Gloucestershire Maps

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£175 Robert Morden 1695 Ref: 7005.5
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Size guide - reference image
42x35 cm

FIRST FOLIO MAP OF THE COUNTY TO INCLUDE ROADS.

GLOUCESTER SHIRE By Robt. Morden
Sold by {Abel Swale Awnsham & Iohn Churchill 

Copper engraving produced by Robert Morden for publication in Edmund Gibson's translation of William Camden's Britannia first  published by Abel Swalle and Awnsham & John Churchill in 1695. This is the first series of maps to mark longitude in minutes of time (top border) as well as in degrees (bottom border). For most counties longitude is based on the meridian of St. Paul's, London. Cardinal points are shown in the borders.

The work was republished in 1722, 1730, 1753 and, finally in 1772.  There were a number of minor alterations to most plates during the early editions and they were substantially updated for the 1722 edition mostly with changes to place name spellings. Due to wear caused by the printing process the plates were reworked for the 1753 edition.

Robert Morden (fl. 1669-1703) mapmaker, mapseller, globemaker, engraver and publisher, is best known for this  series of county maps published in Camden’s Britannia and little is known of his early life. His output was considerable, producing maps and other works in association with many other well known mapmakers and publishers including John Overton, Philip Lea, William Morgan and  Christopher Browne. He was a frequent partner of William Berry from the Wakefield area of Yorkshire who was apprenticed to Joseph Moxon, it is most probable that Morden was also apprenticed to Moxon and, given that the Morden name and variants of it are common in Wakefield, he may also come from that area. Morden is recorded as having the polymath Robert Hooke and diarist Samuel Pepys among his customers and associates. He was a member of the Weavers company and churchwarden of his parish church, St. Christopher-le-Stocks, 1679-1680. He and his wife Mary baptised at least seven children at the same church and he was buried with his wife “in ye north ile” on 25th August 1703. Morden did not receive royal appointments granted to less able contemporaries, and he described himself as having “lain latent under the horizon of unknown obscurity and irresistible poverty” and hoped for “better rewards” in the next world.

Good example of the map of Gloucestershire from the 1695 edition in neat later hand colour. Some light off-setting at the centrefold. Printer's ink smudges in the blank area below Berkshire and in the lower right corner of the map border. two small wormholes in the border upper left and just outside the border upper right.

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