Anglia
hominu[m] numero, rerumq[ue] fere omniu[m] copiis abundans, sub mitissimo Elizabethae, serenissimae et doctissimae Reginae, imperio, placidissima pace annos iam viginti florentissima.
[London],
1579.
Double-page engraved map, fine original hand-colour, bunch of grapes watermark, centre-fold and margins reinforced.
385 by 490mm. (15.25 by 19.25 inches).
24369
notes:
In 1575, Christopher Saxton was authorised by the Queen's Privy Council to survey and map the counties of England and Wales, a task which he had completed by 1579, when the resulting maps were compiled and published in his seminal 'Atlas of England and Wales'. This map of England is one of the 35 maps included in the atlas and is the first map of England and Wales printed in England.
The map records the country's landscapes and settlements, represented by small ...
The map records the country's landscapes and settlements, represented by small ...
bibliography:
provenance:
“The navigator’s vade mecum for the Eastern seas” – one of the most influential English travel books of the sixteenth century
A Prospect of Britain
“Cook’s going out 1776”
The earliest extant plan of London
A verbal and visual map of London’s “cottages”
Collier’s Plan of Windsor and Eton College
Large plan of 1930s Hong Kong showing the cyclone scale
A map of Canton and Hong Kong by “Nemesis Hall”
Dorret’s Landmark Wall Map of Scotland
The Swan River Colony 



