Catalogue XLI: The Name of the Game
Whether alone or in teams, for pleasure or profit, sporting or seated, games have been an ever-present feature of every civilization. During the eighteenth century, not only were industrial advances making large-scale printing easier, but they were also generating something that had never before been available to the majority of society: leisure time. Paired with growing literacy rates across society and greater understanding of the importance of childhood education, this gave birth to a wave of new and unique games, especially in the form of jigsaw puzzles, playing cards, and board games.
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Rare epidemiological map depicting the spread of the 1892 Cholera Epidemic across Russia
The Hejaz Railway
Brooklyn as the third largest city in the United States
Woolwich Dockyard
"Attempt to redefine the lands north of Japan"
The most important nineteenth century plan of the city of Oxford
John Ainslie’s Landmark Map of Scotland
Duchetti's plan of Florence
A separately-published world map, issued prior to its inclusion in the first “atlas” to be so called
A fine eighteenth century view of the Kolveniersburgwal
The borough of Wigan
Thevenot’s Voyages
The most up-to-date sea atlas of the second half of the seventeenth century
Bordone’s Isolario in contemporary binding
Panama 


