A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster and Borough of Southwark,
with the contiguous Buildings. From an Actual Survey taken by John Rocque, Land Surveyor and engraved by John Pine.
London,
John Pine and John Tinney,
1746.
Engraved plan on 24 sheets.
2100 by 4000mm. (82.75 by 157.5 inches).
20790
notes:
It would appear that John Rocque, a French Huguenot, emigrated with the rest of his family to London in the 1730s, where he began to ply his trade as a surveyor of gentleman's estates, and with plans of Kensington Gardens, and Hampton Court. However, in 1737 he applied his surveying skills to a much great task, that of surveying the entire built-up area of London. Begun in March of 1737, upon a scale of 26 inches to one statute mile, the map would take nine years to produce...
bibliography:
Howgego 96 (1)
provenance:
The largest plan of Brighton published in Georgian Britain
John Rocque’s magnificent map of early Georgian London
Speed’s map of Derbyshire
“My real Master”
Speed’s map of China
Homann’s rare nesting pocket globe and armillary
Long Wall, Sally Wall: one of the earliest surveys of Bermondsey
Rare reduction of the Gardner and Yeakell map of Sussex
The borough of Wigan 

