Plan des Attaques de la Ville de Bruxelles
ou la Trancheé sut ouverte la nuit du 7. au 8. Fevrier et qui S'est rendue le 19. Du meme mois de l'Anneé 1746.
1746.
Manuscript plan with fine original hand-colour, dissected and mounted on linen, key below title and plan.
830 by 500mm (32.75 by 19.75 inches).
2700
notes:
Large plan of the Siege of Brussels in 1746.
The plan renders the city and the surrounding area in great detail, depicting rivers, canals, fortifications, field boundaries, street, gardens, and principal buildings. A key plan lists 113 buildings, gateways, and defensive points. To the left of the plan the French trenches are highlighted in yellow, with the range and direction of the artillery in red.
The Siege of Brussels took place between January and...
The plan renders the city and the surrounding area in great detail, depicting rivers, canals, fortifications, field boundaries, street, gardens, and principal buildings. A key plan lists 113 buildings, gateways, and defensive points. To the left of the plan the French trenches are highlighted in yellow, with the range and direction of the artillery in red.
The Siege of Brussels took place between January and...
bibliography:
provenance:
From the Library of the Dukes of Luynes.
Charles Louis d'Albert de Luynes (1717-1771) was a French nobleman and member of the House of Albert. He was the fifth Duke of Luynes as well as Duke of Chevreuse.
He took part in the war in 1733 in the War of the Polish Succession. He also took part in campaigns in 1735 and 1745, the latter in the War of the Austrian Succession, and was injured in combat at Sahay at the head of the Dragoons. He participated in the attack of Prague in 1742, and also assisted in various sieges and battles of the era.
In 1754, he was created a Colonel General of the Dragoons. From 1757 to 1771, he was the Gouverneur de Paris (Military governor of Paris), an ancient and prestigious rank representing the king in the capital. He also was created a Knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit at Versailles on 2 February 1759.
He died in Paris in his Hôtel. He was buried at the Chapelle de Saint Jean l'Évangeliste at the Église Saint-Sulpice, Paris.
Charles Louis d'Albert de Luynes (1717-1771) was a French nobleman and member of the House of Albert. He was the fifth Duke of Luynes as well as Duke of Chevreuse.
He took part in the war in 1733 in the War of the Polish Succession. He also took part in campaigns in 1735 and 1745, the latter in the War of the Austrian Succession, and was injured in combat at Sahay at the head of the Dragoons. He participated in the attack of Prague in 1742, and also assisted in various sieges and battles of the era.
In 1754, he was created a Colonel General of the Dragoons. From 1757 to 1771, he was the Gouverneur de Paris (Military governor of Paris), an ancient and prestigious rank representing the king in the capital. He also was created a Knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit at Versailles on 2 February 1759.
He died in Paris in his Hôtel. He was buried at the Chapelle de Saint Jean l'Évangeliste at the Église Saint-Sulpice, Paris.
Index to Rouge's Mitchell Map
An underwater saw
The first official account of the first European settlement in Australia
Mind the gap, please!
The work that turned Europe Upside Down
The borough of Wigan
Charting the trips undertaken by Churchill during the Second World War
Rare Roger Rea edition of Speed's map of Derbyshire
“in all these straits Piratical Proas usually Lurk, ready to Assault Defenceless Vessels…”
“Cook’s going out 1776”
John Rocque’s rare index to his large wall map of Dublin, including a price list of all Rocque’s published works
“at once the most perceptive and the most literary” (Fitzhardinge)
France’s first official circumnavigation of the world – and the naming of a flower
Rare Roger Rea edition of Speed’s map of Lancashire
The only French game played with Spanish suits
“A Scottish astronomer of considerable reputation”
Rare reduction of William Smith’s seminal geological map
The first regional map of the “great south land” (Clancy)
“A milestone polar map” (Clancy)
Speed’s map of Spain
Half a tent is better than none… 


