Cartographic game board celebrating the British Empire in India
L'Orient or the Indian Travellers, A Geographical Historical Game.
London,
David Ogilvy,
[c1847].
Lithograph with full original wash colour, segmented and mounted on linen as issued, minor foxing and soiling, seams reinforced on verso.
560 by 745mm. (22 by 29.25 inches).
20539
notes:
An attractive, rare and mysterious game board, likely designed to capitalise on public interest following the successful conclusion of the First Anglo-Sikh War, of 1845-1846.
The central part of the game is a map of Europe, Africa, and Asia, with three sailing routes from England to India outlined, with the Atlantic Ocean route featuring tiny circular panels numbered 1-9. The map is surmounted by views of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay, as well as six medallion por...
The central part of the game is a map of Europe, Africa, and Asia, with three sailing routes from England to India outlined, with the Atlantic Ocean route featuring tiny circular panels numbered 1-9. The map is surmounted by views of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay, as well as six medallion por...
bibliography:
V&A, B.11-1997.
provenance:
A French variant of De Jonghe’s view of London
Set of Cook’s three voyages, with the plates and maps bound separately in three atlas volumes
Greenough recognises his debt to William Smith
Blaeu’s Grand Atlas
Known in only one other example
“Who can consider human affairs to be great, when he comprehends the eternity and vastness of the entire world?” (Cicero, legend in the border)
Rare sailing directions for the Eastern Seaboard
Pocock’s Premises
A pair of table globes by Blaeu
“The Lowest Class. Vicious, semi-criminal”
A map of Napoleonic Milan
The ptolemaic world map from the first issue of Laurent Fries’ ‘Geographia’
Map of Japan published in Dufour’s ‘Atlas Populaire’ 

![BARFOOT, J[ames] R[ichard] L'Orient or the Indian Travellers, A Geographical Historical Game.](https://i0.wp.com/crouchrarebooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/20539_1H.jpg?fit=3500%2C2673&ssl=1)
