The rare reduction on eight sheets of Rocque’s monumental plan of London on 24 sheets
A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster, the Borough of Southwark, and the Contiguous Buildings;
with all the New Roads that have been made on account of Westminster Bridge, and the New Buildings and Alterations to the present year MDCCLV. Engraved from an Actual Survey made by John Rocque. This Plan extends from East to West near six Miles, and from North to South a little more than Three, and contains about 11,500 Acres of Ground. Published by the Proprietors of the Original Survey.
London,
this plan was published according to Act of Parliament,
1755 [but c.1768].
Engraved plan on eight sheets.
1150 by 1900mm (45.25 by 74.75 inches).
1479
notes:
One of the finest maps of - what is now - Greater London ever produced. 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 greater task, that of surveying the entire built-up area of London, the survey that would make his name. Begun in March of 173...
bibliography:
Howgego 103 intermediate between state between (1) and (2).