Timed to coincide with Asian Art in London, 3rd to 12th November 2011, map dealer Daniel Crouch Rare Books will be exhibiting work by Ferdinand Verbiest completed at the Chinese Court during the start of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912), as well as antique Chinese porcelain, presented by Woolley & Wallis Auctioneers.
Ferdinand Verbiest maps and Antique Chinese Porcelain
artcalendr.com
A map of Japan from Jean Migeon's 'Nouvel Atlas Illustre Geographie Universelle'
The siege of Gibraltar
Piccadilly Circus
An unrecorded analemma
The most important maps of the Middle East and Arabia published in the sixteenth century
The First Commercial Building in London, and the Earliest English Copper Engraved Topographical Print
An unrecorded state with erasures on the plate
Rocque’s large and detailed plan of the cities of Georgian London and the country ten miles round
S is for Stationer
The first European to enter Mecca and Medina
The first printed star atlas
"such parts of the coast of Madagascar as you may conceive not to have been accurately ascertained"
View of the Amstel from the Hogesluis towards the Zuiderkerk
The Book that "sealed the fate of 'America' as the name of the New World"
A striking map of Central Asia and China from the 1482 Ulm Ptolemy
“The largest view of London ever to be published”
Pivot to the Pacific
Speed’s battle map
One of the largest world maps ever printed
Blaeu’s Grand Atlas 

