Essex Actually Surveyed with the several Roads from London &c.
Exactly measured at three mile in an Inch.
London,
Sold By Phil. Lea at ye Atlas and Hercules in Cheapside,
[c.1689].
Hand-coloured double-page engraved map, trimmed to within neatline.
430 by 540mm. (17 by 21.25 inches).
1635
notes:
A new state of the map by John Ogilby and William Morgan (first published in 1678), with Ogilby's name and date removed and Lea's imprint inserted, but Morgan's dedication to Arthur, Earl of Essex, retained. By this point the plate had been acquired by Philip Lea who published it in this edition of the Saxton atlas of c. 1689.
...
bibliography:
Skelton 110.
provenance:
Complete set of the world’s first national wine atlas
The first atlas printed in Venice, the first wholly printed in colours, incorporating the first map to indicate Japan, the second map in a Ptolemaic atlas to show America.
Southeast Asia at the end of the nineteenth century
Arctic Ice Atlas 


