Cestriae Comitatus
(Romanis Legionibus et Coloniis olim insignis) vera et absoluta effigies
London,
Christopher Saxton,
1579
Double-page engraved map, fine original colour in outline, some offsetting, contemporary annotation on verso in brown ink, some minor offsetting, some light marginal soiling.
420 by 550mm. (16.5 by 21.75 inches).
15350
notes:
This map of Cheshire, or "Cestria", is the tenth in the collection of county maps commissioned by the Queen's Privy Council in 1575, completed by Christopher Saxton within the following four years, and then published in his 'Atlas of England and Wales', the first ever national atlas. It is also the first map of the county itself ever to be created. The cartographer surveyed the landscape of the English and Welsh counties, and documented his findings with illustrations of r...
bibliography:
Bowd, 'John Dee and Christopher Saxton's Survey of Manchester (1596)', (Northern History, 2005); 'Cestiae Comitatus' (The British Library Online Gallery, 2009); Scanlan, 'Through Mountains to the Sea' (Places Journal, 2019).
provenance:
Speed’s map of Essex
Long Wall, Sally Wall: one of the earliest surveys of Bermondsey
Essex – The finest large-scale map of Essex
Thornton’s first published chart
Longitude and Latitude on a map of the Qing Empire
Four rare lithographed maps depicting the operations of the British Army on the River Sutlej during the First Anglo-Sikh War of 1845-46 


