of St George’s Chapel, Windsor, 1789
This finely executed antique engraving presents the plan and elev...
Category
18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$187 Sale Price
20% Off
Buckingham Both Shyre and Shire John Speed 1610 Gilded Frame
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Just purchased more information to follow.
In unrestored condition, the sheet can be cleaned.
Category
17th Century Baroque Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map of the African Coast, Gulf of Guinea, from Sierra Leone to Gabon, 1788
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'Drawn from d'Anvilles Map of the Coast of Guinea, Between Sierra Leone and the crossing of the Line.'
Map of the African coast, Gulf of Guinea, from Sierra Le...
Category
1780s Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$441 Sale Price
20% Off
Antique Map of Straits of Makassar by J.W. Norie, Engraved Chart, 1820
Located in Langweer, NL
Description: Antique map titled 'A New Chart of the Straits of Macassar with various additions
improvements by J.W. Norie'.
Rare and beautifully engraved chart of the Straits of Makassar showing Eastern Borneo and Celebes coast lines. With various smaller inset maps including a plan of the shoals off ragged and shoal points in Borneo, the Bay of Bonthain and the Straits of Salayr.
Artists and Engravers: John William Norie (1772-1843), acquired the chart publishing business of William Heather after he died in 1812. He went into partnership with George Wilson...
Category
1820s Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$2,639 Sale Price
20% Off
Decorative Antique Map of the Malay Archipelago or East Indies Island, 1851
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map Indonesia titled 'Malay Archipelago, or East India Islands'. With vignettes of Victoria Mount, New Guinea, Nativaes of New Guinea an...
Category
1850s Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$1,055 Sale Price
20% Off
1859 Vintage Maps of England and Wales: Blackie
s Imperial Geographic Detail
Located in Langweer, NL
The "Antique Map of England & Wales" from 'The Imperial Atlas of Modern Geography', published by W. G. Blackie in 1859, is an original antique map that provides a detailed depiction ...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$383 Sale Price / set
20% Off
Antique Map of the Asiatic Archipelago by E. Stanford, circa 1910
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique folding map titled 'London Atlas Map of the Asiatic Archipelago'. Centered on the Philippines and Borneo, the map shows a number of different seasonal passages through the region to Hong Kong and Macao. With inset maps of Singapore...
Category
20th Century British Maps
Materials
Paper
$779 Sale Price
35% Off
Antique Map of China and the East Indies by Lowry, 1852
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'China & Indian Archipelago'. Two individual sheets of China and the East Indies. This map originates from 'Lowry's table Atlas constructed and engraved from the m...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Map of New South Wales by Tallis, circa 1851
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'New South Wales'. Decorative and detailed map of New South Wales which was drawn and engraved by J. Rapkin (vignettes by H. Warren ...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Map of the Upper and Lower Rhine by Cary, 1811
By John Cary
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'A New Map of the Circles of the Upper and Lower Rhine'. Antique map covering an area from Westphalia and Lower Saxony in the north to France and Swabia in the south.
Category
Early 19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Map of England and Wales
North
by A.K. Johnston, 1865
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique map titled 'England and Wales (Northern Sheet)'. This map originates from the ‘Royal Atlas of Modern Geography’ by Alexander Keith Johnston. Published by William Blackwood an...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique English Map – Southern England
Wales, Johnston’s Royal Atlas, 1865
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique Map of England & Wales (Southern Sheet) – Johnston’s Royal Atlas, 1865
This finely engraved antique map, titled *England and Wales (Southern Sheet)*, was published in 1865 i...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Map of North-Western and South Africa by A.K. Johnston, 1865
Located in Langweer, NL
Two maps on one sheet titled 'North-Western Africa' and 'Southern Africa'. Depicting Morocco, Algeria, Tunis, Cape Colony, Natal and more. This map originates from the ‘Royal Atlas o...
Category
Mid-19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Map of Sweden and Norway by H. Moll, circa 1715
Located in Langweer, NL
Beautiful and rare map of Sweden and Norway including English text. This map most likely originates from 'The Compleat geographer, or, The chorography and topography of all the known...
Category
Early 18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Mid-18th Century Hand Drawn English Farm Map on Vellum, circa 1740s
Located in San Francisco, CA
Mid-18th century hand drawn English farm map on Vellum circa 1740s
Henry Maxted & Isaac Terry, Surveyors.
A Map of a Farm in the Parish of Blean in the County of KENT: Belonging to Mrs Elizabeth Hodgson circa 1743.
A beautiful hand drawn map...
Category
Mid-18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Lambskin
Early 19th Century Original Framed Land Indenture, England, 1810
Located in Lambertville, NJ
A large hand written land indenture document England, 1810, framed. The beautifully hand written document mounted on board with a red velvet border and ...
Category
1810s Regency Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Giltwood, Parchment Paper
Antique County Map, Berkshire, English Framed Lithograph, Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Berkshire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of Berksh...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique County Map, Middlesex, English, Framed, Litho, Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Middlesex. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of Middle...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Lithography Map, Derbyshire, English, Framed Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Derbyshire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of Derby...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Wood, Paper
Flanders, Holland
Norfolk: Hand-Colored 17th Century Sea Chart by Collins
By Captain Greenvile Collins
Located in Alamo, CA
This hand-colored chart of the seas about Flanders, Holland, Frisia, and Norfolk is from "Great Britain's Coasting Pilot. Being a New and Exact Survey of the Sea-Coast of England" by...
Category
Late 17th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$2,220 Sale Price
20% Off
Antique Berkshire Map, English County, Framed Engraving, Cartography, Lithograph
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique county map of Berkshire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of Berkshire a...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Wood, Paper
Antique County Map, Lancashire, English, Framed Lithography, Cartography, C.1860
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Lancashire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of Lanca...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Wood, Paper
Small Antique County Map, Northamptonshire, English, Framed, Cartography, C.1850
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is a small antique county map of Northamptonshire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Antique Coaching Road Map Cranborne to Dorchester, Framed Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique coaching road map of Cranborne to Dorchester. An English, framed lithograph engraving of regional interest with second map to reverse, dating to the mid 18th cent...
Category
Mid-18th Century Other Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Wood, Paper
Antique County Map, Northamptonshire, English, Framed Cartography, Richard Blome
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique county map of Northamptonshire. An English, framed atlas engraving by Richard Blome, dating to the 17th century and later.
Fascinating cartography, oriented 90 d...
Category
Late 17th Century Charles II Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Wood, Paper
Antique Lithography Map, Environs of Southampton, English, Framed, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map 'The Environs of Southampton'. An English, framed town engraving of cartographic interest by John James Dower, dating to the Victorian period and ...
Category
Late 19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood
Antique Lithography Map, Westmoreland, English, Framed, Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Westmoreland. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of the ...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood
Antique Lithography Map, Buckinghamshire, English, Framed Cartography, Victorian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Buckinghamshire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century and later.
Superb lithography of B...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood, Paper
Antique Lithography Map, Northumberland, English, Framed, Engraving, Cartography
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Northumberland. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the mid 19th century a...
Category
Mid-19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood
Antique Lithography Map, Worcestershire, English, Framed Engraving, Cartography
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Worcestershire. An English, framed atlas engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the early 19th centur...
Category
Early 19th Century Regency Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood
Antique Lithography Map, Durham, English, Framed, Cartography, Early Georgian
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is an antique lithography map of Durham. An English, framed engraving of cartographic interest, dating to the early 18th century and later, circa 1720.
Superb lithography of Du...
Category
Early 18th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Wood
English Engraved Hand Colored Map of the North Eastern United States, circa 1817
Located in Charleston, SC
English copper engraved hand colored map of the North Eastern United States matted under glass in a gilt frame, Early 19th Century. Drawn and Engraved for Thomson's New General Atlas...
Category
1810s George III Antique British Maps
Materials
Glass, Giltwood, Paint, Paper
Early 19th Century Hand Coloured Map of North America by Aaron Arrowsmith
By Aaron Arrowsmith
Located in Hamilton, Ontario
Hand coloured map in French by English cartographer Aaron Arrowsmith (1750–1823) titled "Amerique Septentionale" (North America).
Map size: 9.5" x 8"
Mat size: 20.5" x 14.25".
Category
Early 19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$795 Sale Price
36% Off
Map Southern Scotland Thomas Conder Alex Hogg 1795
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
A new map of the southern part of Scotland containing the counties of Stirling, Lanerk, Renfrew, Linlithgow, Edinburgh, Peebles, Haddingtoun, Berwick, Selkirk, Roxburgh, Dumfries, Wigtoun, Kirkudbright & Air
Published by Alex Hogg at the Kings Arms...
Category
18th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Road Map, John Ogilby, No 54, London, Yarmouth, Britannia
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
The Road from London to Yarmouth com. Norfolk. By John Ogilby, His Majesties Cosmographer. Containing 122 miles, 5 furlongs. No 54.
From Standard in Co...
Category
1670s Baroque Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Chart of the Harbour of Liverpool
Located in Cheshire, GB
PL Burdett A Chart of the Harbour of Liverpool hand coloured. Encased in an ebonised frame.
Dimensions
Height 23.5 Inches
Width 28 Inches
Depth 1 Inches
Category
Early 20th Century British Maps
Materials
Paper
$633 Sale Price
20% Off
Map of Essex by Emanuel Bowen
Located in Cheshire, GB
Map of part of Essex and part of Kent, hand-coloured. Encased in an ebonized and gilded frame.
Dimensions
Height 25.5 Inches
Length 32.5 Inches
width 1 Inches.
Category
Late 19th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$991 Sale Price
50% Off
Map Road Strip Britannia Sheet 2 John Ogilby London Aberistwith Islip Bramyard
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
From John Ogilby's, 'Britannia, an Illustration of the Kingdom of
England and Dominion of Wales'. First published in 1675 it remains the greatest advance ...
Category
17th Century Baroque Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Kyle Carrick Aireshire Thomas Kitchen 1749
By Thomas Kitchin
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
A Map of Kyle & Carrick Aireshire Thomas Kitchen 1749
In original black and gold frame
Just purchased more information to follow
MAKER Thomas Kitchin (1718-1784) English engrave...
Category
18th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Road Map Britannia No 32 the Road from London to Barnstable John Ogilby Framed
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
A road map from Britannia, by John Ogilby Esq., Cosmographer and Geographick Printer to Charles II. Containing 293 miles. No 32.
From Standard in Cornhill London to Andover thence to Amesbury, to Shruton, to Warminster, to Maiden-Bradley, to Bruton, to Weston, to Ascot and to Bridgewater
Hand coloured, some foxing and creasing, commensurate with age.
Floated in a cream mount with a gilded linear border within a burr walnut, ebonised and gilded frame.
Provenance : purchased as pair from a collector with no 15 London to St Davids. Framed as a pair.
Measures: Black Linear Border around Map Length 44cm., 17 1/8" Height 36cm., 14".
Full Sheet Length 51cm., 20" Height 39cm., 15 1/4"
Frame Length 62cm., 24 1/2 " Height 52cm., 20 1/2"
Literature: In a remarkable life John Ogilby pursued, several careers, each ending in misfortune, and yet he always emerged undeterred, to carry on. His modern reputation is based on his final career, started in his sixty-sixth year, as a publisher of maps and geographical accounts.
Ogilby was born outside Dundee, in 1600, the son of a Scottish gentleman. While he was still a child, the family moved to London. When the elder Ogilby was imprisoned for debt, the young John invested his savings in a lottery, won a minor prize, and settled his father's debts. Unfortunately, not enough money was left to secure John a good apprenticeship; instead, he was apprenticed to a dance master. Ogilby was soon dancing in masques at court but, one day, while executing a particularly ambitious leap, he landed badly. The accident left him with a permanent limp, and ended his dancing career. However, he had come to the attention of Thomas Wentworth, later Earl of Strafford, Charles I's most senior minister. Ever one to exploit his contacts, Ogilby became a dance instructor in Strafford's household.
When Strafford was sent to Ireland, Ogilby accompanied him as Deputy-Master of the Kings Revels, and then Master of Revels. In Dublin, he built the New Theatre, in St. Werburgh Street, which prospered at first, but the Irish Rebellion, in 1641, cost Ogilby his fortune, which he estimated at £2,000, and almost his life. After brief service as a soldier, he returned to England, survived shipwreck on the way, and arrived back penniless.
On his return, Ogilby turned his attention to the Latin classics, as a translator and publisher. His first faltering attempt, in 1649, was a translation of the works of Virgil, but after his marriage to a wealthy widow the same year, his publishing activities received a considerable boost. One means by which Ogilby financed these volumes was by subscription, securing advance payments from his patrons, in return for including their name and coats-of-arms on the plates of illustrations. Another approach was to secure a patron, preferably in the court circle. Ogilby's first patron was Strafford, who found out too late that all leading ministers are dispensable when Charles I assented to his execution in 1641. As he re-established himself, Ogilby sought a new patron, the King himself.
In 1661, Ogilby was approached to write poetry for Charles II's coronation procession; he later published 'The Relation of His Majesties Entertainment Passing Through the City of London', and a much enlarged edition the following year, which included a Fine set of plates depicting the procession. Royal favour was bestowed in 1674 when John Ogilby received the title of 'His Majesty's Cosmographer and Geographick Printer' with a salary of £13.6s.8d per annum.
In 1665, Ogilby left London to avoid the Plague then ravaging the capital. The following year, in the Great Fire of London, Ogilby claimed that he lost his entire stock of books valued at some £3,000, as well as his shop and house, leaving him worth just £5.
As he sought to restore his fortunes, Ogilby was already looking in new directions. The initial opportunity he seized on was the reconstruction of London's burnt-out centre. He secured appointment as a 'sworn viewer', whose duty was to establish the property boundaries as they existed before the Fire. Ogilby was assisted in the project by his step-grandson, William Morgan...
Category
Late 17th Century Charles II Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Bedfordshire General Framed
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
A general map of Bedfordshire with its hundreds
A scale of 5 miles
in the original green mount and traditional black and gold frame. Measures: 36cm 14" high.
Category
18th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
20thC Leather Cased Collection Of Bartholomew Maps Of Great Britain c.1920
Located in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent
Antique 20th Century leather-cased collection of Bartholomew British road maps by Edward Stanford Ltd of London. One volume features a map of the entire British Isles, divided into n...
Category
20th Century Other British Maps
Materials
Leather, Paper
Road Map John Ogilby London St David
s Britannia No 15 Abingdon Monmouth Framed
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
John Ogilby (British 1600-1676) Cosmographer and Geographick Printer to Charles II. A road map from Britannia, 1675/6. No 15.
The continuation of the r...
Category
1670s Baroque Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Devonshire Richard Creighton J&C Walker Sculp Samuel Lewis
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Devonshire drawn by Richard Creighton with reference to the Unions
Artist Richard Creighton
Engraved by J&C Walker Sculp
Published in Samuel Lewis Topographical Dictionary 1831, a...
Category
19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Road Map Britannia 1675/6 No 5 Road London to Barwick, London Stilton Grey Frame
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
John Ogilby (British 1600-1676) cosmographer and geographick printer to Charles II.
A road map from Britannia, 1675/6. No 5, The road from London to Barwick: London to Stilton
In a grey painted and gilded frame.
In a remarkable life John Ogilby pursued, several careers, each ending in misfortune, and yet he always emerged undeterred, to carry on. His modern reputation is based on his final career, started in his sixty-sixth year, as a publisher of maps and geographical accounts.
Ogilby was born outside Dundee, in 1600, the son of a Scottish gentleman. While he was still a child, the family moved to London. When the elder Ogilby was imprisoned for debt, the young John invested his savings in a lottery, won a minor prize, and settled his father's debts. Unfortunately, not enough money was left to secure John a good apprenticeship; instead, he was apprenticed to a dance master. Ogilby was soon dancing in masques at court but, one day, while executing a particularly ambitious leap, he landed badly. The accident left him with a permanent limp, and ended his dancing career. However, he had come to the attention of Thomas Wentworth, later Earl of Strafford, Charles I's most senior minister. Ever one to exploit his contacts, Ogilby became a dance instructor in Strafford's household.
When Strafford was sent to Ireland, Ogilby accompanied him as Deputy-Master of the Kings Revels, and then Master of Revels. In Dublin, he built the New Theatre, in St. Werburgh Street, which prospered at first, but the Irish Rebellion, in 1641, cost Ogilby his fortune, which he estimated at £2,000, and almost his life. After brief service as a soldier, he returned to England, survived shipwreck on the way, and arrived back penniless.
On his return, Ogilby turned his attention to the Latin classics, as a translator and publisher. His first faltering attempt, in 1649, was a translation of the works of Virgil, but after his marriage to a wealthy widow the same year, his publishing activities received a considerable boost. One means by which Ogilby financed these volumes was by subscription, securing advance payments from his patrons, in return for including their name and coats-of-arms on the plates of illustrations. Another approach was to secure a patron, preferably in the court circle. Ogilby's first patron was Strafford, who found out too late that all leading ministers are dispensable when Charles I assented to his execution in 1641. As he re-established himself, Ogilby sought a new patron, the King himself.
In 1661, Ogilby was approached to write poetry for Charles II's coronation procession; he later published 'The Relation of His Majesties Entertainment Passing Through the City of London', and a much enlarged edition the following year, which included a Fine set of plates depicting the procession. Royal favour was bestowed in 1674 when John Ogilby received the title of 'His Majesty's Cosmographer and Geographick Printer' with a salary of £13.6s.8d per annum.
In 1665, Ogilby left London to avoid the Plague then ravaging the capital. The following year, in the Great Fire of London, Ogilby claimed that he lost his entire stock of books valued at some £3,000, as well as his shop and house, leaving him worth just £5.
As he sought to restore his fortunes, Ogilby was already looking in new directions. The initial opportunity he seized on was the reconstruction of London's burnt-out centre. He secured appointment as a "sworn viewer", whose duty was to establish the property boundaries as they existed before the Fire. Ogilby was assisted in the project by his step-grandson, William Morgan, and by a number of professional surveyors. The result was an outstanding plan of London, on a scale of 100 feet to an inch, on 20 sheets, although it was not printed until after Ogilby's death.
Ogilby then turned his attention to publishing geographical descriptions of the wider-world. In 1667, he issued 'An Embassy from the East India Company of the United Provinces to the Grand Tartar Cham, Emperor of China.' Buoyed by the response to this volume, Ogilby conceived an ambitious project, a multi-volume description of the world. The volumes were joint collaborations, in conjunction with the Dutch publisher Jacob van Meurs. 'Africa', published in 1670, was the least original of the three, both in terms of the text, maps and illustrations. In a similar vein, he issued the 'Atlas Japannensis' (1670), the 'Atlas Chinensis' (1671), and 'Asia' (1673). In 1671, Ogilby published the 'America', translated from Arnold Montanus' Dutch text. The 'America' is certainly the most original, and most important, of Ogilby's various geographical volumes, and its influence and popularity was immediate.
With its completion, Ogilby turned to a project nearer his heart, the description of Britain. Ogilby originally intended to devote one volume to Britain, but as the project evolved, he became more ambitious, as revealed in a prospectus issued in about 1672:
"This having oblig'd our Author to take new Measures ... to compleat within the space of two Years a Work ... considering the Actual survey of the Kingdom, the Delineation and Dimensuration of the Roads, the Prospects and Ground plots of Cities, with other Ornamentals ... into six fair volumes. The Four first comprehending the historical and geographical description of England, with the County-Maps truly and actually survey'd. ... The fifth containing an Ichnographical and Historical Description of all the Principal Road-ways in England and Wales, in two hundred copper sculptures, after a new and exquisite method. The sixth containing a New and Accurate Description of the famous City of London, with the perfect Ichnography thereof ..."
In the proposals, Ogilby emphasised the scale of the undertaking; no-one before him had attempted such a vast project. He estimated the total costs would be £20,000, a staggering amount. The cost of the complete set of six volumes was to be £34. At that time, Wenceslas Hollar...
Category
Late 17th Century Charles II Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Edinburgh, Scotland Coast: A 17th Century Hand-Colored Sea Chart by Collins
By Captain Greenvile Collins
Located in Alamo, CA
This hand-colored sea chart is entitled "Edinburgh Firth" from "Great Britain's Coasting Pilot. Being a New and Exact Survey of the Sea-Coast of England" by Captain Greenville Collin...
Category
Late 17th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$2,220 Sale Price
20% Off
Dartmouth, England: A Hand-Colored 17th Century Sea Chart by Captain Collins
By Captain Greenvile Collins
Located in Alamo, CA
This hand-colored sea chart of the area around Dartmouth, England is from "Great Britain's Coasting Pilot. Being a New and Exact Survey of the Sea-Coast of England", first published ...
Category
Late 17th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$2,220 Sale Price
20% Off
Plymouth, England: A Hand-Colored 17th Century Sea Chart by Captain Collins
By Captain Greenvile Collins
Located in Alamo, CA
This hand-colored sea chart of the area around Plymouth, England from "Great Britain's Coasting Pilot. Being a New and Exact Survey of the Sea-Coast of England", first published in 1...
Category
Late 17th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$2,220 Sale Price
20% Off
Hampshire County, Britain/England: A Map from Camden
s" Britannia" in 1607
By John Norden
Located in Alamo, CA
An early hand-colored map of Britain's Hampshire county, published in the 1607 edition of William Camden's great historical description of the British Isles, "Britannia". This map was drawn by cartographer John Norden (c. 1547-1625) and engraved by William Hole (active 1607-1624) and William Kip...
Category
Early 17th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$1,180 Sale Price
20% Off
South America: Hand-colored 18th Century Framed Map by Thomas Jefferys
By Thomas Jefferys
Located in Alamo, CA
This detailed hand-colored map of South America by Thomas Jefferys was published in London in 1750. The map shows countries, early colonial possessions, towns, rivers, mountains, and...
Category
Mid-18th Century Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$460 Sale Price
20% Off
Map Sussex
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Map of Sussex with explanation
Maker unknown.
Category
19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
$825
Map Hanging Wall County of Devon C&J Greenwood 1827 Exeter Cathedral Lundy Isle
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
C & J GREENWOOD MAP OF THE COUNTY OF DEVON, FROM AN ORIGINAL SURVEY, PUBLISHED 1827, WITH ENGRAVING OF EXETER CATHEDRAL AND MAP OF LUNDY INSET, 6ft 2 ...
Category
1820s Early Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Bedfordshire WilliamSchmollinger Dunstable Priory Woburn Abbey Moules Gothic
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
ARTIST William Schmollinger (1811-1869)
London : George Virtue, 1832. A highly attractive map in gothick style, with an ornamental architectural border, inset views of Dunstable Priory and Woburn Abbey...
Category
19th Century Victorian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Road Map Britannia No 25 London to the Lands End, John Ogilby Brown Gilded Frame
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
The road from London to the lands end. Commencing at the Standard in Cornhill and extending to Senan in Cornwall. By John Ogilby His Majesties Cosmographer. A road map from Britannia, 1675/6. No 25.
Continuing 308 miles, 3 furlongs.
London Southwark to Brentford, to Hampton Court, to Hounslow, to Windsor, to Cobham, to Farnham, to Basingstoke to Winchester
The handcoloured sheet free floated. In a brown painted and gilded, ogee moulded frame. Some foxing and creasing, uneven edge of sheet, all commensurate with age
Provenance : purchased as pair from a collector with no 15 London to St David's. Framed as a pair.
Sheet width 48cm., 19 ”., height 38cm., 15 “
Frame width 66.5cm., 26”., height 56cm., 22 ”
In a remarkable life John Ogilby pursued, several careers, each ending in misfortune, and yet he always emerged undeterred, to carry on. His modern reputation is based on his final career, started i
Black Linear Border around Map Length 44cm., 17 1/8" Height 32cm., 12 1/2"
Full Sheet Length 58cm., 22 3/4" Height 38cm., 15"
Frame Length 66cm., 26"., Height 56cm., 22"
In a remarkable life John Ogilby pursued, several careers, each ending in misfortune, and yet he always emerged undeterred, to carry on. His modern reputation is based on his final career, started in his sixty-sixth year, as a publisher of maps and geographical accounts.
Ogilby was born outside Dundee, in 1600, the son of a Scottish gentleman. While he was still a child, the family moved to London. When the elder Ogilby was imprisoned for debt, the young John invested his savings in a lottery, won a minor prize, and settled his father's debts. Unfortunately, not enough money was left to secure John a good apprenticeship; instead, he was apprenticed to a dance master. Ogilby was soon dancing in masques at court but, one day, while executing a particularly ambitious leap, he landed badly. The accident left him with a permanent limp, and ended his dancing career. However, he had come to the attention of Thomas Wentworth, later Earl of Strafford, Charles I's most senior minister. Ever one to exploit his contacts, Ogilby became a dance instructor in Strafford's household.
When Strafford was sent to Ireland, Ogilby accompanied him as Deputy-Master of the Kings Revels, and then Master of Revels. In Dublin, he built the New Theatre, in St. Werburgh Street, which prospered at first, but the Irish Rebellion, in 1641, cost Ogilby his fortune, which he estimated at £2,000, and almost his life. After brief service as a soldier, he returned to England, survived shipwreck on the way, and arrived back penniless.
On his return, Ogilby turned his attention to the Latin classics, as a translator and publisher. His first faltering attempt, in 1649, was a translation of the works of Virgil, but after his marriage to a wealthy widow the same year, his publishing activities received a considerable boost. One means by which Ogilby financed these volumes was by subscription, securing advance payments from his patrons, in return for including their name and coats-of-arms on the plates of illustrations. Another approach was to secure a patron, preferably in the court circle. Ogilby's first patron was Strafford, who found out too late that all leading ministers are dispensable when Charles I assented to his execution in 1641. As he re-established himself, Ogilby sought a new patron, the King himself.
In 1661, Ogilby was approached to write poetry for Charles II's coronation procession; he later published 'The Relation of His Majesties Entertainment Passing Through the City of London', and a much enlarged edition the following year, which included a fine set of plates depicting the procession. Royal favour was bestowed in 1674 when John Ogilby received the title of 'His Majesty's Cosmographer and Geographick Printer' with a salary of £13.6s.8d per annum.
In 1665, Ogilby left London to avoid the Plague then ravaging the capital. The following year, in the Great Fire of London, Ogilby claimed that he lost his entire stock of books valued at some £3,000, as well as his shop and house, leaving him worth just £5.
As he sought to restore his fortunes, Ogilby was already looking in new directions. The initial opportunity he seized on was the reconstruction of London's burnt-out centre. He secured appointment as a "sworn viewer", whose duty was to establish the property boundaries as they existed before the Fire. Ogilby was assisted in the project by his step-grandson, William Morgan...
Category
Late 17th Century Charles II Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Berkshire C&J Greenwood Windsor Castle JDower Polling Hundreds
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Map of the County of Berkshire from an Actual Survey made in the Years 1822 & 1823 by C&J Greenwood
Published by the Proprietors Greenwood & Co 13 Regent Street Pall Mall London Ju...
Category
19th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Map Road John Ogilby Britannia No 74 Ipswich to Norwich Cromer Framed
By John Ogilby
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
The Road from Ipswich com Suffolk to Norwich and thence to cromer on the sea coast com Norfolk. By John Ogilby, Esq, His Majesties Cosmographer. Containing...
Category
1670s Baroque Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
Cambridgeshire J Cary
By John Cary
Located in BUNGAY, SUFFOLK
Cambridgeshire published may 1 1814 engraver no 181 strand
Maker John Cary c. 1754 – 1835.
Category
19th Century Georgian Antique British Maps
Materials
Paper
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