A pair of 18-inch Bardin Globes on Table Stands
[A pair of globes - Terrestrial and Celestial].
To the Rt. Honorable Sir Joseph Banks BARt. K.B. President of the Royal Society This New British Terrestrial Globe [WITH:] To the Rev Nevil Maskelyne D.D. FRS. Astronomer Royal This New British Celestial Globe.
London,
1835
A pair of 18-inch table globes, raised on four turned mahogany legs with stretcher, spheres covered with plaster coating, two sets of 12 engraved and hand-coloured half gores on each globe, varnished.
660 by 620mm (26 by 24.5 inches).
18725
notes:
The Bardin family were among the greatest globe makers in London from the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth century. The patriarch of the family, William Bardin (d. 1798), began globe production in the 1780s. The origin of Bardin's globes is thought to be traceable to the early eighteenth century globes of John Senex. Fifteen years after Senex's death, the copper plates for his globe gores were sold to James Ferguson.
In 1757, Ferguson transferred his globe trade...
In 1757, Ferguson transferred his globe trade...
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