The First Cartographic Playing Cards bound as a miniature Atlas

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[Complete Set of Cartographic Playing Cards of England and Wales].

[BOWES, William] [Engraved by] RYTHER, Augustine
[London,
Augustine Ryther,
1590].
12mo (65 by 105mm) map of England and Wales, and 52 cartographic playing cards, mounted on guards, all with fine original hand-colour, manuscript inscription to upper pastedown, "Francis J. Cooke A Gift from His School Fellow, A. Armstrong", seventeenth-century black morocco, lavishly gilt, spine in three compartments, with initials R.W. (inverted), rubbed.
60 by 110mm (2.25 by 4.25 inches).
2384

To scale:

notes:

notes:

These cards are the earliest set of geographical playing cards of any country. They also have the distinction of being the first time that each county is depicted separately.

The 52 playing cards are arranged in suits corresponding to regions: Eastern and Midland; Southern and Western; Northern; and Welsh. The cards themselves consist of a thumbnail map of the county - based upon the general map of England and Wales in Saxton's Atlas - all to the same scale, and ...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Kingsley & Mann, Playing Card Maps, in MCC, Vol 9, no 87, 1972; Turner, G. L. E., Elizabethan Instrument Makers: the origins of the London trade in precision instrument making, Oxford 2000, 36; King, G. L., Miniature Antique Maps, Map Collector Publications, Tring 1996, pp. 60-1; Skelton, R. A. County Atlases of the British Isles, 1579-1850, Carta Press, London 1970, pp. 16-18; Hind, A. M., An Elizabethan pack of Playing-cards, British Museum Quarterly, XIII, 1939, p. 2 Heawood, E., English County Maps in the Collection of the Royal Geographical Society, R.G.S., London 1932, p. 13, plate 21.

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